Métis Red River Carts. One of the intrinsic symbols of Métis identity is the Red River Cart. The

Similar documents
The Beginnings Of Wheeled Transport In Western Canada

KEY WEAPONS OF WWI. Gas Tanks Machine Guns Rifles and bayonets Grenades Artillery Submarines Flame Throwers Airplanes and zeppelins


The Industrial Revolutions: How do we prepare? Wonkoo Lee Department of Chemistry Sogang University, Seoul, Korea

Corduroy Road. Corduroy road

Inventing the Wheel IT S A MAN-MADE INVENTION, IT HAS COMPLETELY CHANGED THE WAY WE LIVE, AND IT S EVERYWHERE IN THE WORLD. WHAT IS IT? THE WHEEL!

CHAPTER 1 INTRODUCTION. 2) Lifting. Design and fabrication of universal action bullock cart

The Registration Exemption and Reciprocity Regulations, 2014

A traditional semi-elliptical Hotchkiss leaf spring arrangement. On the left, the spring is connected to the frame through a shackle.

GetWorksheets.com. Henry Ford

Bill Harley and Arthur Davidson. Innovation on Two Wheels

SAMPLE PAGE. Trains Express Lapbook. Any Age. A Journey Through Learning

INNOVATION BUILT INTO EVERY TRAILER A HERITAGE OF CONTENTS

Part C: World War I Trench Warfare

Monitoring the Canadian Grain Handling and Transportation System. Annual Report Crop Year. Data Tables

The Cauldron / Gazala, 1942 A Flames of War Mega-Game Scenario

More than 7,600 Canadian troops died fighting in the Netherlands. The last months of the Second World War, The Canadian military was given the

WOMEN AT WAR: RAILWAY WORKERS

welcome to the BC Hydro community open house

HORSE TRAILERS. Best in Class

1918 Nash-Quad: Predecessor to the Willys 4x4 and Others?

INNOVATION BUILT INTO EVERY TRAILER A HERITAGE OF CONTENTS

Donkey cart axles and harnessing material development in South Africa

THE GREAT PROVINCIAL OBSTACLE COURSE

SCIENCE 8. Unit 4 Booklet. Machines and Mechanical Systems

Construction of the Alcan Highway One of the Top 10 Construction Achievements of the 20th Century

Fuel Focus. Understanding Gasoline Markets in Canada and Economic Drivers Influencing Prices. Volume 6, Issue 23

Historic Transportation Discovery Box and Guidebook Index

tailored exercises for students preparing for this section in important tests and examinations. This newly added component of the O-Level English

Coal-Mining. By: Lakyn Wallace

Poster book. by Marvin T. Broyhill. Copyright All rights reserved. May not be used in whole or in part without prior written consent.

The Ex - AF Corse, Murphy Prototypes, Le Mans Veteran 2013 Oreca 03 R LMP2 Chassis Number: 18

Electric system improvements near you

henry ford Differentiated reading passages

conversation SHAPE the May 2015 The AUC

COMPANY COMMANDER SUPPORT WEAPONS TACTICAL BRIEFING ON SUPPORT WEAPONS

Fabtron Corporation 1820 S. Sprott St Auburn, IN 46706

EARLY YEARS DEVELOPMENT

The Picton/Mittagong line was opened in March 1867 as part of the Main South line.

How to Store a Billion Beans [Language Arts]

Preserving Railroad History along the Donner Pass Route. A Tale of Two Locomotives (and Their Donner Route Connections)

Star Windmill History

Fuel Focus. National Overview. Recent Developments. In this Issue. Volume 11, Issue 13 June 24, 2016 ISSN

TODAY S ELECTRIC SOLUTION: THE PERFECT CITY CHOICE

Furness Railway Wagon Co. NBR/LNER 8ton 3PLK General Merchandise Wagon

TOPICS for DISCUSSION

Biofuel Potential for Transport Sector in Sudan

ADVANCED DESIGN BUSHELS PER MINUTE

JOHN COOPER WORKS TUNING MINI COOPER S

U-Joints versus Constant Velocity Joints: What's the best choice for a driveline?

Evaluation Report 48

The "Flying Shuttle"

THE WAY WE MOVE LRT FOR EVERYONE

Fuel Focus. Understanding Gasoline Markets in Canada and Economic Drivers Influencing Prices. Volume 10, Issue 4

Tigercat. Gary Olsen International Sales Manager

Coal and its Transportation Introduction

The World s Largest Non-Powered Ground Support Equipment Manufacturer

INFRASTRUCTURE AND TRANSPORTATION ADVERTISING SCHEDULE 2015/2016 CONSTRUCTION AND MATERIAL SUPPLY TENDERS

SOUTHWEST CALGARY RING ROAD (SWCRR)

Toro. Dingo. Compact Utility Loaders

British Motor Company

Explaining AER Setbacks

A century of history

Kettle River Transmission Project

Figure 36 The view of the gantry from the stores boat during World War 2.

Grade 4. Practice Test. Alternative Fuel Cars Electric Cars: History and Future. Photo Credits (in order of appearance): Idealink Photography/Alamy

09 - Summer 2015 Rockhill-Orbisonia Segment 2

Project from

Government of Canada Hopper Car Fleet

WELCOME. North Central LRT Open Houses. June 11, Ascension of Our Lord School June 12, Winston Heights June 13, Thorncliffe Community Hall

The Steam Engine and Industrialization

Furness Railway Wagon Co.

Secretary's Statistical Report Quarterly

Supplemental Historical Background for Lake Sangraco and the Kershaw Ditch, Adams County, Colorado

Name: Class Period: Date:

Insert Company Logo Here. Co-operation! Graham Snape UKTI South East. 8 th November 2012 Doha

FOREIGN CURRENCIES EXCHANGE RATES As of April 9, 2018 RATE IN CANADIAN $ FOR COUNTRY CURRENCY PRICING PURPOSES

PROSPERITY IN THE 1920 S

Buy The Complete Version of This Book at Booklocker.com:

GRWW1 5b Zeppelin airships

The Cherokee establish a culture that is much like the white settlers culture in order to live peacefully.

Retroautos. Designing the 1963 Buick Riviera The style Endures. It s about the cars! Collectible & Classic

STATUS OF THE U.S. REFINING INDUSTRY

Innovation... Refined! Lower profile, gentler conveyor design for easier, smoother self-filling and unloading

House of Commons Standing Committee on Agriculture and Agri-Food: Perception of Public Trust in the Canadian Agriculture Sector

Ultimate mobile, industrial grade, self-contained multipurpose structure.

British Destroyers And Frigates: The Second World War And After By Norman Friedman READ ONLINE

AND THROUGH THE SMOKE WE CAN SEE CLEARLY NOW!

Java Sugar Mill Blog Part 13 (Unlucky for Olean!) 9 August 2017 Olean, Prajakan and on to Jember

Fixing America s Surface Transportation (FAST) Act

EMPLOYEES' MEETINGS THE AU SABLE NEWS. Michael Sol Collection. Page Seven

Appropriate Size D.C. Power Supplies For Heritage Electric Tramways. Richard Clarke BE MEngSc MIEAust MIEEE Chief Engineer, Sydney Tramway Museum

Trench: A History Of Trench Warfare On The Western Front (General Military) By Stephen Bull

Facilities List Alberta Facilities that Accept Hydrovac Waste

ROPE DANCER INSTRUCTION MANUAL:

Bohn to Kettle River Transmission Project

Evaluation Report 124

MIFACE INVESTIGATION: #01MI015

HARLEY DAVIDSON 1940 WLA 750 CC 2 CYL SV

WOLVERINE TO BHP JANSEN NEW TRANSMISSION LINE PROJECT FALL 2017

Transcription:

Métis Red River Carts One of the intrinsic symbols of Métis identity is the Red River Cart. The Red River cart has become, like the fur trade sash, a passionate and powerful symbol of Métis nationhood in Western Canada. These noisy but versatile carts crisscrossed what are now the Prairie Provinces, North Dakota, Montana and Minnesota. Among First Nations and Euro-North Americans the carts became identified with the Métis. In fact, Plains First Nations sign language for the Métis literally meant half-wagon, half-man! While the inspiration for the Red River Cart came from European carting traditions, the materials used were indigenous to the Plains and its construction was distinctly Métis. A typical Red River Cart had a box measuring two metres in length, a metre in height and half a metre in width. Its axles were two metres long, its wheels over half a metre in diameter and its shafts, measuring four metres each, ran from the box to the horse or ox. Its hubs were usually made from elm, wheel rims from ash or oak, and the axle from maple. All the carts wooden pieces were fashioned together by sinew and rope. When the carts broke down, all that was needed for their repair was a bluff of trees, an axe, a saw, a screw auger, and a draw knife. Even the nails on a Métis-made Red River Cart were wooden, unlike the metal nails used by the fur trade companies. Red River Carts made a terrible squealing noise when they moved because their wooden axles and wheels could not be effectively lubricated. A First Nations legend maintains that the

bison deserted the Plains because they wanted to escape from the hideous noise of the carts! The first carts were quite small. Larger, better-constructed carts made their way onto the transportation scene around the start of the nineteenth century, possibly by 1803, when improved wheels were being manufactured. These larger, spoked wheels were dished, or curved inward, and provided greater stability and handling. For the Métis, the Red River Cart was an all purpose utility vehicle and a makeshift home. Métis families used Red River Carts to move their possessions while migrating or resource harvesting. The carts also provided migrating Métis with temporary living quarters and shelter from the elements. Women fashioned decorated covers for the carts from bison hides or canvas, which were supported by an arched frame of cut saplings. When disassembled, Red River Carts also became temporary rafts for water crossings. Once its wheels were removed and reattached under the box and its bottom was enclosed, in a buffalo hide tarp the cart and its cargo could be rafted across rivers and streams. In the winter, the Red River Cart s passenger box, when placed on runners, served as a temporary horse-drawn sleigh. The Red River Cart was also used as a defensive mechanism when the Métis were threatened. When the Métis had frequent battles over the control of bison hunting grounds with the Lakota Sioux in the 1840s and 1850s, they often formed compact defensive circles with their Red River Carts when they met Lakota war parties. Inside the circle, women, children, and animals

could hide safely, while men, old and young, would man the defences. At the Battle of Grand Coteau in 1851, the Métis dug trenches and rifle pits around their defensive circle of Red River Carts and won a resounding victory against the Lakota Sioux. Henceforth, the Sioux, impressed by Métis courage and martial skills, never made war with the Métis again. Some even fought with the Métis during the 1885 Resistance. The Boers, Dutch farmers in South Africa, used a similar tactic against the Zulus and the British. Red River Carts revolutionized the way trade goods were transported in the western interior of North America before the advent of railways and automobiles. A horse-powered Red River Cart could transport the same amount of cargo as four packhorses. Horse-drawn Red River Carts were able to carry more than 200 kilograms at a rate of up to 80 kilometres a day. The same carts pulled by oxen could carry almost 500 kilograms at a rate of about 30 kilometres a day. By tying several carts together, one person could control a team of oxen and carts and usually avoid getting stuck in mud, a common problem for individual carts. These innovations decreased freighting costs, while increasing the amount of goods transported. Red River Carts hauled such goods as pemmican, buffalo hides, furs, moccasins, decorated tanned skin clothes, sugar, tobacco, tea, powder, shot, bullets, point blankets, cloth, vermilion, axes, knives, files, copper kettles, guns, and alcohol. As the Métis became free traders in the 1830s and 1840s, Red River Carts eventually superseded York Boats in the volume of freight hauled. By 1869, approximately 2,500 carts left the Red River Settlement for St. Paul,

Minnesota, outside of the jurisdiction of the Hudson s Bay Company. Cart trails established by Métis freighters connected trading centres and posts, a vital development in flood prone areas such as the Missouri, Red and Assiniboine river basins. The most important Red River Cart trails connected the Red River Settlement to what is now Pembina, North Dakota, and St. Paul, Minnesota. Other trails paralleled settlements along the Assiniboine River from Portage La Prairie and then Fort Ellice. At this point, the trail divided into two, with one branch going to Fort Pelly in the north while the other moved westward to Fort Qu Appelle, in present-day southeastern Saskatchewan. This western branch then split with one segment tracing its way to the Cypress Hills while the other segment going to Batoche, Fort Carleton, Battleford, and the vicinity of Edmonton. Carts were also used to transport goods into the forest. Prior to the building of the railways in the early twentieth century in northeastern Alberta, cart transportation actually superseded watercraft use. For instance, in 1889, all the goods received at Lac La Biche arrived overland via freighters from Calgary. The cost for shipping materials along this route was $5.50 for first class freight, $5.24 for second class freight and $4.90 for third class freight. Carts transported goods from St. Paul, Minnesota to Lac La Biche then York Boats hauled the cargo down the Athabasca River. With the coming of transcontinental railways in the late nineteenth century, opportunities to haul freight on Red River Carts greatly diminished. However, even as Euro-Canadian and European homesteaders entered the Prairie West, the Métis used Red River Carts to haul wood, seneca root,

buffalo bones, and other raw materials to market. Today, throughout western North America, many museums and local heritage centres have samples of Red River Carts on display. In places such as the Métis Farm, in Lebret, Saskatchewan, the Métis still make Red River carts to better connect with the lives of their ancestors.

Adapted From: Préfontaine, Darren R., Paquin Todd, and Young Patrick. Traditional Métis Transportation. http://www.metismuseum.ca/media/document.php/00728.pdf