Jump to content

Frog Lake Massacre

Coordinates: 53°50′0″N 110°22′00″W / 53.83333°N 110.36667°W / 53.83333; -110.36667
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 24.78.210.56 (talk) at 00:24, 30 January 2011 (→‎Aftermath). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Frog Lake Massacre
Part of the North-West Rebellion
DateApril 2, 1885
Location
53°50′0″N 110°22′00″W / 53.83333°N 110.36667°W / 53.83333; -110.36667
Frog Lake, North-West Territories, now St. Paul County No. 19, Alberta
Belligerents
Cree white settlers of Frog Lake
Commanders and leaders
Wandering Spirit
Ayimâsis
Indian agent Thomas Quinn
Casualties and losses
0 (6 later hanged by the Government of Canada) 9

The Frog Lake Massacre was a Cree uprising during the North-West Rebellion. Led by Wandering Spirit, young Cree warriors attacked the village of Frog Lake, North-West Territories (now in Alberta) on 2 April 1885, where they killed nine settlers.

Causes

Angered by what seemed to be unfair treaties by the Canadian government and the dwindling buffalo population, the main source of food for the indigenous people, chief Big Bear had been organizing the Cree for resistance.[1] They were encouraged by the Métis victory at the Battle of Duck Lake.[citation needed]

Anger among the Cree in the area was directled largely to the Indian agent, Thomas Quinn, who treated the Cree with harshness and arrogance.[1]

The Massacre

Against Big Bear's opposition[citation needed], a band of Cree lead by war chief Wandering Spirit took Thomas Quinn hostage in his home in the early morning of 2 April. The Cree then took more white settlers hostage and took control of the village. They gathered the Europeans, including two priests, into the local Catholic church, where mass was in progress. After the mass concluded, around 11:00 a.m., the Cree ordered their prisoners to move to a Cree encampment a couple of kilometres away.[1]

Quinn steadfastly refused to leave the town; in response, Wandering Spirit shot him in the head. In the resulting panic, Wandering Spirit's band killed eight other settlers: the two Catholic priests, Leon Fafard and Felix Marchand, Fafard's lay assistant John Williscroft, as well as John Gowanlock, John Delaney, William Gilchrist, George Dill, and Charles Gouin.[1]

One of the Hudson's Bay Company clerks, William Bleasdell Cameron, one of the men rounded up into the church, went to the Hudson's Bay shop to fill an order made by Quinn for Miserable Man after the mass. When the first shots were fired, he escaped with the help of sympathetic Cree, and made his way to a nearby Wood Cree camp, where the chief pledged to protect him.[2]

Theresa Gowanlock and Theresa Delaney, wives of two of the slain men, their families and approximately seventy others from the town were taken captive.[1]

Aftermath

The Cree moved on to Fort Pitt. The massacre prompted the Canadian government to take notice of the growing unrest in Western Canada. The rebellion was put down.

Wandering Spirit and five other warriors: Round the Sky, Bad Arrow, Miserable Man, Iron Body, Little Bear, Crooked Leg and Man Without Blood, were convicted of treason for their actions in the Frog Lake Massacre. They were hanged with two other Cree convicted of murder in the largest mass execution in Canadian history.[1].

Although Big Bear had opposed the attack,[2] he was charged with treason because of his efforts to organize resistance among the Cree. He was convicted and sentenced to three years in the Manitoba Penitentiary.[2]

Legacy

In the spring of 2008, Tourism, Parks, Culture and Sport Minister Christine Tell proclaimed in Duck lake, that "the 125th commemoration, in 2010, of the 1885 Northwest Resistance is an excellent opportunity to tell the story of the prairie Métis and First Nations peoples' struggle with Government forces and how it has shaped Canada today."[3]

Frog Lake Massacre National Historic Site of Canada, at Frog Lake, Alberta, is the location of the Cree uprising which occurred in the District of Saskatchewan, North-West Territories.[4]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f John Chaput (2007). "Frog Lake Massacre". The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. University of Regina and Canadian Plains Research Center. Retrieved 8 June 2010.
  2. ^ a b c W. B. Cameron, "Massacre at Frog Lake", University of Alberta Libraries, response by W. B. Cameron to "Massacre at Frog Lake", Edmonton Journal, 4 Apr 1939, accessed 2 Aug 2009
  3. ^ "Tourism agencies to celebrate the 125th anniversary of the Northwest Resistance/Rebellion". Home/About Government/News Releases/June 2008. Government of Saskatchewan. June 7, 2008. Retrieved 2009-09-20.
  4. ^ "Parks Canada - National Historic Sites in Alberta - National Historic Sites in Alberta". Government of Canada. Retrieved 2009-09-20.

Further reading

  • Cameron, W. B. (1926). The war trail of Big Bear (London : Duckworth). This work was published in three editions 1926-1930, and a revised edition was published in 1950 as Blood red the sun (Calgary : Kenway Pub. Co., 1950).