Thomas Douglas, 5th earl of Selkirk, had …

Years: 1816 - 1816
June

Thomas Douglas, 5th earl of Selkirk, had in 1811 obtained from the Hudson’s Bay Company an extensive grant of land in Canada’s valley of the Red River of the North (the area around present-day Winnipeg, Manitoba).

Selkirk had become interested in the concept of settling the area after reading Alexander Mackenzie's 1801 book on his adventures in what is today the west of Canada.

At the time, social upheaval in Scotland due to the introduction of sheep farming and the ensuing Highland and Lowland Clearances have left a number of Scots destitute.

In purchasing a controlling interest in the Hudson's Bay Company and setting up the land grant, his objective is to gain control of the area to take control of the West from the company's rival, the Montreal-based North West Company.

Selkirk had sent out a small group of Scots to the area in 1811, but they were forced to pause for the winter in York Factory.

When they finally arrived in 1812, they built Fort Douglas, but by the time it was done, the growing season was over.

When farming started the next spring, the results were less than expected.

In 1814, Miles MacDonell, Governor of the Red River Colony, had issued the Pemmican Proclamation, which prohibited the export of pemmican from the colony for the next year.

This may have been to ensure food for the colony, or a business move to cut off the Nor'Westers.

Either way, the move touched off the Pemmican War.

The Nor'Westers, who rely on pemmican supplied to them by local Métis, were so upset that they destroy Fort Douglas and burned down all the buildings around it.

The fort was later rebuilt and relations settled down for a time.

Later in 1815, after several conflicts and apparently suffering from "severe emotional instability", MacDonell had resigned as governor of the Red River Colony.

Selkirk, hearing of the problems, has sent out a new governor, Robert Semple, an American businessman with no previous experience in the fur trade.

In 1816, a band of mostly Métis but including some French-Canadians, English, and Native American employees, led by Cuthbert Grant and working for the North West Company, seizes a supply of Hudson's Bay Company pemmican (that was stolen from the Métis) and are traveling to a meeting with traders of the North West Company to whom they intend to sell it.

They are met by Semple and a group of HBC men and settlers south of Fort Douglas along the Red River at a location known to the English as Seven Oaks, or la Grenouillière (Frog Plain) by the Métis.

The North West Company sends a French-Canadian, François-Firmin Boucher, to speak to Semple's men.

He and Semple argue, and a gunfight ensues when the English try to arrest Boucher and seize his horse.

Semple and his men have no chance against the Métis, who are skilled sharpshooters and outnumber Semple's forces by nearly three to one.

The Métis repulse the attack, killing twenty-one men, including Governor Semple.

Although early reports will state that the Métis had fired the first shot and begun the fray, Royal Commissioner W.B. Coltman will determine with "next to certainty" that one of Semple's men had fired first. (The Metis: Memorable Events and Memorable Personalities, by George and Terry Goulet, published 2006)

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