There was no Manitoba in 1867, but there was a sense of uncertainty - Action News
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Manitoba

There was no Manitoba in 1867, but there was a sense of uncertainty

Wooden carts groaned over dirt paths, filling prairie air with creaks, grinds and rumbles as people in the Red River settlement went about a typical day on July 1, 1867 tending small farm plots, selling grains, trading furs.

Manitoba was still 3 years and much political turmoil away from being defined and joining the new Dominion

Settler's house and Red River cart in Manitoba in 1862. (Lawrence J. Barkwell)

Wooden carts groaned over dirt paths, filling prairie air with creaks,grinds and rumbles as people in the Red River settlement went about a typical day on July 1, 1867 tending small farm plots, selling grains, tradingfurs.

There were no bells, whistles or cheers to mirror the festivities in four eastern British colonies, which had just united to establishthe Dominion ofCanada.

Manitobansdid not celebrate because there was no place called Manitoba.

The area that would eventually become the province was part of acontinental commercial expanse known asRupert's Land,owned by the Hudson's Bay Company.

Upper Fort Garry, at the confluence of Red and Assiniboine rivers, in 1858. (Humphrey Lloyd Hime collection/Manitoba Archives)

Manitoba was still three years and much political turmoil away from being defined and joiningCanada.

It was a land dotted by forts, homesteadsand small settlementsacross a mostly empty rolling plain. There were no cities or towns.

The largest village, at the forks of the Red and Assiniboine rivers, was just a scattering of buildings, dirt roads, a stone fort and a population of about 100, according to the online digital archive site Manitobia.

A skull is the only thing that marks an otherwise undisturbed expanse of prairie, looking west from the banks of the Red River in 1858. (Humphrey Lloyd Hime/Manitoba Archives)

Most of the wood-clad buildings that marked the fledgling community that would be known in a few years' time asWinnipegwere located near Upper Fort Garry, which overlooked the junction of the rivers.

Founded on the fur trade, which thrived there since the1730s,the settlement's centre of commerce in 1867 was still focused around the forks, where steamboats brought travellers and trade.

Five years prior, in 1862, a man named HenryMcKenneywas ridiculed for purchasing a parcel of land covered in a tangle of scrub oak and poplar a quarter-milenorth the forks.McKenneysaw potential for a store where the north-south and east-west ox-cart paths crossed.

The St. Boniface Cathedral is seen in 1858 from what would be the current-day riverwalk at The Forks. (Humphrey Lloyd Hime/Manitoba Archives)

McKenney'ssite would eventually become the business and banking centre of the city at the intersection of Portage and Main.

In 1867, however, the celebrations out east createda general sense of uncertainty in the Prairies, both for those new to the region andthose whose ancestors had lived there for generations.

A deal with the Dominion of Canada

In his bookThe Centennial History of Manitoba, James A. Jackson wrote that the HBC, which had domain overRupert's Land since 1670, could also sense that uncertainty. Though it was still the primary trading company, it no longer held a monopoly and was also facing increased settlement and demands from Mtisfighting for land titles.

A photo shows an early traffic jam at the corner of Portage and Main in Winnipeg in June 1872. (University of Manitoba)

The HBC's governors were increasingly aware they did not have the funds to administer such a large territory and one that was evolving beyond simplya source of furs, according to Historica Canada.

Thegovernment of the newly created Canada, led by Prime Minister John A. Macdonald, was ready and willing to step in and relieve the HBC of its domain.Macdonaldworriedthe United States, which had purchased Alaska from Russia in 1867, was interested in annexing Rupert's Land for itself.

In March 1869, theHBCagreed to sellRupert's Landto theDominion of Canada. Anticipating the transfer of these lands, the federal government sent surveyors out toassess and re-stake the lands.

In 1867, two-thirds of what is now known as Canada was owned by the Hudson's Bay Company and called Rupert's Land. (Wikimedia Commons/Golbez)

Mtistake a stand

TheMtisof the Red River valley, seeing their concernsand land claims ignored by the new authority, took a stand and thrust thesmall settlement into a national spotlight. In October 1869, an eloquent, educated and articulate 24-year-old Mtisleader named Louis Rielstepped on thesurveyors' chain, said "Yougo no further," and halted the work.

In November, Riel and theMtis National CommitteeseizedUpper Fort Garryfrom the HBC and established itself as the provisional government of the Red River settlement, responsible for negotiating the terms of the colony's annexation to Canada.

During negotiations with the Canadian government, a group of men opposed to Riel and the MNC prepared to attack but were captured and jailed.

Among them was a combative man from Ontario named Thomas Scott, whocontinually insulted the guards and threatened to shoot Riel if he was ever freed.Scott was sent before a tribunal, convicted of treason, and sentenced to death.

He wasexecuted by a firing squad in the courtyard of Upper Fort Garry.

Manitoba becomes a province

TheManitoba Act, creating the new province and bringing into confederation, was passed by the Canadian Parliament and received royal assent on May 12,1870.

At the time, Manitoba was a postage-stamp version of its future size.Much of what we know now as the province was still within the boundary of the North-Western Territories which would itself become part of Canada as the North-West Territories in July of 1870.

A map showing Winnipeg in 1872, a year before it was formally incorporated. (Compiled by Will E. Ingersoll/Winnipeg in Maps)

Most of the new province's12,000 citizens lived in small settlements and farms strung along rivers, close to sources of water and wood, neither of which could be found on the rolling plains.

Riel had achieved his goal but itwas not a victory he could enjoy for long.Scott's death hadinflamed passionsin Ontario andMacdonald dispatched a military force westto avenge the killing.

Broken promises and dark history

Rieland his lieutenants fled justbefore thetroopsarrivedin August 1870. With the MNC effectively disbanded and the leaders in exile, the government reneged on the promised transfer of land to the Mtis people.

Instead, the land was opened to settlers from the east.

That led to another dark time in the province's young history as the government forced the Indigenous people onto reservations through treaties signed between 1871 and 1906.

Manitoba, meanwhile, continued to grow. By 1881, the population of the province was 66,000,by 1901 it was 255,000and by 1911 it stood at 450,000, according to Manitobia.

By 1911, Winnipegwas the third-largest city in the country, with over 142,000 residents.

And today, as Canada celebrates the 150th anniversary of Confederation, Manitoba boasts a population of nearly 1.3 million.

Winnipeg stands as the nation's seventh-largest city, with a population of 705,000 a long way from the 100 or so people who lived in that scattering of buildings and travelled those dirt roads in 1867.

Manitoba in 1870 was a postage-stamp version of its future size. Much of what we know now as the province was still within the boundary of what was then called the North-West Territories. (Wikimedia Commons/Golbez)