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{{short description|Plains Cree chief}}
[[Image:Poundmaker.gif|thumb|right|Chief Poundmaker]]
{{about|the Cree headman}}
{{Use Canadian English|date=September 2013}}
{{Use dmy dates|date=July 2022}}
{{Infobox royalty
| name = Poundmaker
|title = [[Cree]] headman
| image = Poundmaker.png
| caption = Chief Poundmaker (1885)
| birth_name = Pîhtokahanapiwiyin


| birth_date = {{birth-date|1842}}
'''Pitikwahanapiwiyin''' ([[c.]] [[1842]] – [[4 July]], [[1886]]), commonly known as '''Poundmaker''', was a Plains [[Cree]] chief known as a peacemaker and defender of his people.
| birth_place = near [[Battleford]], [[Rupert's Land]], [[British North America]]
| death_date = 4 July {{death year and age|1886|1842}}
| death_place = [[Blackfoot Crossing]], [[District of Alberta|Alberta]], [[Northwest Territories|North-West Territories]], Canada
| known_for =
|father = Sikakwayan
| mother =
}}
'''Pîhtokahanapiwiyin''' ({{circa|1842}} – 4 July 1886), also known as '''Poundmaker''', was a [[Plains Cree people|Plains Cree]] chief known as a peacemaker and defender of his people, the [[Poundmaker Cree Nation]]. His name denotes his special craft at leading buffalo into buffalo pounds (enclosures) for harvest.

In 1885, during the [[North-West Rebellion]], his band was attacked by Canadian troops and a battle ensued. After the rebellion was suppressed, he surrendered and was convicted of treason and imprisoned. He died of illness soon after his release. In May 2019, Canadian Prime Minister [[Justin Trudeau]] exonerated the chief and apologized to the [[Poundmaker Cree Nation]].<ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/chief-poundmaker-exoneration-1.5126471 |title=Chief Poundmaker, wrongly convicted of treason-felony in 1885, to be exonerated by Trudeau |date=7 May 2019 |publisher=CBC |access-date=8 May 2019 |quote=Trudeau's statement of exoneration is being co-developed with Poundmaker Cree Nation.}}</ref>


==Name==
==Name==
According to Cree [[oral history]], Pitikwahanapiwiyin got his name because he had a special ability to attract [[American Bison|buffalo]] into pounds. A [[buffalo pound]] resembled a huge corral. Sometimes a herd of buffalo were stampeded into this trap. On other occasions, the buffalo were drawn in quietly by a person like Poundmaker. He would dress in a buffalo pelt and use a bell to capture the herd's attention. One time, it is said that Poundmaker lured 500 buffalo into his pound, therefore giving him the name Poundmaker.
According to Cree tradition, or [[oral tradition|oral history]], Pîhtokahanapiwiyin, known to English speakers as Chief Poundmaker, gained his name for his special ability to attract [[American Bison|buffalo]] into pounds. A [[buffalo pound]] resembled a huge corral with walls covered by the leaves of thick bushes. Usually herds of buffalo were stampeded into this trap. But sometimes buffalo were drawn in by a person such as Pîhtokahanapiwiyin, who according to tradition was gifted by spirit helpers, singing and drumming a special song to entice a lead buffalo cow to lead her herd into the enclosure.<ref name="The Plains Cree">{{cite book
| last = Mandelbaum
| first = David G.
| title = The Plains Cree: An Ethnographic, Historical, and Comparative Study
| publisher = Aims Pr Inc.
| year= 1940
| location = New York
| isbn = 978-0-404-15626-8
}}</ref>


==Biography==
==Biography==
Poundmaker was born in the [[Battleford]] region, the child of Sikakwayan, an [[Assiniboine]] medicine man, and a mixed-blood [[Cree]] woman, the sister of Chief Mistawasis.<ref name "es-pdmkr">[http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/poundmaker_c_1842-86.html Poundmaker], Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan</ref> Following the death of his parents, Poundmaker, his brother Yellow Mud Blanket, and his younger sister, were all raised by their mother's Cree community, led by Chief Wuttunee, but later known as the [[Red Pheasant Band]]. In his adult life, Poundmaker gained prominence during the 1876 negotiations of [[Treaty 6]] and split off to form his own band. In 1881, they band settled on a reserve about 40 km northwest of [[Fort Battleford]].<ref name "es-pdmkr"/> Poundmaker was not opposed of the idea of a treaty, but became critical of the Canadian government's failures to live up to its promises.<ref name "es-pdmkr"/>
Poundmaker was born in [[Rupert's Land]], near present-day [[Battleford]]; the child of Sikakwayan, an [[Assiniboine people|Assiniboine]] medicine man, and a mixed-blood [[Cree]] woman, the sister of Chief [[Mistawasis]].<ref name="es-pdmkr">{{cite encyclopedia |url=http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/poundmaker_c_1842-86.html |title=Poundmaker |first=Christian |last=Thompson |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan |publisher=[[University of Regina]] |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171019004729/http://esask.uregina.ca/entry/poundmaker_c_1842-86.html |archive-date=19 October 2017 |access-date=2 July 2018 }}</ref> Following the death of his parents, Poundmaker, his brother (Yellow Mud Blanket), and his younger sister, were all raised by their mother's Cree community, led by Chief Wuttunee, later known as the [[Red Pheasant Band]]. In his adult life, Poundmaker gained prominence during the 1876 negotiations of [[Treaty 6]] and split off to form his own band. In 1881, the band settled on a reserve about 40&nbsp;km northwest of [[Fort Battleford]].<ref name="es-pdmkr"/> Poundmaker was not opposed to the idea of a treaty, but became critical of the Canadian government's failures to live up to its promises.<ref name="es-pdmkr"/>


In 1873, [[Crowfoot]], chief of the [[Blackfoot]] [[First Nation]], had adopted Poundmaker thereby increasing the latter’s influence. This move also cemented the ties between the Blackfoot and the Cree, which successfully stopped the quarreling over the now very scarce buffalo.
In 1873, [[Crowfoot]], chief of the [[Blackfoot]] [[First Nations in Canada|First Nation]], had adopted Poundmaker thereby increasing the latter's influence. This move also cemented the ties between the Blackfoot and the Cree, which successfully stopped the struggling over the now very scarce buffalo.


===North-West resistance===
===North-West Rebellion===
{{main|Battle of Cut Knife}}
{{main|North-West Rebellion|Battle of Cut Knife}}
The shortage of buffalo left Poundmaker's people desperately hungry, and in 1885, they traveled south to [[Battleford]]. Oral history accounts suggest Poundmaker went to the fort to speak with the Indian agent, Rae, and reaffirm his loyalty to the Queen after a murder at the nearby [[Mosquito Reserve]]; however, the people of Battleford and some of the settlers in the surrounding area, hearing reports of large numbers of Cree and Assiniboine leaving reserves and making their way to Battleford, feared for their safety. On the night of [[March 30]], [[1885]], townspeople began to abandon the town and seek shelter in the North West Mounted Police [[Fort Battleford]]. Telegrams sent by those barricaded in the fort indicated they believed it was an attack, but Peter Ballantyne exited the fort and, acting as a spy, checked Poundmaker's plans and found his intentions peaceful<ref>Stonechild, Readings in Canadian History, Volume 2, 66</ref>.
The shortage of bison left Poundmaker's people desperately famished, and in 1885, they traveled south to [[Battleford]]. Oral history accounts suggest Poundmaker went to the fort to speak with the Indian agent, Rae, and reaffirm his loyalty to the Queen after a murder at the nearby Mosquito Reserve; however, the people of Battleford and some of the settlers in the surrounding area, hearing reports of large numbers of Cree and Assiniboine leaving reserves and making their way to Battleford, feared for their safety. On the night of 30 March 1885, the townspeople began to abandon the town and seek shelter in the North-West Mounted Police [[Fort Battleford]]. When Poundmaker and his party reached the town, the Indian agent refused to come out of the fort to meet with them. He kept them waiting for two days. Telegrams sent by those barricaded in the fort indicated they believed it was an attack, but Peter Ballantyne exited the fort and, acting as a spy, checked Poundmaker's plans and found his intentions peaceful.<ref>Stonechild, ''Readings in Canadian History'', Volume 2, 66</ref>


Looting of the abandoned buildings of the camp took place, but the identity of the looters is disputed. Some reports from inside claimed Poundmaker's people were responsible, but one observer alleged that most of the looting had already been done by whites.<ref>Robert Jefferson, Fifty Years on the Saskatchewan, 127</ref>. Oral history accounts claim that the looting was done by [[Nakoda (people)|Nakoda people]], and that Poundmaker did his best to stop it.<ref>Stonechild, Blair. "An Indian View of the 1885 Uprising" in "Sweet Promises: A Reader on Indian-White Relations in Canada", J.R. Miller (ed)</ref> Either way, Poundmaker's people left the next day.
Looting of the abandoned buildings of the town took place, but the identity of the looters is disputed. Some reports claimed Poundmaker's people were responsible, but one observer alleged that most of the looting had already been done by whites.<ref>Robert Jefferson, Fifty Years on the Saskatchewan, 127</ref> White witness oral history suggests daily looting by Indians. Native tradition suggests the looting was done by [[Nakoda (people)|Nakoda people]], and that Poundmaker did his best to stop it.<ref>Stonechild, Blair. "An Indian View of the 1885 Uprising" in ''Sweet Promises: A Reader on Indian White Relations in Canada'', J. R. Miller (ed)</ref> Either way, Poundmaker's people left the next day, to establish an encampment at Cut Knife Hill.


On [[May 2]], [[1885]], a military force of 325 Canadian troops, led by Lieutenant-Colonel [[William Dillon Otter]], attacked Poundmaker's camp near [[Battle of Cut Knife|Cut Knife Hill]].<ref name "es-pdmkr"/> When the army was forced to retreat, Poundmaker, who had not taken part in the fight, prevented his warriors from pursuing the soldiers. With the news of [[Louis Riel]]'s actions and defeat at [[Battle of Batoche|Batoche]], Poundmaker went there to surrender. On the basis of a letter written by Louis Riel bearing his name, Poundmaker was convicted of [[treason]] in 1885 and sentenced to three years in [[Stony Mountain Penitentiary]]<ref>Stonechild, Readings in Canadian History, Volume 2, 70</ref>. At his trial, he is reported to have said:
On 2 May 1885, a military force of 332 Canadian troops, led by Lieutenant-Colonel [[William Dillon Otter]], attacked Poundmaker's camp near [[Battle of Cut Knife|Cut Knife Hill]].<ref name="es-pdmkr"/> Lieutenant R.S. Cassels, attached to the command of the "C" School, a military division of the troops under Otter, stated the following:
:"Everything that is bad has been laid against me this summer, there is nothing of it true.<ref>Canada, Sessional Papers, 1886, No. 52, 336</ref> ... Had I wanted war, I would not be here now. I should be on the prairie. You did not catch me. I gave myself up. You have got me because I wanted justice."<ref>{{cite web | author=Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online | title=Poundmaker| year=2000 | url= http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=39905| accessdate=January 8 | accessyear=2007}}</ref>


{{quote|About 4 P.M. the column starts. Our force is eight scouts; sixty Mounted Police under Captain Neale; "B" Battery, eighty men under Major Short; "C" School, forty-five men under Lieutenant Wadmore, No. 1 Company, Queen's Own Rifles, under Captain Brown, fifty-five men; Battleford Rifles, under Captain Nash, forty men; twenty men of the Guards under Lieutenant Gray and Queen’s Own Rifles Ambulance Corps; Surgeon Lesslie; Sergeant Fere and eight men; Colonel Otter in command; and Colonel Herchmer, Surgeon Strange, Captain Mutton and Lieutenant Sears on the Staff. Hume Cronyn, E. C. Acheson, and Blakely of "K", McLennan and Prior of "T", Farin Wallace and Grierson of "H", Fraser and A. J. Boyd of "F" is attached to No. 1.<ref>Mcleod, R. C. (Ed.) (1983). ''Reminiscences of a Bungle by One of the Bunglers: And Two Other Northwest Rebellion Diaries''. Edmonton: The University of Alberta Press, 150.</ref>}}
Because of the power of his adopted father, [[Crowfoot]], Poundmaker's hair was not cut in prison, and he served only seven months in prison. Nonetheless, his stay there devastated his health and led to his death (from a lung [[hemorrhage]]) in 1886, at the age of 44.<ref name "es-pdmkr"/>

After six hours of inconclusive skirmishing and suffering casualties, Otter ordered the withdrawal. As his force retreated, Poundmaker, who had not taken part in the fight, coaxed his band's fighters not to pursue the soldiers. Likely, his actions prevented the loss of many lives on both sides as the active pursuit of the fleeing force would have prolonged the conflict as serious countermeasures would have been put into use to cover the retreat, and the Cree would likely have killed many as the soldiers made their retreat.<ref>Light, Douglas W. ''Footprints in the Dust''. Turner-Warwick Publications, 1987.</ref>

A few weeks later, after Riel's defeat at Batoche, Poundmaker and his starving band went to Battleford to make peace with Major-General Middleton.

===Surrender, trial and death===
[[File:Poundmaker with woman.jpg|thumb|upright|Poundmaker and his wife]]
With the news of [[Louis Riel]]'s actions and defeat at [[Battle of Batoche|Batoche]], Poundmaker surrendered on May 26.

On the basis of a letter written by [[Louis Riel]] bearing his name, Poundmaker was convicted of [[treason]] in 1885 and sentenced to three years in [[Stony Mountain Penitentiary]]. He said to Riel, "You did not catch me, I gave myself up. I wanted peace."<ref>Stonechild, ''Readings in Canadian History'', Volume 2, 70</ref>

At his trial, he is reported to have said:
{{quote|Everything that is bad has been laid against me this summer, there is nothing of it true<ref>Canada, Sessional Papers, 1886, No. 52, 336</ref> ... Had I wanted war, I would not be here now. I should be on the prairie. You did not catch me. I gave myself up. You have got me because I wanted justice.<ref>{{cite web | author=Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online | title=Poundmaker| year=2000 | url=http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=5783| access-date=8 January 2007}}</ref>}}

Because of the power of his adopted father, [[Crowfoot]], Poundmaker's hair was not cut in prison, and he served only seven months. Nonetheless, his stay there devastated his health and led to his death (from a lung [[hemorrhage]]) in 1886, at the age of 44.<ref name="es-pdmkr"/>

He was buried at Blackfoot Crossing near [[Gleichen, Alberta]], but his remains were exhumed in 1967, and reburied on the Poundmaker Reserve, [[Saskatchewan]]. Pictures from the [[exhumation]] and reburial were donated to the Allen Sapp museum in [[North Battleford, Saskatchewan|North Battleford]].

===Exoneration===
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke to members of the Poundmaker Cree Nation and others gathered at Cut Knife Hill, on 23 May 2019 to exonerate Poundmaker and clear his memory.

In part he said: "The Government of Canada recognizes that Chief Poundmaker was not a criminal, but someone who worked tirelessly to ensure the survival of his people, and hold the Crown accountable to its obligations as laid out in Treaty 6. We recognize that the unjust conviction and imprisonment of Chief Poundmaker had, and continues to have, a profound impact on the Poundmaker Cree Nation."<ref>{{cite web |url=https://pm.gc.ca/en/news/speeches/2019/05/23/statement-exoneration-chief-poundmaker |type=speech transcript |agency=Prime Minister Justin Trudeau |title=Statement of Exoneration for Chief Poundmaker |date=23 May 2019 |access-date=4 April 2021}}</ref><ref>{{cite web |url=https://www.cbc.ca/news/politics/chief-poundmaker-exoneration-1.5126471 |title=Chief Poundmaker, wrongly convicted of treason-felony in 1885, to be exonerated by Trudeau |date=7 May 2019 |publisher=CBC |access-date=8 May 2019 |quote=Trudeau's statement of exoneration is being co-developed with Poundmaker Cree Nation.}}</ref>

==Legacy==
The [[Poundmaker Cree Nation]] continues to this day, near [[Cut Knife, Saskatchewan|Cut Knife]]. His grandnephew [[John Tootoosis]], Cree leader, and great-grandnephew [[Gordon Tootoosis]], actor, both lived on this reserve.

Pîhtokahanapiwiyin, referred to by his anglicised name Poundmaker, appears as the leader of the Cree in ''[[Civilization VI|Sid Meier's Civilization VI]]'', having bonuses related to trade and diplomacy. His appearance in the game drew criticism from some members of the Poundmaker Cree Nation, who felt that, by being included in a game based around expansion and conquest, his values and those of the Cree were misrepresented, and criticized the company for not formally approaching community elders, but also commented that his portrayal wasn't completely negative, and hoped his inclusion in the game would help his at the time ongoing exoneration by publicizing it.<ref>{{cite web |last1=Shield |first1=David |title=Poundmaker Cree Nation not happy with chief's portrayal in Civilization video game |url=https://www.cbc.ca/amp/1.4473089 |website=CBC News Canada |access-date=6 April 2021}}</ref>


==References==
==References==
{{reflist|30em}}
<references />
Sluman, N., (1967). Poundmaker. Toronto: Ryerson


== External links ==
== External links ==
*[http://library.usask.ca/northwest/background/pound.htm Pîhtokahanapiwiyin (Poundmaker)]
*[http://www.biographi.ca/EN/ShowBio.asp?BioId=39905 Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online'']
*[http://www.biographi.ca/009004-119.01-e.php?&id_nbr=5783 Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online'']
*[http://www.cbc.ca/arts/story/2003/09/17/poundmaker170903.html CBC article "Photos of Cree chief surface" (broken link)]
{{Authority control}}


[[Category:1842 births]]
[[Category:1840s births]]
[[Category:1886 deaths]]
[[Category:1886 deaths]]
[[Category:First Nations leaders]]
[[Category:First Nations history]]
[[Category:First Nations history]]
[[Category:Cree people]]
[[Category:Cree people]]
[[Category:People of the North-West Rebellion]]

[[Category:Pre-Confederation Saskatchewan people]]
{{Canada-bio-stub}}
[[Category:Indigenous leaders in Saskatchewan]]
{{NorthAm-native-stub}}
[[Category:Persons of National Historic Significance (Canada)]]

[[Category:People convicted of treason against Canada]]
[[ca:Poundmaker]]
[[de:Pitikwahanapiwiyin]]
[[fr:Poundmaker]]
[[cr:ᐱᑎᐧᑲᐦᐊᓇᐱᐧᐃᔨᓐ]]

Latest revision as of 03:54, 30 May 2024

Poundmaker
Cree headman
Chief Poundmaker (1885)
BornPîhtokahanapiwiyin
1842 (1842)
near Battleford, Rupert's Land, British North America
Died4 July 1886 (aged 43–44)
Blackfoot Crossing, Alberta, North-West Territories, Canada
FatherSikakwayan

Pîhtokahanapiwiyin (c. 1842 – 4 July 1886), also known as Poundmaker, was a Plains Cree chief known as a peacemaker and defender of his people, the Poundmaker Cree Nation. His name denotes his special craft at leading buffalo into buffalo pounds (enclosures) for harvest.

In 1885, during the North-West Rebellion, his band was attacked by Canadian troops and a battle ensued. After the rebellion was suppressed, he surrendered and was convicted of treason and imprisoned. He died of illness soon after his release. In May 2019, Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau exonerated the chief and apologized to the Poundmaker Cree Nation.[1]

Name[edit]

According to Cree tradition, or oral history, Pîhtokahanapiwiyin, known to English speakers as Chief Poundmaker, gained his name for his special ability to attract buffalo into pounds. A buffalo pound resembled a huge corral with walls covered by the leaves of thick bushes. Usually herds of buffalo were stampeded into this trap. But sometimes buffalo were drawn in by a person such as Pîhtokahanapiwiyin, who according to tradition was gifted by spirit helpers, singing and drumming a special song to entice a lead buffalo cow to lead her herd into the enclosure.[2]

Biography[edit]

Poundmaker was born in Rupert's Land, near present-day Battleford; the child of Sikakwayan, an Assiniboine medicine man, and a mixed-blood Cree woman, the sister of Chief Mistawasis.[3] Following the death of his parents, Poundmaker, his brother (Yellow Mud Blanket), and his younger sister, were all raised by their mother's Cree community, led by Chief Wuttunee, later known as the Red Pheasant Band. In his adult life, Poundmaker gained prominence during the 1876 negotiations of Treaty 6 and split off to form his own band. In 1881, the band settled on a reserve about 40 km northwest of Fort Battleford.[3] Poundmaker was not opposed to the idea of a treaty, but became critical of the Canadian government's failures to live up to its promises.[3]

In 1873, Crowfoot, chief of the Blackfoot First Nation, had adopted Poundmaker thereby increasing the latter's influence. This move also cemented the ties between the Blackfoot and the Cree, which successfully stopped the struggling over the now very scarce buffalo.

North-West Rebellion[edit]

The shortage of bison left Poundmaker's people desperately famished, and in 1885, they traveled south to Battleford. Oral history accounts suggest Poundmaker went to the fort to speak with the Indian agent, Rae, and reaffirm his loyalty to the Queen after a murder at the nearby Mosquito Reserve; however, the people of Battleford and some of the settlers in the surrounding area, hearing reports of large numbers of Cree and Assiniboine leaving reserves and making their way to Battleford, feared for their safety. On the night of 30 March 1885, the townspeople began to abandon the town and seek shelter in the North-West Mounted Police Fort Battleford. When Poundmaker and his party reached the town, the Indian agent refused to come out of the fort to meet with them. He kept them waiting for two days. Telegrams sent by those barricaded in the fort indicated they believed it was an attack, but Peter Ballantyne exited the fort and, acting as a spy, checked Poundmaker's plans and found his intentions peaceful.[4]

Looting of the abandoned buildings of the town took place, but the identity of the looters is disputed. Some reports claimed Poundmaker's people were responsible, but one observer alleged that most of the looting had already been done by whites.[5] White witness oral history suggests daily looting by Indians. Native tradition suggests the looting was done by Nakoda people, and that Poundmaker did his best to stop it.[6] Either way, Poundmaker's people left the next day, to establish an encampment at Cut Knife Hill.

On 2 May 1885, a military force of 332 Canadian troops, led by Lieutenant-Colonel William Dillon Otter, attacked Poundmaker's camp near Cut Knife Hill.[3] Lieutenant R.S. Cassels, attached to the command of the "C" School, a military division of the troops under Otter, stated the following:

About 4 P.M. the column starts. Our force is eight scouts; sixty Mounted Police under Captain Neale; "B" Battery, eighty men under Major Short; "C" School, forty-five men under Lieutenant Wadmore, No. 1 Company, Queen's Own Rifles, under Captain Brown, fifty-five men; Battleford Rifles, under Captain Nash, forty men; twenty men of the Guards under Lieutenant Gray and Queen’s Own Rifles Ambulance Corps; Surgeon Lesslie; Sergeant Fere and eight men; Colonel Otter in command; and Colonel Herchmer, Surgeon Strange, Captain Mutton and Lieutenant Sears on the Staff. Hume Cronyn, E. C. Acheson, and Blakely of "K", McLennan and Prior of "T", Farin Wallace and Grierson of "H", Fraser and A. J. Boyd of "F" is attached to No. 1.[7]

After six hours of inconclusive skirmishing and suffering casualties, Otter ordered the withdrawal. As his force retreated, Poundmaker, who had not taken part in the fight, coaxed his band's fighters not to pursue the soldiers. Likely, his actions prevented the loss of many lives on both sides as the active pursuit of the fleeing force would have prolonged the conflict as serious countermeasures would have been put into use to cover the retreat, and the Cree would likely have killed many as the soldiers made their retreat.[8]

A few weeks later, after Riel's defeat at Batoche, Poundmaker and his starving band went to Battleford to make peace with Major-General Middleton.

Surrender, trial and death[edit]

Poundmaker and his wife

With the news of Louis Riel's actions and defeat at Batoche, Poundmaker surrendered on May 26.

On the basis of a letter written by Louis Riel bearing his name, Poundmaker was convicted of treason in 1885 and sentenced to three years in Stony Mountain Penitentiary. He said to Riel, "You did not catch me, I gave myself up. I wanted peace."[9]

At his trial, he is reported to have said:

Everything that is bad has been laid against me this summer, there is nothing of it true[10] ... Had I wanted war, I would not be here now. I should be on the prairie. You did not catch me. I gave myself up. You have got me because I wanted justice.[11]

Because of the power of his adopted father, Crowfoot, Poundmaker's hair was not cut in prison, and he served only seven months. Nonetheless, his stay there devastated his health and led to his death (from a lung hemorrhage) in 1886, at the age of 44.[3]

He was buried at Blackfoot Crossing near Gleichen, Alberta, but his remains were exhumed in 1967, and reburied on the Poundmaker Reserve, Saskatchewan. Pictures from the exhumation and reburial were donated to the Allen Sapp museum in North Battleford.

Exoneration[edit]

Prime Minister Justin Trudeau spoke to members of the Poundmaker Cree Nation and others gathered at Cut Knife Hill, on 23 May 2019 to exonerate Poundmaker and clear his memory.

In part he said: "The Government of Canada recognizes that Chief Poundmaker was not a criminal, but someone who worked tirelessly to ensure the survival of his people, and hold the Crown accountable to its obligations as laid out in Treaty 6. We recognize that the unjust conviction and imprisonment of Chief Poundmaker had, and continues to have, a profound impact on the Poundmaker Cree Nation."[12][13]

Legacy[edit]

The Poundmaker Cree Nation continues to this day, near Cut Knife. His grandnephew John Tootoosis, Cree leader, and great-grandnephew Gordon Tootoosis, actor, both lived on this reserve.

Pîhtokahanapiwiyin, referred to by his anglicised name Poundmaker, appears as the leader of the Cree in Sid Meier's Civilization VI, having bonuses related to trade and diplomacy. His appearance in the game drew criticism from some members of the Poundmaker Cree Nation, who felt that, by being included in a game based around expansion and conquest, his values and those of the Cree were misrepresented, and criticized the company for not formally approaching community elders, but also commented that his portrayal wasn't completely negative, and hoped his inclusion in the game would help his at the time ongoing exoneration by publicizing it.[14]

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Chief Poundmaker, wrongly convicted of treason-felony in 1885, to be exonerated by Trudeau". CBC. 7 May 2019. Retrieved 8 May 2019. Trudeau's statement of exoneration is being co-developed with Poundmaker Cree Nation.
  2. ^ Mandelbaum, David G. (1940). The Plains Cree: An Ethnographic, Historical, and Comparative Study. New York: Aims Pr Inc. ISBN 978-0-404-15626-8.
  3. ^ a b c d e Thompson, Christian. "Poundmaker". Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan. University of Regina. Archived from the original on 19 October 2017. Retrieved 2 July 2018.
  4. ^ Stonechild, Readings in Canadian History, Volume 2, 66
  5. ^ Robert Jefferson, Fifty Years on the Saskatchewan, 127
  6. ^ Stonechild, Blair. "An Indian View of the 1885 Uprising" in Sweet Promises: A Reader on Indian White Relations in Canada, J. R. Miller (ed)
  7. ^ Mcleod, R. C. (Ed.) (1983). Reminiscences of a Bungle by One of the Bunglers: And Two Other Northwest Rebellion Diaries. Edmonton: The University of Alberta Press, 150.
  8. ^ Light, Douglas W. Footprints in the Dust. Turner-Warwick Publications, 1987.
  9. ^ Stonechild, Readings in Canadian History, Volume 2, 70
  10. ^ Canada, Sessional Papers, 1886, No. 52, 336
  11. ^ Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online (2000). "Poundmaker". Retrieved 8 January 2007.
  12. ^ "Statement of Exoneration for Chief Poundmaker" (speech transcript). Prime Minister Justin Trudeau. 23 May 2019. Retrieved 4 April 2021.
  13. ^ "Chief Poundmaker, wrongly convicted of treason-felony in 1885, to be exonerated by Trudeau". CBC. 7 May 2019. Retrieved 8 May 2019. Trudeau's statement of exoneration is being co-developed with Poundmaker Cree Nation.
  14. ^ Shield, David. "Poundmaker Cree Nation not happy with chief's portrayal in Civilization video game". CBC News Canada. Retrieved 6 April 2021.

External links[edit]