Thursday, May 14, 2026

North–South Trade and Human Movement Between the Missouri and Saskatchewan River Watersheds Before the Settler Era

 

Drawing of "typical" activities in the life of a Plains Indian band.

Overview

Long before railways or agricultural settlement transformed the northern Great Plains, the watersheds of the Missouri and Saskatchewan rivers were linked by one of the most dynamic and consequential Indigenous trade systems in North America. Goods, people, languages, technologies, and biological realities — horses, disease, seeds — all moved through a corridor stretching roughly 800 kilometres north to south, across what are today the Canadian prairies and the American northern plains. The archaeological record pushes this connectivity back at least 13,000 years, while ethnohistorical and documentary evidence illuminates its richest era between roughly 1650 and 1870, before railways and the settler rush severed the old routes and confined peoples to reserves and reservations.


I. The Physiographic Corridor

The two great watersheds are not isolated: they share a broad geographical ramp across the Missouri Coteau, a narrow band of hummocky glacial upland that stretches from southern Saskatchewan into South Dakota. The Coteau's eastern escarpment and the Souris (Mouse) River basin provided a natural north–south route flanking the Missouri's upper reaches, while the Assiniboine and Qu'Appelle river systems offered branching connections westward into the Saskatchewan basin. Along the western edge of the corridor, the Old North Trail — a corridor worn deeply into the foothills east of the Rocky Mountains — extended from the Arctic to Mexico, and forked near what is now Calgary. Together these physiographic features meant that north–south movement across both watersheds required no ocean or mountain crossing; the terrain actively invited it.[1][2][3][4]


II. Deep Prehistory: Stone, Shell, and the Earliest Networks (13,000 BCE – 500 CE)

The archaeological evidence for very long-distance exchange is unambiguous. Researchers have analysed more than 1,200 obsidian artifacts from nearly 100 Alberta sites dating from 13,000 to 300 years ago. Obsidian does not occur naturally in Alberta — every fragment was imported — with the majority sourced to Bear Gulch, Idaho, and Obsidian Cliff, Wyoming, both within or near the upper Missouri watershed. The scale of this movement is remarkable: archaeologist Timothy Allan concluded that "likely millions of people were in contact with one another," and that the scope of the network was "way more massive than we thought".[5][6]

Knife River Flint (KRF), quarried in Dunn and Mercer Counties of North Dakota near a Missouri tributary, provides another north–south tracer. The KRF quarry complex covers about 200 hectares with 29 pit complexes; the flint was traded north into Alberta and beyond for more than 13,000 years. The trade in KRF has been documented before 2000 BCE, making the Missouri-to-Saskatchewan stone exchange one of the oldest continuously documented commercial relationships on the continent.[7][8]

Marine goods completed the long-distance picture. Copper from Lake Superior, dentalium shells from the Pacific Northwest, conch shells from the Gulf Coast, and marine shells from the Pacific Ocean all appear archaeologically in Great Plains and Saskatchewan basin sites. Archaeological explorations at The Forks (confluence of the Red and Assiniboine rivers) have produced items originating as far away as Lake Superior and northern Texas in a context dated to 1000 BCE. The Forks itself was already functioning as a provisioning and transit stop on seasonal migration routes between the northern coniferous forests and the southern plains during this period.[9][10][^11]


III. The Mandan-Hidatsa Hub: The Great Plains Entrepôt

The single most important node in the north–south trade between the Missouri and Saskatchewan watersheds was the cluster of permanent earthlodge villages of the Mandan, Hidatsa, and Arikara peoples along the Missouri River in what is now central North Dakota. As early as 350 CE there existed a highly developed network of trade throughout North America, with these villages serving as primary centres. The Mandan established villages near the Heart River by at least 1450 CE, and the Mandan-Hidatsa complex became known as the "Marketplace of the Central Plains".[11][9]

What made these villages so central was an agricultural surplus — corn, squash, beans, sunflowers, and tobacco — that could be exchanged with surrounding nomadic peoples for bison products, horses, and exotic goods. Visiting peoples included the Cree, Assiniboine, Cheyenne, Crow, Comanche, Kiowa, Arapaho, and Teton Sioux from every direction. Seasonal trade fairs typically occurred in late summer and early fall when the corn was ripe, with Washington Matthews recording that when the Dakota saw the blazing star blooming on the prairie, "they knew the corn was ripe, and went to the villages of the farming Indians to trade". Goods at these fairs could be compared using a standard of value — the buffalo-horse, a horse fast enough to run down a bison.[12][13][14][9]

The Mandan trade network at its height was continental in reach: dentalium shells arrived from the Pacific Northwest, and the villages acted as relay stations through which goods moved between the Missouri basin and the Saskatchewan basin in the north, the Rocky Mountains in the west, and the Missouri Valley in the south and east. Archaeological evidence of copper, Pacific shells, and obsidian at the Knife River villages confirms the physical reality of these recorded exchange relationships.[15][16][^11]


IV. Key Peoples as Brokers of the North–South Exchange

The Assiniboine (Nakoda)

No people were more central to the north–south corridor than the Assiniboine, who split from the Yanktonai Sioux around 1640 and migrated west into the northern plains. By the early 18th century their territory bridged the two watersheds, straddling what is now southern Saskatchewan in the north and the upper Missouri confluence zone in the south. They traded bison meat and pelts south to the Mandan and Hidatsa, receiving corn, squash, beans, sunflowers, and tobacco in return.[13][17]

The pivotal role of the Assiniboine as commercial and geographic intermediaries is illustrated most precisely by the 1738 journey of French explorer Pierre La Vérendrye. Operating from posts in Manitoba near Lake Winnipeg, La Vérendrye accompanied an established Assiniboine trading party south through the Turtle Mountains and along the Souris River, reaching a Mandan earthlodge village on December 3, 1738. His party of 52 people included 25 Assiniboine men and women. The Assiniboine had been conducting these journeys regularly long before La Vérendrye joined them — the route was already worn — and from 1770 to 1778 Assiniboine traders routinely carried corn and furs north from Mandan country up the Souris River to the French post of Fort La Reine, though warned by Sioux not to traffic with Europeans.[18][19][^20]

The Plains Cree

The Plains Cree emerged as major brokers of a different phase of north–south trade after 1670, when they allied initially with the Blackfoot and later with the Mandan to the south. Supplied with European firearms from Hudson's Bay Company posts at the northern end of the exchange chain, the Plains Cree became middlemen sending guns deep into the Blackfoot Confederacy while receiving bison robes, hides, and — crucially — horses in return. The alliance with the Mandan gave the Cree a southern supply of horses as well. This firearms-for-horses circulation, running north to south and south to north simultaneously along the Saskatchewan-Missouri corridor, was one of the most consequential feedback loops in 18th-century Plains history.[21][22]

The Blackfoot Confederacy

The Blackfoot Confederacy (Siksika, Kainai, Piikani) occupied the western flank of the corridor, their territory stretching from the North Saskatchewan River in the north to the Yellowstone River in Montana. Their engagement in north–south trade was inseparable from the diffusion of the horse. Around 1730 the Blackfoot were attacked by Shoshone on horseback — the first time they had encountered horses, which they named "Elk Dogs". Between 1730 and 1750 they acquired their first horses through peaceful trade with their neighbours the Flathead, Kootenai, and Nez Perce, and by the mid-18th century horses had transformed Blackfoot life and trade capacity entirely. When Anthony Henday of the Hudson's Bay Company travelled inland in 1754 and reached a Blackfoot camp of 322 lodges near present-day Red Deer, Alberta, he found a wealthy people confident enough in their resources — horses and buffalo — to decline his invitation to travel north to York Factory to trade.[23][24][25][26][^27]

The Blackfoot's strategic position astride the Old North Trail gave them influence over north–south movement along the foothills corridor. They controlled access to horses for northern peoples and in turn received guns and European goods from Cree and later from HBC and NWC posts on the North Saskatchewan River.[26][27]


V. The Horse Diffusion as a North–South Trade Event (circa 1680–1760)

The northward spread of the horse was itself the most transformative north-to-south trade movement of the pre-settlement era, and it travelled the same corridors as material goods. Horses reached the northern plains gradually from the southwest after the Pueblo Revolt of 1680 released large numbers of Spanish horses into Indigenous hands in New Mexico. Through a combination of trade and raiding, horses reached present-day southern Alberta by the 1720s. The Plains Cree acquired horses by approximately 1730. The Nakoda (Assiniboine) gained mobility on the plains when they obtained horses, allowing them to range much greater distances in pursuit of buffalo and trade. The cultural transformation was noted immediately by visiting Europeans: by the time Henday encountered the Blackfoot in 1754, horse-mounted bison hunting on a massive scale was already the dominant economy of the corridor.[24][28][29][20][^23]

The diffusion was southwest-to-northeast, but it ran through and was mediated by the same Mandan-Hidatsa villages at the Missouri that anchored north–south trade. The Mandan served as relay nodes for horses coming from the south and west and heading north, just as they relayed corn and obsidian in other directions. The Nakoda coached their Cree allies in horse culture as the animals moved northward, completing a chain that linked Mexican plateaus to the Saskatchewan River valley within roughly two generations.[30][1]


VI. Guns Moving South, Horses Moving North: The 18th-Century Exchange Engine

The dominant dynamic of the 18th-century corridor was a counter-flow: firearms and metal goods moved southward and westward from Hudson's Bay Company and later North West Company posts on the Saskatchewan; horses and agricultural products moved northward and eastward from the Missouri villages and the southern horse-breeding networks. The Cree, operating from positions along the North Saskatchewan River, were essential catalysts. Their alliance with the Mandan gave them access to horses; their access to HBC posts gave them guns to sell or trade. The Assiniboine performed a parallel role in the Souris corridor east of the Coteaux.[22][21]

This exchange had geopolitical consequences. Peoples who acquired guns and horses faster than their neighbours could project force across the corridor, displacing others. The Cree and Assiniboine alliance pushed the Atsina (Gros Ventre) out of the Saskatchewan valleys through sustained raids across the 18th century. The Blackfoot, once they acquired both horses and guns through the corridor trade, used their dual advantage to dominate a vast territory and nearly exterminate the Shoshone in battles over hunting territory between 1780 and 1805. Epidemics of smallpox, also moving along the same trade routes, reached the Assiniboine along the Souris in 1782 and cut their population dramatically before they recovered enough to resume trading operations by 1784.[27][20][^21]


VII. The HBC-Mandan Trade: Formal Documentation of the Corridor (1795–1812)

European traders did not create the north–south corridor; they inserted themselves into it. The most direct documentary evidence is the period 1795–1812, when the Hudson's Bay Company formally entered the Mandan trade. On November 12, 1795, HBC employees left Brandon House on the Assiniboine River to travel south to the Mandan villages with North West Company rivals who had already established a trade there. For the next fifteen-odd years, the HBC traded regularly with the Mandan, receiving pelts, provisions, and horses. The NWC had preceded them, and before that, French traders from Montreal had been in the trade as early as La Vérendrye's 1738 journey. The Mandan villages drew Canadian traders, St. Louis traders, and a succession of explorers including Lewis and Clark in 1804, each finding a commercial infrastructure that Indigenous peoples had maintained for centuries.[31][32][33][12]


VIII. The Old North Trail: The Western Corridor

Parallel to and west of the river-based exchange was the Old North Trail, which ran north and south along the eastern face of the Rocky Mountains from the Arctic to Mexico. The Blackfoot describe it as originating in the migration of a great tribe from the distant north, worn so deeply by generations of travellers that travois tracks and horse trails were still visible in the early 20th century. The trail forked near present-day Calgary, with one branch extending north into the Barren Lands and the main trail running south through Montana. Tribes using this corridor included the Blackfoot, Cree, Kootenai, Salish, Gros Ventre, Shoshone, and later the Métis. The Old North Trail served as the "backbone" of a trail system used for over 10,000 years, connecting the Saskatchewan basin in the north to the Missouri and beyond in the south.[34][4][35][36]


IX. Seasonal Migration and Human Movement

Trade and seasonal movement were inseparable. The north–south corridor was traversed not just by dedicated trading parties but by entire peoples following the bison. The great herds moved seasonally, and bands moved with them, creating regular cycles of contact between peoples from different watershed systems. The Assiniboine, for example, inhabited northwest North Dakota, northeast Montana, and southern Saskatchewan simultaneously and seasonally. Many groups used The Forks (present-day Winnipeg) as a rest stop in seasonal migration routes from northern coniferous forests to the southern plains. The Cree's westward expansion during the early 18th century was itself a sustained population movement through the Saskatchewan watershed toward the Missouri corridor.[37][10][38][21]

Inter-marriage was structurally embedded in this mobility. Trading gatherings — whether at the Mandan villages, at Cree meeting points on the Saskatchewan, or at neutral grounds along the Qu'Appelle — were also occasions for diplomatic alliance-making and inter-band marriage. The movement of peoples therefore produced genetic, linguistic, and cultural mixing across the corridor, making the north–south exchange zone a region of continual hybridisation long before the arrival of the Métis as a recognized distinct people.[^39]


X. Disruption and Legacy

The north–south trade system survived — indeed thrived — in the early fur trade era because European traders inserted themselves into existing networks rather than replacing them. The decisive disruptions came in sequence: smallpox epidemics (1781, 1837–38) killed enormous proportions of corridor populations, especially the sedentary Mandan and Hidatsa who were concentrated in villages and therefore most vulnerable to contagion. The drawing of the 49th parallel as an international boundary in 1818 imposed a political line across the corridor's southern Saskatchewan-northern Montana zone that had no precedent in Indigenous geography. The bison herds collapsed by the early 1880s, destroying the economic basis of the nomadic exchange system. And the arrival of the Canadian Pacific Railway in 1883 and the American Northern Pacific in 1881 finally reoriented commerce east–west, along lines of settler agriculture rather than north–south, along lines of bison migration and Indigenous trade.[31][27]

The peoples of the corridor did not vanish. Assiniboine bands settled on reserves on both sides of the Canada–US border in the 1870s. Blackfoot, Cree, and other nations whose territories had straddled the border for centuries found themselves divided between two states. The trade routes, now overgrown or paved over, persist as ghost infrastructure — visible in the alignment of some modern highways, in the place-names of river crossings, and in the archaeological record of stone tools moving from the Missouri basin to the Saskatchewan basin for more than ten millennia.[^13]


References

  • Before the Railway: Trails, Canoes and York Boats
  • Missouri Coteau - University of Regina - The Missouri Coteau, hereafter called “the Coteau,” is a narrow band of prairie upland that stretche...
  • Old North Trail - The Old North Trail which ran through the foothills along the eastern slopes of the Rocky Mountains ...
  • The Old North Trail - Montana Archaeology - I noticed that the Sacred-Texts.com website now has the full text of Walter McLintock's The Old Nort...
  • Obsidian artifacts unearthed in Alberta offer new clues on prehistoric ... - Hand-carved arrowheads and jagged spears made of obsidian, a sharp rock formed by volcanic magma, ar...
  • Canada's Indigenous Communities Operated Vast Obsidian Trade ... - “The sheer scale of obsidian trade tells us that likely millions of people were in contact with one ...
  • TRADE | Encyclopedia of the Great Plainsplainshumanities.unl.edu › encyclopedia › doc › egp.na.117.html
  • Knife River Flint quarries and the Alberta connection - Written by: Emily Moffat, Regulatory Approvals Coordinator, Archaeological Survey of Alberta Stone t...
  • Intertribal Trade | Prairie Public - 8/29/2008: When we think of international commerce; we often think of America’s great cities like Ne...
  • Land use in the precontact period - The Forks National Historic Site - How Indigenous peoples used the land near The Forks for hunting, fishing and other uses before Europ...
  • Tracing ancient trade routes along the Upper Missouri | Buffalo's Fire - The historic journey of the small but culturally potent dentalium shells from the ocean floor of the...
  • Lewis & Clark among the Indians 4. The Mandan Winterlewisandclarkjournals.unl.edu › item › lc.sup.ronda.01.04
  • Fort Union Trading Post - THE ASSINIBOINE - NPS History
  • History of Hidatsa: Pre-1845 (U.S. National Park Service) - Learn about Hidatsa early villages, early explorers, Sacagawea, oral history, education and societie...
  • What Artifacts Have Been Found At The Knife River Villages? - Archaeology Quest - What Artifacts Have Been Found At The Knife River Villages? At the Knife River Indian Villages Natio...
  • Great Plains First Nations trading networks - Wikipedia
  • Fort Union Trading Post
  • Profile: Pierre La Vérendrye | 4th Grade North Dakota Studies - La Vérendrye and his party traveled through the Turtle Mountains and proceeded south to the Missouri...
  • Unit 2: Set 2. La Verendrye visits the Mandan - Introduction - The Assiniboine who were already trading partners led La Verendrye to a Mandan village in 1738. La V...
  • Our Heritage
  • Chapter 3: The Plains Peoples—Allies, Conflict, Adaptation - This chapter looks at the Indigenous peoples of the Prairies within the context of trade, resources,...
  • The Plains Cree: Trade, Diplomacy and War, 1790 to 1870 - Sentence describing this page.
  • Henday, Anthony National Historic Person - Parks Canada - This designation has been identified for review
  • The "Horse Revolution" - Electricity & Alternative Energy - Through a combination of trade and warfare, the horse spread gradually across the North American Pla...
  • The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan
  • 062 The Life of Chief Crowfoot of the Blackfoot, and bears ... - The Blackfoot Confederacy became masters of the horse and gun and used this to control large areas o...
  • Blackfeet Timeline - 1730 Blackfeet attacked by Shoshone on horseback. First time Blackfeet have seen horses which they c...
  • Henday's First Big Journey - Learn Anthony Henday facts for kids
  • [PDF] The Horse in North America - Plains. Cree. 1730. The Horse in. North America. 0. Diffusion route of horses. 200 miles. Map shows ...
  • 8.7 Cultural Change on the Plains - Canadian History: Pre-Confederation is a survey text that introduces undergraduate students to impor...
  • Early Fur Trade on the Northern Plains: Canadian Traders Among the Mandan and Hidatsa Indians, 1738-1818 - Edited by W. Raymond Wood & Thomas D. Thiessen. Softcover, 353 pages.
  • Early Fur Trade on the Northern Plains: Canadian Traders among the Mandan and Hidatsa Indians, 1738-1818.
  • The Hudson's Bay Company Mandan Indian Trade, 1795–1812.
  • The Old North Trail
  • Microsoft Word - Tower Rock State Park REVISED.doc
  • Eighth Street SE & the Old North Trail
  • The Assiniboine - Fort Union Trading Post National Historic Site (U.S. ...
  • History - The Forks National Historic Site - Parks Canada - Learn about the history of The Forks as a traditional Indigenous meeting place to a downtown Winnipe...
  • Section 1: Trade

Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Métis River Lots vs. the Dominion Land Survey: A History of Dispossession

Metis family in Red River cart

 Overview

When Canada purchased Rupert's Land from the Hudson's Bay Company in 1869, it inherited a landscape already deeply inhabited, organized, and culturally meaningful to the Métis people. For generations, Métis communities had divided the land along the banks of the Red, Assiniboine, North Saskatchewan, and South Saskatchewan rivers using a system of long, narrow river lots — thin strips running perpendicular from the riverfront back into the prairie. The imposition of the Dominion Land Survey (DLS) rectangular grid — dividing the prairies into townships, sections, and quarter sections of 160 acres — over these existing land holdings triggered a cascade of conflict, resistance, broken promises, and dispossession that spanned more than six decades, culminating in two armed resistances, widespread Métis displacement, and a landmark 2013 Supreme Court ruling.


The River Lot System: Logic and Cultural Meaning

The river lot system was not an arbitrary or informal arrangement — it was a carefully designed, communally rational land tenure model inherited from the seigneurial tradition of New France and adapted to the prairie landscape. Each lot had a narrow frontage on the river — typically about ten chains (roughly 200 metres, or 660 feet) wide — extending back approximately two miles into the prairie. Beyond the standard two-mile depth, many grants included hay privilege lots, additional strips of prairie extending a further three miles for communal hay-cutting.[1][2]

The genius of the system was multi-dimensional:[3][4]

  • Water access: Every family had direct access to the river for drinking water, fishing, and canoe transport — the primary corridor of movement in the pre-railway era.
  • Fuel and timber: Tree cover along river margins meant each lot included firewood and building materials.
  • Community proximity: Because lots were narrow at the front, homes were built close together along the riverbank, creating a linear but dense village-like social structure — quite unlike the isolated quarter-section homesteads that the DLS system would later produce.
  • Hay and pasture: The rear of the lots provided communal hay land and grazing.

This system had been in continuous use in the Red River Settlement since at least 1813, and Métis communities had extended it westward as they migrated up the North Saskatchewan and South Saskatchewan rivers through the 1860s and 1870s. By the early 1880s, approximately 50 Métis families had claimed river lots around Batoche on the South Saskatchewan alone.[5][6][7][3]


The Dominion Land Survey: A Clash of Geometries

The DLS was designed in conscious emulation of the American township-and-range system, adapted to Canadian specifications. Colonel J.S. Dennis studied the U.S. rectangular system and recommended a grid of eight-mile-square townships divided into 64 sections, each section comprising 800 acres and divisible into four quarter sections of 200 acres. (This was later revised to the more familiar six-mile-square townships of 36 sections, each section one square mile of 640 acres.)[8][9]

The fundamental incompatibility was geometric. River lots followed the organic curves of river channels, their boundaries running perpendicular to the riverbank regardless of cardinal direction. The DLS grid ran on strict north-south and east-west lines, intersecting the sinuous river lots at oblique angles. Where a Métis farmer had cleared and farmed a specific stretch of land for decades, the DLS survey lines might cut across it diagonally, placing portions of the same cultivated field in two or three different sections belonging (in the government's eyes) to different future homesteaders.[^1]

The conflict was also philosophical. The Métis river lot system organized land around a community's relationship with a specific waterway — a living, resource-giving landscape element. The DLS grid treated land as an abstract, fungible commodity: interchangeable squares to be allocated, sold, and developed by an incoming agricultural population. Canada's explicit goal was to populate the vast prairies with European farmers producing export crops, and the grid was the administrative tool for that colonization project.[10][11]


First Confrontation: Red River, 1869

The collision between these two systems produced its first explosion in the fall of 1869, before the formal transfer of Rupert's Land to Canada had even occurred. The Dominion government dispatched survey crews to the Red River Settlement that summer, even though the transfer was not yet complete and the residents had not been consulted. On October 11, 1869, a Métis farmer named Édouard Marion discovered government surveyors working on his land near St. Vital, and summoned his neighbours. A mounted patrol of nineteen unarmed Métis, led by Louis Riel, confronted the survey crew. The crew had been running a base line across Métis river lots for the establishment of a new township north of Ste. Anne.[12][13][^14]

Riel physically stepped on the survey chain — the actual metal measuring chain the surveyors were using — and ordered them to stop. The surveyors withdrew. This act, small in physical scale but enormous in symbolic weight, is recognized as the opening moment of the Red River Resistance.[15][12][^10]

The Métis grievance was precise and concrete: the surveyors were laying out a grid that did not recognize, and in fact crossed over, properties the Métis had occupied and cultivated for generations. Their concern was not abstract nationalism — it was the practical fear that their river lots, homes, gardens, and hay grounds would be overwritten by a survey that treated their land as empty and available.[13][16][^10]

The resistance escalated rapidly. By November 2, 1869, 500 Métis had seized Upper Fort Garry. Riel formed a provisional government, negotiated directly with Ottawa, and produced the list of rights that became the foundation of the Manitoba Act, 1870. The Act created the province of Manitoba and, critically, contained two provisions specifically addressing Métis land:[14][13]

  • Section 31 set aside 1.4 million acres for distribution among the children of Métis heads of families.[17][13]
  • Section 32 guaranteed all existing settlers — Métis and otherwise — "peaceable possession" of the lots they already occupied, and included provisions for the hay privilege outer lots.[^17]

These provisions represented a formal governmental acknowledgment that the river lot system deserved legal recognition. What followed their passage, however, was a systematic betrayal of that promise.


Manitoba Act Betrayed: Delays, Fraud, and Dispossession

The promise of Sections 31 and 32 was almost immediately undermined by federal delay, bureaucratic manipulation, and land speculation. Lieutenant Governor Adams Archibald had devised a straightforward implementation plan: distribute the 1.4 million acres collectively to the Métis, allow individuals to publicly declare ownership of their existing river lots, and register title in those persons' names. Prime Minister John A. Macdonald vetoed this plan.[^18]

Macdonald's strategy, as later documented by historians, was deliberate delay — to stall the settlement of Métis claims until incoming settlers from Ontario outnumbered the original Métis population. Federal tactics included:[19][18]

  • Amending the Manitoba Act in 1874 to require that improvements be made to land before title could be granted — effectively disqualifying approximately 65% of the Métis population who were away hunting buffalo during the required periods.[^18]
  • Changing the official "date of proof of occupation" retroactively to a time when many Métis were absent.[^18]
  • Issuing land scrip (certificates redeemable for land) instead of direct title, making Métis grants vulnerable to speculation.[20][21]

The scrip system, described by Indigenous rights lawyer Jason Madden as "the largest land swindle in North America," was structurally designed to fail. Land assigned to Métis claimants was often located hundreds of kilometres from where they actually lived, requiring complete family relocation to inaccessible, unfamiliar territory. Speculators positioned themselves at the very tents where scrip was distributed, purchasing coupons from impoverished Métis families for a fraction of their face value. Having bought the coupons, speculators redeemed them at Dominion Lands offices for prime agricultural land.[22][23]

Research commissioned in the 1970s by the Manitoba Métis Federation and other Métis organizations documented the scale of the fraud in devastating detail. Analysis of the Section 31 grants found:[^24]

  • Of 6,267 allotments totalling 1,504,080 acres, patents were not found for 1,975 grants covering 473,000 acres.[^24]
  • Proper registration was absent in 2,901 cases covering 696,240 acres.[^24]
  • 529 land grants covering 126,960 acres were sold illegally.[^24]
  • 590 grants consigned to Métis children were obtained by speculators, who earned profits of 100 to 2,000 percent.[^24]
  • Only 2,254 of the total sales could be categorized as legal.[^24]

The Manitoba Métis Federation's 1978 official statement concluded that "all elected representatives as well as members of the bureaucracy knew that the Métis were being exploited and indeed they contributed to the exploitation."[^24]

In the climate of violence and intimidation that followed the arrival of over 1,000 Canadian troops in Manitoba in August 1870 — under Colonel Garnet Wolseley — Métis women were assaulted and men murdered. More than half of the Métis in the new province left for the North-West Territories or Dakota Territory rather than face ongoing persecution. The Red River dispersal was, in the words of historian Douglas Sprague, not the result of any "fatal flaw in the Métis character" but of overwhelming formal and informal pressure orchestrated by the federal government.[19][13]


The Saskatchewan Repetition: 1870s–1885

The Métis who migrated west from Red River to the South Saskatchewan River valley in the 1870s carried a hard-won lesson: they needed to secure their land tenure before the next wave of settlers arrived. They established communities along the South Saskatchewan — at Batoche, St. Laurent, St. Louis de Langevin, St. Antoine de Padoue (Duck Lake), and other river settlements — and laid out their land in the familiar river lot pattern.[6][25]

But the Dominion government's preliminary survey of the South Saskatchewan, conducted in 1878 and 1879, largely ignored the presence of these Métis settlers and their river lots. The surveyors adopted the township system — six-square-mile townships subdivided into 36 sections of 640 acres each, divisible into quarter sections of 160 acres — without adjusting for the existing Métis occupation. The Canadian government was formally obliged to recognize the river lots of settlers who had arrived before the survey; in many cases, it did not.[^9]

The Métis responded through legitimate channels, flooding Ottawa and the Territorial Government in Regina with petitions. The record of this petitioning is extensive and largely futile:[^26]

  • 1872: Métis on the South Branch wrote to the Lieutenant Governor requesting protection of their river lot land rights as new settlers moved in.[^27]
  • 1878: Métis and Old Settlers of Prince Albert petitioned for an immediate survey respecting the river lot system and distribution of scrip.[^26]
  • 1880: Métis of the Edmonton area petitioned for scrip equivalent to that issued under the Manitoba settlement scheme.[^26]
  • 1882: Gabriel Dumont, Jean Carron, and others petitioned Prime Minister Macdonald directly regarding land claims near Batoche.[^26]
  • 1883: The Métis of St. Louis de Langevin petitioned for land rights.[^26]
  • 1882–1885: Multiple petitions from the Batoche region (the Constituency of Lorne) to both Regina and Ottawa — the main concern in every case being recognition of land rights and the surveying of the Métis river lot system.[^28]

Government responses were described as "vague" and no action was taken. By 1884, the Métis demanded that the North-West Territories become a proper province, that they be granted full title to their lands, that surveys recognize the river lot system, and that Louis Riel's leadership be formally acknowledged. In the summer of 1884, a delegation led by Gabriel Dumont travelled to Montana to bring Riel back from exile to lead the cause.[29][25][^28]

The unresolved land conflict — specifically the fear of losing their river lots to the DLS grid, exactly as they had lost land in Manitoba — was the central, animating grievance. As the University of Saskatchewan's Indigenous Encyclopedia states: the Métis "feared the loss of their land as they watched surveyors imposing upon their long narrow river lots the Canadian township system which divided the land into squares."[25][29]

In January 1885, the government responded by saying it would not negotiate with Riel and would only consider Métis demands if those demands were submitted through proper bureaucratic channels. On March 18, 1885, Riel declared a provisional government. The conflict escalated to armed confrontation at Duck Lake, then to the siege at Batoche, where 300 Métis and allied First Nations fighters held off 800 Canadian militia troops from May 9 to 12, 1885. After three days, the Métis were forced to surrender. Riel was captured, tried for treason, and hanged in Regina on November 16, 1885. Several Métis fighters were also hanged.[30][29][^6]

The aftermath of 1885 at Batoche was especially bitter: the community lost people, leaders, lands, and houses. However, in a belated acknowledgment that the land grievances had been legitimate, the government in 1888 resurveyed townships 42, 43, 44, and 45 along the South Saskatchewan, dividing portions into river lots 8–10 chains wide and one mile deep — finally reconciling, in a small area and too late, the key grievance of the Métis population.[31][30]


The Road Allowance People: The Final Dispossession

The defeat of 1885 and the failure of the scrip system left the majority of prairie Métis landless. Having been dispossessed of their river lots and unable to redeem scrip for adjacent land, Métis families dispersed into the parkland fringes. Many squatted on the only Crown land that no one else wanted: the narrow road allowances — strips of land 66 feet wide left between surveyed homesteads by the DLS for future road construction.[32][33][34][35]

These "road allowance communities" became a defining feature of post-1885 Métis life on the prairies. Dozens of such communities emerged in Saskatchewan, Manitoba, and Alberta — including Spring Valley (near Prince Albert National Park), Chicago Line (Qu'Appelle Valley), Ste. Madeleine (Manitoba), and Round Prairie (Saskatchewan). Because road allowance dwellers paid no taxes (they owned nothing), their children were excluded from provincially funded schools, compounding social marginalization across generations.[34][36][^32]

The situation worsened after the Natural Resources Transfer Act of 1930, which transferred administration of Crown lands to the prairie provinces. Saskatchewan began disbanding road allowance communities through "false relocation programs and burning of homes," alongside removal of Métis children. Between roughly 1930 and 1960, most road allowance communities were broken up, often by force.[37][35][38][32]


Legal Reckoning: The 2013 Supreme Court Decision

The chain of broken land promises finally reached Canada's highest court in Manitoba Métis Federation Inc. v. Canada (Attorney General), 2013 SCC 14. The case, launched in 1981 after 26 years of litigation, asked the Supreme Court to declare that the federal government had failed to implement the land provisions of the Manitoba Act in accordance with the honour of the Crown.[^39]

On March 8, 2013, the Supreme Court ruled in favour of the Métis. The Court found that the federal government's actions amounted to a "persistent pattern of inattention" — it had failed to diligently fulfil its solemn obligation to quickly and efficiently allocate the promised 1.4 million acres to Métis children, thereby violating the honour of the Crown. The Court stopped short of finding a breach of fiduciary duty (because Métis land interests had historically been individual rather than collective), but its recognition of the honour of the Crown principle created a new constitutional basis for Métis land claims going forward.[40][41][42][39]

The decision did not restore lost lands; it established that a wrong had been done and that the government must engage in reconciliation. The full implications for land restitution remain contested.


Legacy and Interpretation

The historiography of this conflict contains a genuine scholarly debate. Thomas Flanagan (University of Calgary, historical consultant to the federal Department of Justice) argued that the federal government substantially fulfilled the land provisions of the Manitoba Act, and that Métis dispersal resulted from rational individual decisions rather than government conspiracy. Douglas Sprague, a historian retained by the Manitoba Métis Federation, concluded the opposite: that a deliberate federal conspiracy, orchestrated at the highest levels including Prime Minister Macdonald, systematically deprived the Métis of their promised lands through bureaucratic manipulation, delay, and complicity in speculation.[43][19][^17]

The 2013 Supreme Court decision and the body of documentary evidence accumulated by Métis political organizations since the 1970s largely supports the Sprague interpretation — that the failure of the land system was not accidental but institutional.[40][24]

What is not in dispute is the outcome: a people who had built a coherent, water-oriented, community-based land system across the river valleys of western Canada were overwritten by a geometric grid designed for an entirely different economic purpose, and the legal protections theoretically afforded them by Confederation were systematically denied. The river lot — a form of land tenure perfectly adapted to prairie river ecologies and community cohesion — survived in only a few places, most visibly in the street patterns of Winnipeg, where the diagonal traces of old Métis lots remain embedded in the urban grid as a physical record of what was lost.[^1]


References

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  • A Common Métis Way of Life: River Lots - Métis River Lots were an important part of the common Métis way of life that developed across west c...
  • Manitoba Land Survey Systems
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  • Preliminary Survey of the South Saskatchewan River - Largely ignoring the presence of the Metis and their river lot land division ... Various Metis commu...
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38. [The Métis after 1885 – Indigenous Voices Learning Modules](https://www.saskoer.ca/indigenousvoices/chapter/the-metis-after-1885/) - <p><!–a=1–></p>

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