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Louis Riel

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Louis Riel Famous memorial

Birth
Saint-Boniface, Greater Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Death
16 Nov 1885 (aged 41)
Regina, Regina Census Division, Saskatchewan, Canada
Burial
Saint-Boniface, Greater Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada GPS-Latitude: 49.8892593, Longitude: -97.1230927
Memorial ID
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Canadian Political Figure. Born the eldest son of Julie Lagimonière and Louis Riel, who were Franco-Chipewyan Métis, in Saint-Boniface, in the Red River Settlement in present-day Manitoba, Canada. In 1849, his father organized a broad-scale Métis resistance to the Hudson's Bay Company fur-trading monopoly, apparently setting the tone for his life. At 13, he was given the scholarship to study at a Sulpician school in Montreal. While in the seminary he met Marie-Julie Guernon and they became engaged, but her parents refused to allow her to marry a Métis, and the engagement was broken. He then left the seminary and returned to Red River. There he became the secretary for the Métis National Committee, organized to protect the social, cultural, and political status of the Métis. He would later be elected the Committee president, and under his tenure, the committee halted Canadian land surveys, established a roadblock to prevent William McDougall, a Canadian expansionist, from entering the Red River, and seized Upper Fort Garry from the Hudson's Bay Company. The Métis National Committee was consolidated as a provisional government in late 1869, it issued a "Declaration of the People of Rupert's Land and the North-West," which rejected Canada's authority to govern the Northwest and proposed a negotiated settlement between Canada and them. At a meeting in January 1870, delegates drew up a "List of Rights," which they wanted met. The provisional government obtained an agreement with the Canadian government, embodied in the Manitoba Act which had the Province of Manitoba enter the Confederation. In the summer of 1870, Riel fled to the United States to avoid retaliatory military action. He returned to Canada a year later when he was denounced as a murderer by the establishment, but hailed as a hero in Manitoba as the defender of Catholicism and French culture. The federal government granted him amnesty that was conditional to five years of banishment. He, however, suffered a "nervous breakdown" and after some time in an asylum in Quebec, in January 1878, he traveled to Keesville, New York. Between 1879 and 1883 he was in Montana Territory, and there married a Métis woman, Marguerite Monet. In June 1884, he returned to Canada to aid a Métis contingent in the Saskatchewan Valley. At a meeting in March 1885, he drafted a 10-point "Revolutionary Bill of Rights." The federal government sent 500 soldiers in answer to the Métis petitions. He led the Métis to seize the parish church at Batoche, form a provisional government, and demanded the surrender Fort Carlton. The Canadians eventually defeated the Métis, and Riel surrendered himself to the Canadian militia. In July 1885, he was put on trial for treason. He argued that Métis actions in 1870 and 1885 had been justifiable, but a jury pronounce him guilty, and while they recommended clemency, none was forthcoming. Appeals were dismissed, and he was publicly executed, 16 November 1885, in Regina.
Canadian Political Figure. Born the eldest son of Julie Lagimonière and Louis Riel, who were Franco-Chipewyan Métis, in Saint-Boniface, in the Red River Settlement in present-day Manitoba, Canada. In 1849, his father organized a broad-scale Métis resistance to the Hudson's Bay Company fur-trading monopoly, apparently setting the tone for his life. At 13, he was given the scholarship to study at a Sulpician school in Montreal. While in the seminary he met Marie-Julie Guernon and they became engaged, but her parents refused to allow her to marry a Métis, and the engagement was broken. He then left the seminary and returned to Red River. There he became the secretary for the Métis National Committee, organized to protect the social, cultural, and political status of the Métis. He would later be elected the Committee president, and under his tenure, the committee halted Canadian land surveys, established a roadblock to prevent William McDougall, a Canadian expansionist, from entering the Red River, and seized Upper Fort Garry from the Hudson's Bay Company. The Métis National Committee was consolidated as a provisional government in late 1869, it issued a "Declaration of the People of Rupert's Land and the North-West," which rejected Canada's authority to govern the Northwest and proposed a negotiated settlement between Canada and them. At a meeting in January 1870, delegates drew up a "List of Rights," which they wanted met. The provisional government obtained an agreement with the Canadian government, embodied in the Manitoba Act which had the Province of Manitoba enter the Confederation. In the summer of 1870, Riel fled to the United States to avoid retaliatory military action. He returned to Canada a year later when he was denounced as a murderer by the establishment, but hailed as a hero in Manitoba as the defender of Catholicism and French culture. The federal government granted him amnesty that was conditional to five years of banishment. He, however, suffered a "nervous breakdown" and after some time in an asylum in Quebec, in January 1878, he traveled to Keesville, New York. Between 1879 and 1883 he was in Montana Territory, and there married a Métis woman, Marguerite Monet. In June 1884, he returned to Canada to aid a Métis contingent in the Saskatchewan Valley. At a meeting in March 1885, he drafted a 10-point "Revolutionary Bill of Rights." The federal government sent 500 soldiers in answer to the Métis petitions. He led the Métis to seize the parish church at Batoche, form a provisional government, and demanded the surrender Fort Carlton. The Canadians eventually defeated the Métis, and Riel surrendered himself to the Canadian militia. In July 1885, he was put on trial for treason. He argued that Métis actions in 1870 and 1885 had been justifiable, but a jury pronounce him guilty, and while they recommended clemency, none was forthcoming. Appeals were dismissed, and he was publicly executed, 16 November 1885, in Regina.

Bio by: Iola



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  • Maintained by: Find a Grave
  • Added: Dec 31, 1998
  • Find a Grave Memorial ID:
  • Find a Grave, database and images (https://www.findagrave.com/memorial/4228/louis-riel: accessed ), memorial page for Louis Riel (22 Oct 1844–16 Nov 1885), Find a Grave Memorial ID 4228, citing Saint Boniface Cathedral Cemetery, Saint-Boniface, Greater Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada; Maintained by Find a Grave.