Cypress Hills Massacre: Difference between revisions
Removed unnecessary characterisation of the incident ('...was a mass murder...') which is not supported by citations and attempts to rewrite the perspective of history in 21st-century PC terms. There is no place in an encyclopedia for this sort of thing. |
No edit summary |
||
Line 12: | Line 12: | ||
}} |
}} |
||
The '''Cypress Hills Massacre'''<ref name="encsas">{{cite encyclopedia| last = Hildebrandt| first = Walter| title = Cypress Hills Massacre| encyclopedia = The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan| publisher = University of Regina| url = http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/cypress_hills_massacre.html| accessdate = 2008-03-28| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080317002819/http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/cypress_hills_massacre.html| archive-date = 2008-03-17| url-status = dead}}</ref><ref name="nhsc"/><ref name="parks">[http://www.pc.gc.ca/eng/lhn-nhs/sk/walsh/natcul/histo.aspx#Cypress The Cypress Hills Massacre] at [[Parks Canada]]</ref> occurred on June 1, 1873, near [[Battle Creek (Milk River)|Battle Creek]] in the [[Cypress Hills (Canada)|Cypress Hills]] region of Canada's [[North-West Territories]] (now in [[Saskatchewan]]). It involved a group of American [[Bison hunting|bison hunters]], American [[Wolf hunting|wolf hunters]] or "[[wolfers (hunting)|wolfers]]", American and Canadian whisky traders, [[Métis people (Canada)|Métis]] cargo haulers or "freighters", and a camp of [[Assiniboine]] people. |
The '''Cypress Hills Massacre'''<ref name="encsas">{{cite encyclopedia| last = Hildebrandt| first = Walter| title = Cypress Hills Massacre| encyclopedia = The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan| publisher = University of Regina| url = http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/cypress_hills_massacre.html| accessdate = 2008-03-28| archive-url = https://web.archive.org/web/20080317002819/http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/cypress_hills_massacre.html| archive-date = 2008-03-17| url-status = dead}}</ref><ref name="nhsc"/><ref name="parks">[http://www.pc.gc.ca/eng/lhn-nhs/sk/walsh/natcul/histo.aspx#Cypress The Cypress Hills Massacre] at [[Parks Canada]]</ref> occurred on June 1, 1873, near [[Battle Creek (Milk River)|Battle Creek]] in the [[Cypress Hills (Canada)|Cypress Hills]] region of Canada's [[North-West Territories]] (now in [[Saskatchewan]]). It involved a group of American [[Bison hunting|bison hunters]], American [[Wolf hunting|wolf hunters]] or "[[wolfers (hunting)|wolfers]]", American and Canadian whisky traders, [[Métis people (Canada)|Métis]] cargo haulers or "freighters", and a camp of [[Assiniboine]] people. or more and one wolfer died. The Cypress Hills Massacre prompted the Canadian government to accelerate the recruitment and deployment of the newly formed [[North-West Mounted Police]]. |
||
==Incident== |
==Incident== |
||
The incident began in the spring of 1873 when a small party of Canadian and American wolfers, led by Thomas W. Hardwick and John Evans, |
The incident began in the spring of 1873 when a small party of Canadian and American wolfers, led by Thomas W. Hardwick and John Evans, returning from their winter hunt. While they camped on the [[Teton River (Montana)|Teton River]] . that their horses stolen the men travelled to [[Fort Benton, Montana Territory]], about five miles, for assistance them <ref name=":1" /> own to retrieve the stolen horses. The party numbered 13 men, and Canadian free traders and .<ref name=":1">{{Cite journal|url = |title = Massacre at Cypress Hills: A Whoop-Up Country Preview|last = Sharpe|first = Paul, F.|date = Winter 1954|journal = The Montana Magazine of History|doi = |pmid = }}</ref> |
||
The group quickly travelled from Fort Benton northward across the border in pursuit of the stolen horses. They eventually arrived at Abe Farwell's |
The group quickly travelled from Fort Benton northward across the border in pursuit of the stolen horses. They eventually arrived at Abe Farwell's small trading post located the [[Cypress Hills (Canada)|Cypress Hills]] region. While there they George Hammond, who had been selling whisky the . Hammond Hardwick group in the search for the horses.<ref>{{Cite book|title = Clearing the Plains: disease, politics of starvation, and the loss of Aboriginal life|last = Daschuk|first = James|publisher = University of Regina Press|year = 2013|isbn = 978-0-88977-296-0|location = Regina|pages = 81}}</ref> |
||
Farwell had assured Evans that Little Soldier, the leader of a small band of Assiniboine camped near the trading post, had no horses with them. After a brief search it was determined by the group that Little Soldier showed no evidence that he had stolen their horses, so Evans, Hammond, and the rest of the wolfers retired for the night to Farwell's trading post, where they spent the evening and the next morning drinking Farwell's whisky with a group of recently arrived Métis freighters. |
|||
In response, Hammond grabbed a rifle and started towards Little Soldier's camp. He insisted that the rest of the wolfers join him and forcibly take back his horse. The wolfers, along with the Métis, followed Hammond towards the Assiniboine camp. Historical accounts differ on what happened during the skirmish, as there were no reliable testimonies. Abe Farwell testified that he tried to restrain Hammond in an attempt to avoid any violence.<ref name=":0" /> Hammond approached Little Soldier's tent asking about the missing horse. Little Soldier replied that his group had not stolen the horse but that it was grazing on a nearby hill. Both Little Soldier and Hammond's parties were intoxicated and negotiations between them fell through. Little Soldier was willing to avoid violence and gave Hammond two of his horses as hostage until the missing horse could be found. This did not avoid violence as the situation became increasingly tense as women and children were seen fleeing from the camp, and the Native men taking off their garments in preparation for violence.<ref name="Friesen">Friesen, Gerald. ''The Canadian Prairies a History''. Student ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1987.</ref>{{rp|135}} The wolfers regarded these actions as a signal for a fight and lined up along a riverbank fifty yards outside the Assiniboine camp. Seeing these preparations, Little Soldier asked Hammond why his group was taking such menacing positions. In a last ditch effort to avoid violence Farwell pleaded with the wolfers, asking them not to shoot at the Natives especially when there was a white man among them. Before he could continue negotiating with Little Soldier and the wolfers, Farwell saw Hammond fire his rifle at the Natives. The rest of the wolfers, protected by the tall river bank, fired volleys onto the camp. The Assiniboine, using inferior weapons, attempted to return fire, but were unable to sustain an attack due to the wolfers' superior position and surprise.<ref name=":0" /> They did manage to kill one wolfer, a French Canadian named Ed Legrace. The number of casualties differs from accounts but the number of Assiniboine deaths was higher than twenty. In the personal account of Donald Graham, who joined the wolfers at Fort Benton and travelled with them to Cypress Hills, mentions that there were only 13 Indians dead. After the battle, the wolfers buried Legrace in a Native cabin and set the building ablaze. His wooden coffin still remains there to this day.<ref>{{Cite book|title = As Long as the Sun Shines and Water Flows: A Reader in Canadian Native Studies|last = Getty|first = Ian|publisher = University of British Columbia Press|year = 1983|isbn = |location = British Columbia|pages = 235}}</ref> |
|||
In the morning Hammond complained that one of Little Soldier's men had stolen his horse for a second time<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|title = The Cypress Hills: the land and its people|last = Hildebrandt|first = Walter|publisher = Purich Publishing|year = 1994|isbn = 1-895830-02-8|location = Saskatoon|pages = 68|last2 = Hubner|first2 = Brian}}</ref>, and started towards Little Soldier's camp, insisting that the rest of the wolfers join him to retrieve his horse. The wolfers, along with the Métis, followed Hammond to the Assiniboine camp. |
|||
Historical accounts differ on what happened during the skirmish, as there were no reliable testimonies. The best information states that: |
|||
* Abe Farwell testified that he tried to restrain Hammond in an attempt to avoid any violence.<ref name=":0" /> |
|||
* Hammond approached Little Soldier's tent asking about the missing horse. |
|||
* Little Soldier replied that his group had not stolen the horse but that it was grazing on a nearby hill. |
|||
Both Little Soldier's and Hammond's parties were intoxicated, and negotiations between them fell through. Little Soldier offered Hammond two of his horses as hostages until the missing horse could be found, but the situation became increasingly tense as women and children began fleeing from the camp and Little Soldier's men began stripping off their garments in preparation for battle.<ref name="Friesen">Friesen, Gerald. ''The Canadian Prairies a History''. Student ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1987.</ref>{{rp|135}} |
|||
The wolfers regarded these actions as a signal for a fight and lined up along a riverbank fifty yards outside the Assiniboine camp. In a last-ditch effort to avoid violence, Abe Farwell pleaded with the wolfers, asking them not to start shooting. Before he could continue negotiating with Little Soldier and the wolfers, Farwell saw Hammond fire his rifle. The rest of the wolfers, protected by the tall river bank, then fired volleys into the camp. The Assiniboine, using inferior weapons, returned fire, but were unable to sustain an attack due to the wolfers' protected position.<ref name=":0" /> |
|||
The total number of casualties reported differs widely in various accounts. One of Hardwick's men--Ed Legrace--was killed, but the number of Assiniboine casualties was higher. In the personal account of Donald Graham, who joined the wolfers at Fort Benton and travelled with them to the Cypress Hills, he states that 13 of Little Soldier's men were killed in the exchanges of fire. After the battle, the wolfers buried Legrace in a cabin and set the building ablaze. Some sources claim that Legrace's wooden coffin still remains there to this day.<ref>{{Cite book|title = As Long as the Sun Shines and Water Flows: A Reader in Canadian Native Studies|last = Getty|first = Ian|publisher = University of British Columbia Press|year = 1983|isbn = |location = British Columbia|pages = 235}}</ref> |
|||
The site of the massacre was designated a [[National Historic Sites of Canada|National Historic Site of Canada]] in 1964.<ref name="nhsc">{{CRHP|9307|Cypress Hills Massacre|17 August 2012}}</ref> Artifacts from the Cypress Hills Massacre have also been preserved at nearby Fort Walsh National Historic Site, along with reconstructions of Farwell's and Solomon's trading posts. |
The site of the massacre was designated a [[National Historic Sites of Canada|National Historic Site of Canada]] in 1964.<ref name="nhsc">{{CRHP|9307|Cypress Hills Massacre|17 August 2012}}</ref> Artifacts from the Cypress Hills Massacre have also been preserved at nearby Fort Walsh National Historic Site, along with reconstructions of Farwell's and Solomon's trading posts. |
||
Line 25: | Line 38: | ||
==Aftermath== |
==Aftermath== |
||
[[File:Nwmp 1900.jpg|thumb|North-West Mounted Police, 1900]] |
[[File:Nwmp 1900.jpg|thumb|North-West Mounted Police, 1900]] |
||
News of the Cypress Hills Massacre did not reach Ottawa until late August 1873, therefore the event itself was not very well known in Canada. The Canadian government soon took steps to have those involved extradited from the United States and tried for |
News of the Cypress Hills Massacre did not reach Ottawa until late August 1873, therefore the event itself was not very well known in Canada. The Canadian government soon took steps to have those involved extradited from the United States and tried for , causing confrontation between Canada and the United States. The case languished for some time and then was taken up by the newly created [[North-West Mounted Police]] (NWMP). The NWMP at this time was still establishing itself the . |
||
===Investigation and Trials=== |
|||
⚫ | In December 1874, Assistant Commissioner [[James Macleod]] was given permission by the U.S. government to enter [[Helena, Montana|Helena, Montana Territory]] to start an investigation into the Cypress Hills Massacre. the findings of this investigation, the accused extradition to Canada to face arrests were made, but two men escaped custody before they could . The remaining were there was not enough clear evidence to prove anything against American commissioner refused the extradition request as there was far too much conflicting testimony. charged with false arrest charge was soon dropped. |
||
In June, 1876, shortly after they were released from custody in the United States, two traders and a wolfer crossed the border into Canada and were subsequently arrested and put on trial in Winnipeg. The Crown's case against them failed, however, once again weakened by insufficient or contradictory evidence. The three men were acquitted, and the case was finally dropped in 1882.<ref name="Kelly">Kelly, William & Nora. "The Horses of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police: A Pictorial History" Doubleday Canada Ltm. Toronto, Ontario. 1984</ref> <ref name="Kelly"/> |
|||
===Trial and investigation=== |
|||
⚫ | In December 1874, Assistant Commissioner [[James Macleod]] was given permission by the U.S. government to enter [[Helena, Montana|Helena, Montana Territory]] |
||
W. E. Cullen, the American commissioner, said at the extradition hearing at Helena: although the "preponderance of testimony is to the effect that the Indians commenced the firing |
W. E. Cullen, the American commissioner, said at the extradition hearing at Helena: although the "preponderance of testimony is to the effect that the Indians commenced the firing... they were doubtlessly provoked to this by the apparently hostile attitudes of the whites... An armed party menacing their camp, no matter for what purpose, was by no means slight provocations."<ref name="Kelly"/> |
||
===Creation of the North-West Mounted Police=== |
===Creation of the North-West Mounted Police=== |
Revision as of 01:17, 1 October 2020
Cypress Hills Massacre | |
---|---|
Location | Saskatchewan, Canada |
Nearest city | Maple Creek No. 111 |
Coordinates | 49°32′57″N 109°52′05″W / 49.54917°N 109.86806°W |
Year of event | 1873 |
Designated | 1 January 1964 |
The Cypress Hills Massacre[1][2][3] occurred on June 1, 1873, near Battle Creek in the Cypress Hills region of Canada's North-West Territories (now in Saskatchewan). It involved a group of American bison hunters, American wolf hunters or "wolfers", American and Canadian whisky traders, Métis cargo haulers or "freighters", and a camp of Assiniboine people. Thirteen or more Assiniboine warriors and one wolfer died in the conflict. The Cypress Hills Massacre prompted the Canadian government to accelerate the recruitment and deployment of the newly formed North-West Mounted Police.
Incident
The incident began in the spring of 1873 when a small party of Canadian and American wolfers, led by Thomas W. Hardwick and John Evans, was returning from their winter hunt. While they were camped on the Teton River, their horses disappeared overnight. Presuming that their horses had been stolen by 'Indians', the men travelled on foot to Fort Benton, Montana Territory, about five miles, and asked for assistance from the local authorities to retrieve them. The authorities at Fort Benton refused to assist them, however, [4] so Hardwick organised his own expedition and set off to retrieve the stolen horses. The party numbered 13 men, comprising both U.S. and Canadian 'free traders' and wolf-hunters.[4]
The group quickly travelled from Fort Benton northward across the border in pursuit of the stolen horses. They eventually arrived at Abe Farwell's small trading post located in the Cypress Hills region. While there, they encountered George Hammond, a friend of both Evans and Hardwick, who had been selling whisky in the area. Hammond subsequently joined Hardwick's group in the search for the missing horses.[5]
Farwell had assured Evans that Little Soldier, the leader of a small band of Assiniboine camped near the trading post, had no horses with them. After a brief search it was determined by the group that Little Soldier showed no evidence that he had stolen their horses, so Evans, Hammond, and the rest of the wolfers retired for the night to Farwell's trading post, where they spent the evening and the next morning drinking Farwell's whisky with a group of recently arrived Métis freighters.
In the morning Hammond complained that one of Little Soldier's men had stolen his horse for a second time[6], and started towards Little Soldier's camp, insisting that the rest of the wolfers join him to retrieve his horse. The wolfers, along with the Métis, followed Hammond to the Assiniboine camp.
Historical accounts differ on what happened during the skirmish, as there were no reliable testimonies. The best information states that:
- Abe Farwell testified that he tried to restrain Hammond in an attempt to avoid any violence.[6]
- Hammond approached Little Soldier's tent asking about the missing horse.
- Little Soldier replied that his group had not stolen the horse but that it was grazing on a nearby hill.
Both Little Soldier's and Hammond's parties were intoxicated, and negotiations between them fell through. Little Soldier offered Hammond two of his horses as hostages until the missing horse could be found, but the situation became increasingly tense as women and children began fleeing from the camp and Little Soldier's men began stripping off their garments in preparation for battle.[7]: 135
The wolfers regarded these actions as a signal for a fight and lined up along a riverbank fifty yards outside the Assiniboine camp. In a last-ditch effort to avoid violence, Abe Farwell pleaded with the wolfers, asking them not to start shooting. Before he could continue negotiating with Little Soldier and the wolfers, Farwell saw Hammond fire his rifle. The rest of the wolfers, protected by the tall river bank, then fired volleys into the camp. The Assiniboine, using inferior weapons, returned fire, but were unable to sustain an attack due to the wolfers' protected position.[6]
The total number of casualties reported differs widely in various accounts. One of Hardwick's men--Ed Legrace--was killed, but the number of Assiniboine casualties was higher. In the personal account of Donald Graham, who joined the wolfers at Fort Benton and travelled with them to the Cypress Hills, he states that 13 of Little Soldier's men were killed in the exchanges of fire. After the battle, the wolfers buried Legrace in a cabin and set the building ablaze. Some sources claim that Legrace's wooden coffin still remains there to this day.[8]
The site of the massacre was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1964.[2] Artifacts from the Cypress Hills Massacre have also been preserved at nearby Fort Walsh National Historic Site, along with reconstructions of Farwell's and Solomon's trading posts.
Aftermath
News of the Cypress Hills Massacre did not reach Ottawa until late August 1873, therefore the event itself was not very well known in Canada. The Canadian government soon took steps to have those involved extradited from the United States and tried for murder, causing confrontation between Canada and the United States. The case languished for some time and then was taken up by the newly created North-West Mounted Police (NWMP). The NWMP at this time was still establishing itself; the battle between the Assiniboine warriors and Hardwick's group of wolf-hunters at Cypress Hills was one of the catalysts for its creation.
Investigation and Trials
In December 1874, Assistant Commissioner James Macleod was given permission by the U.S. government to enter Helena, Montana Territory to start an investigation into the Cypress Hills Massacre. Depending upon the findings of this investigation, the accused could have faced extradition to Canada to face trial under Canadian law. Seven arrests were made, but two men escaped custody before they could be examined. The remaining men were freed because there was not enough clear evidence to prove anything against them, and the American commissioner refused the extradition request as there was far too much conflicting testimony. The Canadian Comissioner (Macleod) was subsequently charged with false arrest, but this charge was soon dropped.
In June, 1876, shortly after they were released from custody in the United States, two traders and a wolfer crossed the border into Canada and were subsequently arrested and put on trial in Winnipeg. The Crown's case against them failed, however, once again weakened by insufficient or contradictory evidence. The three men were acquitted, and the case was finally dropped in 1882.[9] [9]
W. E. Cullen, the American commissioner, said at the extradition hearing at Helena: although the "preponderance of testimony is to the effect that the Indians commenced the firing... they were doubtlessly provoked to this by the apparently hostile attitudes of the whites... An armed party menacing their camp, no matter for what purpose, was by no means slight provocations."[9]
Creation of the North-West Mounted Police
It is very difficult to measure the impact that the Cypress Hills Massacre had on Canada and the United States. The creation of the North-West Mounted Police (NWMP, later the Royal Canadian Mounted Police), was introduced partially as a result of the massacre. Around this time, the Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba, Alexander Morris, was concerned about perceived threats of violence to uniformed Canadians and Americans conducting geological surveys. As a result, Morris had to call off any further surveying until there was a solution. Unable to find a solution, Morris used the reports of the massacre to call on the Prime Minister of Canada, Sir John A. Macdonald, to create a police force. Already planning to establish a police force in the North-West Territories, Macdonald had envisioned a horse mounted brigade based on the idea of the Royal Irish Constabulary. The force would be small; only 300 men could enlist. For an area that covered 480 000 square kilometres,[9] the force would have to be as mobile as possible. Alexander Campbell, the minister of the interior, did not believe sending an armed police force into the North-West Territories was necessary at this time, causing Morris to fear that any delay in training and deployment could be exacerbated further once winter fell. To force their creation, Morris claimed that the Métis and white settlers in the area around Portage la Prairie and Fort Qu'Appelle were experiencing fear and unrest due to the massacre.[9] On September 25, 1873, the government of Canada passed an order-in-council to appoint nine officers of "Mounted Police Force for the North-West Territories". Recruitment began immediately, and the North-West Mounted Police was created. With the new police force patrolling the area, the border could no longer be so easily crossed.[9]
The creation of the police force also had a political motive. The investigation into the massacre was to ensure that First Nations in the area were able to trust the Canadian government. The investigation would require international cooperation of two federal governments, and the North-West Mounted Police would take measures to make examples out of international criminals. Although ultimately no prosecution took place, the willingness to seek justice for any Canadian contributed to the establishment of peace between the NWMP and First Nations.[9]
As time went on the Cypress Hills Massacre gradually became part of popular knowledge about Canada's past even though the event was never fully closed and dealt with.
In media
When the news of the Cypress Hills Massacre broke into eastern Canada, it introduced a wave of anti-Americanism. In the news, the American men were described as "American gangsters" and "American scums". The idea that only American frontiersmen could commit this outrage had been maintained in many Canadian written accounts of the massacre. Canadians were not only shocked that the Americans committed such a crime in their country, but now the media was putting an increased negative view on Americans. Canadians believed that Americans would continually murder people on Canadian soil.[10] This fear was summed up by General Philip Sheridan's infamous statement to Tosawi of the Comanche, "The only good Indians I ever saw were dead."[10]
Although Canadians also took part in the Cypress Hills Massacre, it remains overlooked in western Canadian history. Even though it took place in Canada, the massacre represented a temporary extension of American frontier mentality into the Canadian North-West.
In fiction
A fictionalized account of the events of the Cypress Hills Massacre is told in the novel The Englishman's Boy by Canadian author Guy Vanderhaeghe.[11] The story focuses in part on the character of the "Englishman's boy", one of the members of the party of wolfers. While little is known of those involved in the actual event, the novel attributes the cause of the massacre to one Tom Hardwick, the "lead" wolfer. The book was made into a miniseries that first appeared on CBC Television in March 2008.
The movie The Canadians was another fictionalized version. The Cypress Hills Massacre is also used as the plot centrepiece for the Terrance Dicks novel Massacre In the Hills which charts the beginning of the NWMP.
See also
References
- ^ Hildebrandt, Walter. "Cypress Hills Massacre". The Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. University of Regina. Archived from the original on 2008-03-17. Retrieved 2008-03-28.
- ^ a b Cypress Hills Massacre. Canadian Register of Historic Places. Retrieved 17 August 2012.
- ^ The Cypress Hills Massacre at Parks Canada
- ^ a b Sharpe, Paul, F. (Winter 1954). "Massacre at Cypress Hills: A Whoop-Up Country Preview". The Montana Magazine of History.
{{cite journal}}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ^ Daschuk, James (2013). Clearing the Plains: disease, politics of starvation, and the loss of Aboriginal life. Regina: University of Regina Press. p. 81. ISBN 978-0-88977-296-0.
- ^ a b c Hildebrandt, Walter; Hubner, Brian (1994). The Cypress Hills: the land and its people. Saskatoon: Purich Publishing. p. 68. ISBN 1-895830-02-8.
- ^ Friesen, Gerald. The Canadian Prairies a History. Student ed. Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1987.
- ^ Getty, Ian (1983). As Long as the Sun Shines and Water Flows: A Reader in Canadian Native Studies. British Columbia: University of British Columbia Press. p. 235.
- ^ a b c d e f g Kelly, William & Nora. "The Horses of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police: A Pictorial History" Doubleday Canada Ltm. Toronto, Ontario. 1984
- ^ a b Marty, Sid. Leaning on the Wind: Under the Spell of the Great Chinook. Custer, Washington: Heritage House Publishing Company, 2009. 64-65.
- ^ Thacker, Robert (2003). "Introduction: No Catlin Without Kane; or, Really Understanding the "American" West". American Review of Canadian Studies. 33 (4): 459–471. doi:10.1080/02722010309481361.
Further reading
- Allen, Robert S. (2011). "A Witness to Murder: The Cypress Hills Massacre and the Conflict of Attitudes towards the Native People of the Canadian and American West during the 1870s". In Lussier, Antoine S. (ed.). As Long as the Sun Shines and Water Flows: A Reader in Canadian Native Studies. UBC Press. ISBN 9780774843393.[1]
- Hildebrant, Walter, Hubner, Brian (1994). The Cypress Hills: the land and its people. Saskatoon: Purich Publishing. ISBN 1-895830-02-8.
- Daschuk, James (2013). Clearing the Plains: disease, politics of starvation, and the loss of Aboriginal life. Regina: University of Regina Press. ISBN 978-0-88977-296-0.
- Friesen, Gerald (1987). The Canadian Prairies: a history. Toronto: University of Toronto Press. ISBN 0-8020-6648-8.
Older sources
- Dempsey, Hugh A. (1953). "Cypress Hills Massacre". The Montana Magazine of History. 3 (4): 1–9. JSTOR 4515883.
- Sharpe, Paul F. (1954). "Massacre at Cypress Hills: A Whoop-Up County Preview." The Montana Magazine of History 4 (1): 26–41.
External links
- ^ Google books Allen has been Deputy chief, Treaties & History Research Centre, Department of Indian and Northern Affairs in Ottawa
- Canada–United States relations
- Disasters in Saskatchewan
- Conflicts in Canada
- Maple Creek No. 111, Saskatchewan
- Massacres of First Nations
- Crime in Saskatchewan
- National Historic Sites in Saskatchewan
- 1873 in Canada
- Conflicts in 1873
- Royal Canadian Mounted Police
- American frontier
- Indigenous conflicts in Canada
- June 1873 events
- 1870s crimes in Canada
- Violence in Canada