Written by the medical doctor who examined Riel three times to determine his sanity while he was imprisoned after the 1885 Resistance and awaiting trial.
Originally published in the American Journal of Insanity, July 1887.
A Short History and Description of Ojibeway Indians Now On a Visit to England with Correct Likenesses, Engraved from Daguerreotype Plates, Taken by M. Claudet
A Short History and Description of Ojibway Indians Now On a Visit to England with Correct Likenesses, Engraved from Daguerreotype Plates, Taken by M. Claudet
Biographical account of William Henry Jackson's {also known as Honoré Joseph Jaxon) involvement in the 1885 Rebellion as Louis Riel's secretary. Smith examines Jackson's political and religious beliefs, his trial and charge of treason felony and the question of his sanity.