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1885: Metis Rebellion or Government Conspiracy?
1885: Rebellion or Resistance?
Explains why the Metis prefer to use the word resistance to describe the conflicts labelled as the Red River Rebellion and North West Rebellion by the Canadian government and press.
The 18th Century Western Cree and Their Neighbours: Identity and Territory
Aboriginal Archery and European Firearms on the Northern Great Plains and in the Central Subarctic: Survival and Adaptation, 1670-1870
Aboriginal Peoples and Postsecondary Education in Canada
Adventures of a Surveyor in the Canadian Northwest, 1880-1883
Assignment: “The 1885 Rebellion”
Bibliographie: Louis Riel c. Canada: les années rebelles
Most references published in English.
Bibliography from Louis Riel c. Canada: les années rebelles.
Big Bear at Stony Mountain Penitentiary
The Birth of Western Canada: A History of the Riel Rebellions
Butler’s “Great Lone Land”
Canada and the Métis, 1869-1885
Canada. Department of Northern Affairs and National Resources
Capturing Women: The Manipulation of Cultural Imagery in Canada's Prairie West
Changes Come to the Canadian Prairies
Focuses on the numbered treaties and their effect on First Nations and the Métis, and the causes and impacts of the North-West Resistance. Intended for Grade 10 Social Studies students.
Chapter from Horizons: Canada's Emerging Identity, 2nd Edition, by Michael Cranny.
Chapter 8: The Métis [Notes]
For use with chapter from the Grade 7 Social Studies textbook Voices and Visions: A Story of Canada.
Chapter XVII -- "The Hudson's Bay Company"
Chapter XX -- "The Rebellion of 1885"
Chief One Arrows Spirit Returns Home to People
The Commission of 1885 to the North-West Territories
The Common and Contested Ground: A History of the Northwestern Plains from A.D. 200 to 1806
Contrasting Worlds
Overview of Métis history from the 1600s to the early 1870s when many Métis migrated from Manitoba to Saskatchewan. Includes questions for students.
2nd edition.
The Cypress Hills Massacre—A Century’s Retrospect
The Diaries of Louis Riel
An Episode of the North-West Rebellion 1885
“Eskimo” Immigrants and Colonial Soldiers: Icelandic Immigrants and the North-West Resistance, 1885.
From Fireside to TV Screen Self-Determination and Anishnaabe Storytelling Traditions
From Wooden Ploughs to Welfare: Why Indian Policy Failed in the Prairie Provinces
The Fur Trade and Western Canadian Society 1670-1870
Gabriel Dumont : The Métis Chief and His Lost World
The Great Lone Land: A Narrative of Travel and Adventure in the North-West of America
The Half-Breed "Rising" of 1875
Haunted Prairie: Aboriginal 'Ghosts' and the Spectres of Settlement
Histoire abrégée de l'Ouest Canadien: Manitoba, Saskatchewan, Alberta et Grand-Nord
History of Saskatchewan and the Old North West
The History of the North-West Rebellion of 1885
Homeland to Hinterland: The Changing Worlds of the Red River Metis in the Nineteenth Century
Indian Record (Vol. 36, Nos. 5-6, May-June, 1973)
Indian Record (Vol. XXIII, No. 2, February, 1960)
L' Insurrection du Nord-Ouest, 1885
Jemmy Jock Bird: Marginal Man on the Blackfoot Frontier
[John Franklin Boyd]
Notes and sketches from a trip taken by John Franklin Boyd in July and August, 1885, from Minnedosa, Manitoba to visit Prince Albert and the places involved in the North-West Rebellion.