Sunday, 20 April 2014

Frog Lake Massacre 1885




The settlement of Frog Lake in 1885

In early 1885 Father Fafard had just finished building Notre Dame du Bon Conseil two miles south of Frog Lake in an area of small wooded hills  near Lac Clair. Fafard could speak Cree, French and English and regularly taught classes to about twenty children.

The rectory was a simple log house with a large room which served as kitchen, parlour and classroom. On one side doors opened to a small chapel (which also served as the confessional) and a bedroom for Father Leon Fafard. Upstairs in the attic were three small rooms. Two were in use by Father Felix Marchand who was learning the Cree language and Fafard's lay assistant John Williscroft .

A dozen feet from the rectory was the recently completed 40 foot long church made of square-cut logs. The church was dedicated to Our Lady of Good Counsel (''Notre Dame du Bon Conseil'' in French). Beside the church was a timber frame that held the bell. A well, a shed, and a stable completed the site which was surrounded by pole fences.

Father Fafard was the director of this major mission which included three dependencies;  the mission of Saint Louis at Onion Lake founded by Father Felix Marchand in 1884,  the St. Raphael mission at Cold Lake (a Chipewyan reserve) with Father Legoff in charge and the Saint Charles mission at Long Lake which was without a priest.

Two or three hundred feet from the church on a  rise were the solid buildings of the Indian Agent. The Hudson's Bay Company post and George Dill's store were nearby. North West Mounted Police occupied a large area with barracks, a supply depot, a blacksmith, stables and other buildings necessary to support the small detachment.

Two miles west on Frog Creek John Gowanlock was building a grist mill (flour mill) which was almost complete.  Map of settlement

Three Wood Cree groups who were mostly Christian formed a reserve which was located nearby.

In January 1885 Big Bear and his band of about 20 families camped in the valley of Frog Creek close to the mill. None were Christian.

Rumours of War


In the last months of winter rumours of war came to the small village and on March 28 two representatives of Poundmaker brought to Big Bear a piece of tobacco that he had received from Batoche. The messengers carried news of the uprising and the success at Duck Lake and asked that the Cree unite against their common enemy. A council under Wandering Spirit (Big Bear was absent)  deliberated on future plans and then the calumet (pipe) was smoked.

On the night of March 31 a soldier from Captain Dickens arrived to advise the white residents of the grave situation and to take refuge at Fort Pitt. None of them left for one reason or another believing themselves safe. The small NWMP detachment left for Fort Pitt.

The next day (April 1) Big Bear returned from a hunt and with his son Ayimesis spent an agreeable evening with Quinn. Big Bear returned to his lodge but his son joined Wandering Spirit and his group who a little after midnight began to put their plans into fruition.

On the night of April 2 the houses of the settlement were put under guard and the horses were secretly taken.
Around 4:30 in the morning recounts Mrs. Delaney we were awakened by Johnny Pritchard (Quinn's interpretor) and Ayimesis. Ayimesis told my husband the Metis were in revolt and had stolen the horses. He took all the blame since he had danced almost all night with his friends and was asleep at the time

He then left with his group for the mill two miles away where Gilcrest was staying.

(to be continued)







Wednesday, 14 August 2013

Sara Riel 1848-1883




"Sarah Riel the sister of Métis leader Louis Riel was born October 11, 1848 in St. Boniface, Manitoba. She joined the Grey Nuns as a novice in 1865 and in 1868 became the first Métis Grey Nun from Red River. She could speak English, French, Cree and Michif and in 1871  was sent to Île-à-la-Crosse where her father Jean-Louis Riel was born. She served in the school and the hospital of the mission until her death of tuberculosis December 27, 1883. She took the name Sister Marguerite-Marie in 1872 and is buried under that name at the cemetery in Île-à-la-Crosse. Her headstone in French reads: Ici Repose Rév. Soeur Marguerite Marie (Riel) Decédée 27 Decembre, 1883, Agée 34 ans, R.I.P.  She and her brother Louis Riel wrote to each other while she was alive and letters remain describing their relationship and her life in Île-à-la-Crosse." http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sara_Riel
Ile a la Crosse is built on a peninsula (aerial view) 


Tuesday, 23 July 2013

Flight from Île-à-la-Crosse 1885

Stories from the North-West Rebellion 

April 1885
In a few months the waterways of  northern  Saskatchewan would be ice free and York boat brigades would again travel to supply the Hudson's Bay Company posts of the Athabasca and Mackenzie River Districts located north of the Methye Portage. It was spring and some swift moving rivers like the Beaver River were relatively free of ice. Open water was beginning to show along some lakes. In the last week of April 1885 rumours of war reached the isolated village of Ile a la Crosse. The village had a population of about 300 people. Most were descendants of French Metis from Red River.

Ile a la Crosse 

Ile a la Crosse was the birthplace of Louis Riel Sr. (the father of Louis Riel) in 1817.  Sara Riel the sister of Louis Riel died in Ile a la Crosse in 1883. She was 34 years old.

Sunday, 21 July 2013

The Looting of Green Lake in 1885

Stories of the North-West Rebellion

On April 26, 1885 a group of armed militants arrived to claim the contents of the Green Lake Post.

The river on this map of Green Lake flows into the Beaver River.



Green Lake is a village of 418 people in Saskatchewan a half hour drive north of the city of Meadow Lake.
A Hudson's Bay Post called Green Lake House was located there.  It was an important depot for the movement of supplies to the far north and was connected to Fort Carlton by an a ox-cart trail built in 1875-76.

Sunday, 14 April 2013

Dene/Chipewyan Statistics

Dene children in La Loche, Saskatchewan in the 1940s


The Dene Suline language or the Chipewyan language 

Approximately 11,000 of the 11,860 people who chose Dene as their mother tongue in the 2011 Canada Census are Dene/Chipewyan from the historical Chipewyan regions south and east of Great Slave Lake.  7,955 or 72% were in Saskatchewan, 1,005 were in Manitoba, 510 plus urban dwellers in Alberta and 260 plus urban dwellers  in the Northwest Territories.

Friday, 9 November 2012

Inuit of Pangnirtung, Nunavut..1953-1958


Photos by Geoffrey Secord.


More photos taken by Geoffrey Secord while he served as a doctor from 1953 to 1958 in Pangnirtung can be viewed on the following site.


Friday, 5 October 2012

Oilsand Quest sold to Cenovus

The remaining assets of Oilsands Quest sold for $10 million.

Oil Sands Quest spent hundreds of millions during its years of exploration in Saskatchewan.
read previous blog entry: Oilsands Quest for sale

(see also) Oilsands Quest 2007 native road blockade.

(see also) $349 million raised since 2004 (Corporate overview April 29,2009)

 Oilsands Quest leases in orange.                      read more....Oilsands Quest Timeline








Cenovus Energy Inc. sent out this press release October 2, 2012.

Saturday, 25 August 2012

Father Mathieu's dog team 1950's La Loche

Father Bertrand Mathieu and his dog team in 1955 La Loche. The Mission of La Loche included La Loche, Garson Lake, Descharme Lake, Turnor Lake, Bull's House and West La Loche. Visiting these small villages regularly was Father Mathieu's responsibility. (Photos from Canada Archives)
  •  Father Bertrand Mathieu o.m.i. (ordained in 1949) arrived in La Loche in 1950 and served until 1986.  .....History of La Loche