On October 21st, 1869, Riel and a group of Comité members met in St. Norbert to discuss a plan to stop McDougall from entering the territory. A group of Métis militia built a three-foot-tall wood barrier blocking the Pembina Trail crossing. In the afternoon of the 21st, in addition to the barrier, about forty armed men were patrolling the area.
Alex McArthur, a HBC employee reports:
“…on a cold raw morning in the last days of October, 1869, I was approaching the River Salle (sic), some nine or ten miles south of Fort Garry…when word came from a house on the wayside that we should be stopped before crossing the river. When within a few hundred yards of the bridge an obstruction, something like a pole fence, appeared across the whole width of the road, which on either side was here bounded by poplar woods.
A few men with guns in their hands were standing on the other side of the barricade. One of their number was dispatched to a tannery which stood in a hollow close by the bridge, and in a few minutes returned with someone having authority. After a few questions some poplar poles were thrown aside from the slight construction in front of us, and we were allowed to pass through… we were told that the rather simple looking obstruction across the road was intended to keep out Governor McDougall and his whole retinue and, strange as it may seem, it effected this purpose.” (Métis Museum – La barriere)
The barrier was successful and prevented the government officials from occupying the territory and proving that the Métis would resist being taken over. This was the start of the Red River Resistance which ended in the creation of the Manitoba Act that officially declared Manitoba a province.
In 1906 a stone cross was erected by L’Union Nationale Métisse de St. Joseph near the La Salle river in honour of this event. The text of the monument reads,
“Here Nov. 1st, 1869 the Métis “barred” the road to the envoys of the Canadian government on their way to Fort Garry to establish a new government. The intervention of the Métis forced the authorities to undertake negotiations which brought about the creation of Manitoba and enshrined the rights of the population of Red River.”
The memorial now sits at Place St. Norbert. La Barriere park is also named after this historic event.
Sources and More Information
Manitoba Historical Society – Red River Resistance
Métis Museum – La barriere
Letter Authorizing Movement of La Barriere Cross
Derrick Nault – La Barriere Monument
Centre du Patrimonie – Souvenir de la Barriere
Manitoba Culture, Heritage and Citizenship – St. Norbert
The Metis and the Spirit of Resistance – Metis Museum
Report of the Select Committee on the Causes of the Difficulties in the North-West Territory in 1869-70 (1874)