Category:Cypress Hills Massacre
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
This category is for a cultural heritage site in Canada, number 9307
|
1873 shootout between North American fur traders and indigenous Canadians | |||||
Upload media | |||||
Instance of | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Location | Cypress Hills massacre site, Maple Creek No. 111, Saskatchewan, Canada | ||||
Point in time |
| ||||
Number of deaths |
| ||||
| |||||
English: The Cypress Hills massacre occurred on June 1, 1873, in the Cypress Hills region of the (then) North-West Territories (now in Saskatchewan, Canada). A group of American hunters had chased some horse thieves from the Montana Territory across the border into Canada. After losing the trail of the thieves, the Americans arrived at a trading post and Nakota camp in the Battle Creek valley, and shortly thereafter an alcohol-fueled massacre occurred, resulting in 23 deaths among the Nakota people and the death of one American. The incident outraged Canadians, who saw their sovereignty and Western Canada threatened by Americans. In response, the Canadian government created the North-West Mounted Police (precursor to the RCMP) and Fort Walsh was subsequently established in the Cypress Hills region. All of the American hunters were arrested and tried, but none were ever convicted.
Media in category "Cypress Hills Massacre"
The following 2 files are in this category, out of 2 total.
-
Battle creek, Cypress Hills, Alberta panorama..png 5,865 × 1,112; 12.57 MB
-
Cypress Hills Massacre NHSC.png 1,524 × 1,088; 3.31 MB
Categories:
- National Historic Sites of Canada by name
- National Historic Sites of Canada in Saskatchewan
- Fort Walsh
- Maple Creek No. 111
- 1873 events in Canada
- 1873 in Saskatchewan
- Northwest Mounted Police
- Relations of Canada and the United States
- June 1873 in Canada
- Native American history of the 1870s
- First Nations in Saskatchewan
- 19th-century massacres
- 1873 in Montana
- Relations of Canada and the United States in the 19th century
- 1873 in international relations