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Manitoba Act

The Manitoba Act provided for the admission of Manitoba as Canada’s fifth province. It received royal assent and became law on 12 May 1870. It marked the legal resolution of the struggle for self-determination between people of the Red River Colony and the federal government, which began with Canada’s purchase of Rupert’s Land in 1870. The Act contained protections for the region’s Métis. However, these protections were not fully realized. As a result, many Métis left the province for the North-West Territories.

North-West Territories, 1870

Rupert’s Land and the Métis

Beginning in 1670, the Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) held legal control over all lands whose waters drained into Hudson Bay. Known as Rupert’s Land, this territory included all of present-day Manitoba. The HBC’s policies in the region included limiting the number of white migrants who could settle in the area. The Métis population, as a result, became predominant. The Métis were the offspring of European fur traders — mostly French, Scottish and Irish — and local Indigenous people. By 1870, the Métis population in the Red River Valley was estimated at 10,000 people.

Westward expansion by the United States became an increasing concern of the Canadian government. It jeopardized Prime Minister John A. Macdonald’s vision of a Canadian nation extending from sea to sea. As a result, the government began a policy of encouraging Western immigration. It also negotiated the purchase of Rupert’s Land from the HBC.

The influx of new settlers into the region caused fear among the Métis. They saw their way of life endangered, including their French and Roman Catholic heritage; their system of land ownership and governance; and their reliance on the land, including the fur trade and the buffalo hunt.

Buffalo Hunting in the Summer, by artist Peter Rindisbacher, ca. 1822.

Credit: Library and Archives Canada, Acc. No. 1981-55-69

      Red River Resistance

      Local anxiety, especially over Métis land rights, led to demands by local people for a voice in creating the terms under which the Red River Colony would be incorporated into Canada. A popularly elected convention, reflecting the settlement’s cultural diversity, supported the creation of a provisional government. It was led by Louis Riel and was considered illegal by Ottawa.

      Riel then led the Red River Resistance against the federal government. During the unrest that followed, Riel’s order to execute Thomas Scott deeply divided Canadians along French/English lines. Riel was depicted as either a hero or an outlaw. Many, particularly Protestants from Ontario, wanted Macdonald to take action against the Riel insurgents. However, Macdonald chose to negotiate. Three Red River delegates were sent to Ottawa for this purpose.

      Four successive lists of rights were drafted by the provisional government. The final version became the basis of federal legislation creating Manitoba. The final list demanded that Manitoba be admitted into Confederation as a province, not a territory; that the lieutenant governor of the new province speak French and English; and that members of the provisional government not face legal consequences for their actions in the Resistance.

      Louis Riel and the Provisional Government
      Riel's (centre) first provisional government, 1869.
      Courtesy Glenbow Archives/NA-1039-1

      Legislation

      The Manitoba Act received royal assent and became law on 12 May 1870. Due to the position of strength of the Métis, and with the support of Quebec, the Manitoba Act essentially established a Métis province. Macdonald thought the creation of a new province was premature. At its inception, Manitoba was a much smaller piece of geography, centred on present-day Winnipeg. With its small population and size, the province could not support itself financially. Macdonald’s reservations may have also reflected his concerns that the majority of inhabitants in Manitoba did not possess Ontarian or British roots.

      Despite Macdonald’s reluctance, Manitoba entered Confederation as a province. English and French-language rights were safeguarded in the new legislature and the courts; as were Protestant and Roman Catholic educational rights. The right to education in either English or French, however, was not protected. Ottawa agreed to pay subsidies to the provincial government; roughly 1,400,000 acres of land were set aside for the Métis; and the province received four seats in the federal Parliament. This was strong representation considering the small population.

      Unlike in other provinces at the time, the federal government retained control of Manitoba's natural resources; in particular unallocated land, which was to be sold to support the building of the Canadian Pacific Railway. The railway became a magnet for immigration. The new province of Manitoba thus entered Confederation as a province unlike the original four. Its creation revealed Ottawa’s resolve to control Western development.

      Manitoba Coat of Arms
      (artwork by Karen E. Bailey, courtesy Library and Archives Canada)

      Failures

      Many of the Manitoba Act’s promised benefits were short-lived. Ottawa moved 1,500 troops into the province, and White settlers began to arrive in large numbers. Protestant Ontarians regarded Manitoba as a “half-breed” province. This spiteful attitude was reflected in future actions.

      The Métis were not able to acquire their land rights until proper surveying of the land was done. This took up to three years to complete. In lieu of land, many Métis families were issued scrip entitling them to 64 hectares of land. The scrip was a promissory note on a piece of paper. The Métis had little exposure to the financial and legal systems of eastern Canada, including deeds, money and written laws. Not knowing the value of the piece of paper, many Métis were cheated out of their entitlement by more savvy speculators.

      Métis land scrip
      Métis scrip issued for the purchase of dominion lands, 1905.
      (courtesy Library and Archives Canada / Wikimedia CC)


      The federal government also passed several laws affecting how the Métis land distribution was to take place. An example is the Dominion Lands Act of 1872. It favoured the occupation of land by newly arrived (non-Métis) settlers. It is debatable whether Ottawa intentionally impeded the allotment of land grants; or if this was the result of poor administration and lack of competence. But the fact remains that as little as 15 per cent of the original 1.4 million acres promised under the Act were ever distributed.

      The bilingual merits of the Manitoba Act were extended to the remainder of the North-West Territories in 1875. But most of these bilingual and bicultural provisions were abolished between 1890 and 1905, creating a unilingual West.

      Ultimately, many Métis found themselves migrating further westward to pursue and maintain their traditional lifestyle. Many settled in the area of Batoche, in present-day Saskatchewan. It was the scene of an even bloodier uprising against federal authority in 1885.

      See also North-West Resistance; Manitoba and Confederation; Manitoba Schools Question; Reserves in Manitoba; French in the West; Francophones of Manitoba.