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i was here:)

Revision as of 02:11, 1 January 2008

Thomas Scott

Thomas Scott (c. 18421870) was a Scottish-born Canadian and fervent Orangeman. Scott was in fact born in the Clandeboye area of Co. Down, in what is now Northern Ireland.[1] He was recruited by Canada to fight in the Red River Rebellion and was captured and imprisoned in Upper Fort Garry by Louis Riel and his men while trying to attack it along with 34 other volunteers. While imprisoned Scott constantly threatened and insulted guards, calling Their leader a coward along with the rest of the Métis and threatened that he would assassinate Louis Riel upon gaining his freedom. Scott made an attempt to escape but was recaptured by Riel's men and was summarily executed for committing insubordination.

Charles Boulton's Memoirs of the North West Rebellions cites Métis leader John Bruce's claim that only two bullets from the firing squad actually hit Scott, wounding him once in the left shoulder, and once in the upper chest. A man stepped forward and discharged his pistol close to Scott's head, but the bullet only penetrated the upper part of the left cheek and came out somewhere near the cartilage of the nose. Still not dead, Scott was placed in a kind of coffin, from which he was later reported to cry:

"For God's sake take me out of here or kill me."

which he was denied, and lived on to die slowly in his coffin. the captain who ordered he be left there reportedly said "this coffin shall be your hell, because apparently your God loves your race too much to send you to his."

An artist's depiction of the execution of Scott

News of his death made it to Ontario and disturbed the predominantly English-speaking, Protestant population. Upon learning about Scott's death, John A. Macdonald sent troops to attack Fort Garry and retake it, but they were repelled. Eventually, the Red River Rebellion would result in the creation of the Manitoba Act and the province of Manitoba.

Though relatively unknown during his lifetime, Scott's death made him a martyr. He had always been contemptuous and violent, having been convicted of violence and assault when he, leading a band of his co-workers, almost drowned his employer over the issue of a pay raise.

Scott's execution led to an outrage in Ontario, and was largely responsible for prompting the Wolseley Expedition, which forced Louis Riel, now branded a murderer, to flee the settlement.

References

  1. ^ "The Murder of Thomas Scott". OrangeNet. 1999. Retrieved 2007-08-19.