The Life
When people hear the name Louis Riel, some fill up with anger, others fill up with a thankful sense of happiness, like me and my grandfather for example. Louis was Metis, this was the product of a Voyageur and Indian women having a child. The Metis were famed for their hunting and tracking abilities and were often employed individuals or groups as guides or interpreters. Their farming tradition had its roots in the Red River settlement of Manitoba. Following the massive exodus into Sasketchewan, the Metis again established farms and homesteads. The difficulties encountered by the Metis in gaining clear entitlement to their land and the intervention of land speculators when scrip was issued caused most Metis to lose possession of their farms. "York" boats played a major role in the fur trade industry as they replaced freight canoes on the main water systems of Canada in the late 19th century. They had a larger carrying capacity and required fewer men to operate them. This enabl!ed furs to be transported faster and more economically than by canoe. It took eighteen men to run the York boats: a helmsman to give the orders for rowing, a man to steer and sixteen men to pull the oars. Sails were often used to catch favourable winds. Th
The reason that Phillippe respected Louis so much was because Louis Reil stood up for everything that he belived in. My grandfather passed away two weeks after Louis Riel was hanged. Louis formed a provisional government to the colonies entrance into Confederation, he knew that the thoughts and ideas would be bypassed. The prisoners would be let free if interfered with the provisional government. They were soon in the process of relinquishing its territory to the government. In 1869 the Canadian government sent surveyors to the Red River area. By this time the Hudson Bay company had ruled the praries. The Canadians who were there an didn't want tower imprisoned. I was born on a very cold night on November 16, 1867. My grandfather, Phillippe Jaques, looked up to, and respected Louis Reil greatly, that's why Phillippe went through this journey with Louis. Louis Riel had ordered them to stop, he was very upset about this. My grandfather, Phillippe Jaques, thought that for what he did for his people he should not have been executed, but the fact that he was makes the whole issue all the more important and spiritual. In 1821 the Hudson Bay company had created a union with the first nations people. He agreed and went back to his rebels to them fight the government with the help of the Indian Chiefs Big Bear and Poundma!ker.
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