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5. [Bird’s-eye view MAP of] WINNIPEG 1884
W. G. Fonseca Mortimer & Co. Ottawa, 1884
SCARCE. Colour Lithograph 29 x 39 ½" (73.5 x 100.5 cm)
Ref. LRA934/ENN/dd.sa > DOLN PRICE CODE F
A splendid full colour lithographed birds-eye view plan of the city of Winnipeg, Manitoba at the height of its boom era. From the humble beginnings of the Selkirk settlement in 1811-20, it was still a "miserable looking village" (pop 1000), according to Captain Butler when he saw it in 1870. Centered on Douglas Point at a bend in the Red River, the original settlement site. The city's phenomenal expansion and population growth from 8, 000 souls in 1880 to over 30,000 by 1884 is well illustrated by this plan.
Main St. had been the principal route between Upper Fort Garry and the settlement, with Queen St, (Portage Avenue), at its intersection with Main, was the termination of the old fur traders route down the Assiniboine River, giving rise to the commercial sector which sprang up along these streets. With the opening of the Hudson's Bay Company's reserve (between Queen and the Assiniboine River on the plan) in the 1880's, the fashionable residential district gravitated to that sector from Douglas Point. The north and east sectors were rapidly occupied by new immigrants following the arrival of the CPR. Whilst across the Red River the once important transportation center of St. Boniface, has been dwarfed into insignificance by Winnipeg's expansion.
A border containing 22 inset views of prominent commercial, residential, religious and educational buildings vividly portray the city's prosperity, amongst which are included the old and new Hudson's Bay stores and a view of the 1871 village. All in all, a spectacular example of a north-american birds-eye view plan. Such plans were prepared from ground sketches of the buildings and lithographic stones, to give the illusion of the entire city seen from a thousand feet up. They were frequently used to promote immigration to or advertize the prosperity of the location illustrated.
An example of this plan was exhibited in Treasures of the National Map Collection Exhibition, Ottawa 1982/3, #66.
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North West Territories 1870 -1884… a time of transition
Prior to the early 1870’s there were virtually no settlements in the North West Territories or Rupert’s Land save for a few scattered missions and H.B.C. posts. (see map item 11) Rather than turn to an agricultural existence in the Red River Settlement many Métis decided to follow the disappearing buffalo herds into the North West Territory, (see item 10) returning each winter to temporary settlements along the North and South Saskatchewan rivers and in the Qu’Appelle Valley. Following the insurrection in the Red River Settlement the permanent Métis settlements of St. Albert (1866) and St. Laurent (1871) were founded. By 1873 the latter, named Grandin, had established a successful form of self-government under Gabrielle Dumont.
Development in the Canadian Northwest, while slower than that of the northwestern United States, but was achieved without the humiliating spectacle of the Indian wars that have stained the history of U.S. expansionism. This was partly as a result of the respect gained by Indian, Half-breeds and whites alike for the peace keeping efforts of N.W.M.P. (see item 12) A job made more difficult for the presence amid the Blackfeet and Cree Indians of Sitting Bull and his Sioux Indians, who had migrated to Canada following the battle of the Little Big Horn (25 June 1876). There they were joined by survivors of Chief Joseph’s Nez Percé War (1879). That the peace and good relations was maintained in Canada was due largely to the enlightened presence of Assistant Commissioner Maj. James F. MacLeod and his 150 officers.
White settlement of the Northwest also developed around missions, such as at Prince Albert’s Presbyterian mission (1866); Hudson’s Bay forts, such as Fort Edmonton (1846); Telegraph line stations, such as Battleford, the surveyor’s headquarters and by 1877 the capital of the North West Territories; or N.W.M.P. posts, such as Fort Calgary (1875). Settlement was also stimulated by the rapid growth of the Canadian Pacific Railway toward the west in the 1880’s. The decision to take the southern route resulted in the capital of the North West Territories being transferred to Regina in 1883, the site being selected by H.R.H. the Princess Louise, wife of Gov. Gen. The Marquis of Lorne. The year before the territories had been divided into four provisional districts to facilitate the postal service.
The challenge of opening up the west brought development and prosperity for the white man (see item 9) but spelled disaster for the Indiansand near extinction for the buffalo (see item 10). The repeating rifle and pot hunting gave impetus to wholesale slaughter. The resulting disappearance in the early 1880’s of the buffalo meant dependence on charity, in time of need and abject starvation for many Indians, Métis and half breeds. Charity which had been officially denied them by the Ottawa government in an effort to persuade them to remain on their reserves.
Treaties confining the free-roaming hunters of the plains to reserves proved very disagreeable and an infringement of their liberty and ancestral way of life. Factors which readily fomented dissent and gave Louis Riel the following he needed. He answered the call of his people from Montana, where he had been living with his family since 1879, and was escorted to Batoche by Dumont in June 1884.
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9. EMIGRANT TRAIN, ASSINEBOINE VALLEY/FACTOR RESIDENCE, FORT ELLICE/ A PIONEER STORE/
Three wood engraved lithographs. Published in Munro Grant. Picturesque Canada 1882.
8 x 6 3/8" & 8 5/8 x 6 3/8" (20.4 x 16.2 & 21.9 x16.2 cm.)
Ref. LRA72/-/r.dosl>DSN PRICE CODE B
Three iconic views on two pages depicting life in the North West territories. This area was being homesteaded in the early' 1880's and both the H.B.C. trading post and the pioneer store serviced the long winding trains of pioneers, freighter's wagons and Red River carts plying their way toward a new, if difficult, future and the expansion of Canada. The eerie screech of the un-greased axles of the Red River carts was heard for many miles across the Prairie heralding the new era.
10. HALF BREED CAMP / AT THE FOOTHILLS OF THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS
Two wood engraved lithographs. Published in Munro Grant. Picturesque Canada 1882.
7 5/8 x 6 5/8" & 6 5/8 x 9" (19.4 x 16.8 & 16.8 x 22.8 cm.)
Ref. LRA73/-/r.dosl> DSL PRICE CODE B
Two more iconic images of the North West, a double-sided view of a typical travelling camp of the half breed and Métis people who having sold (usually for a pittance) their scrip to a developer, were now on the move north west. They largely just wanted to live in peace and at one with the land (despite the adoption of the cast iron cooking pot and the Red River Cart) as their forbears had done. On the reverse is a fine view of the once plentiful herds of North American Bison or Buffalo on whom the Métis culture largely depended. It is believed that the bison once numbered about 60 million. Wanton, systematic extermination at the instigation of the white man over a 15 year period reduced their numbers to less than 1000 throughout the continent - despicable carnage, and we call ourselves civilized ! (Fortunately, more enlightened conservation in the following century brought their numbers back from near extinction.)
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11. WESTMACOTT - MANITOBA & NORTH WEST TERRITORY
PROVINCE OF MANITOBA AND PART OF THE DISTRICT OF KEEWATIN AND NORTH WEST TERRITORY SHEWING THE TOWNSHIPS & SETTLEMENTS TO 1876
Colour Lithograph Map. published by H. Beldon, Toronto 1876 [1878]
16 1/4 x 251/8" (41.2 x 63.8 cm.)
Ref. LRA Atlas 2 1229/AN/g.door> AOL PRICE CODE B
A splendid and decorative map depicting the Province of Manitoba and North West Territory, shewing the townships and settlements, mounted police posts, Dawson Route to Winnipeg. The cart trail to the North West Territory, CPR only as far as Livingstone, post offices, forts, churches and mills, topographical features, Indian reserves and tribal areas ceded and surveyed areas. The map is adorned with images of steam boats, bison, railway engine, indian settlements making it an attractive acquisition for any western collection. On the verso are depictions of houses in Northumberland County, Ont. including that of Dr. Herriman and Col. A.H.T. Williams (who led the charge at Batoche) in Port Hope.
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