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Assiniboia

Assiniboia is a name derived from the Assiniboine, an Indigenous people. The name Assiniboia applied to two political units in the 19th century. The first was a district centred on the forks of the Red and Assiniboine rivers — which became the site of the Red River Resistance (1869–70) — forerunner to the province of Manitoba. The second was a provisional district of the ever-changing North-West Territories (1870–1905). Two political constituencies (one federal and one Manitoban), a rural municipality (in Manitoba), and a town (in Saskatchewan) have also been called Assiniboia.
North-West Territories, 1870

District of Assiniboia: 1836–69

The first territory in Rupert’s Land to be delimited for governmental purposes, as distinct from trading districts, was the 1811 Hudson’s Bay Company (HBC) grant of 116,000 square miles (300,438 km2) to Lord Selkirk. After the Selkirk grant (known as the Red River Colony) was taken over by the HBC in 1836, a newly created District of Assiniboia was formed, encompassing the lands within 50 miles of Upper Fort Garry. The district was supervised by an HBC-appointed governor and council.

Red River Resistance: 1869–70

In November 1869, the Louis Riel-led resistance movement replaced the HBC authority with the first of several provisional governments. The last of these, commencing in March 1870, was guided by a representative, democratically chosen, 28-member “Legislative Assembly of Assiniboia” and claimed authority over a slightly larger territory. Several Lists of Rights were prepared in the assembly’s name and taken by delegates to Ottawa, where negotiations were conducted for the entry of all Rupert’s Land, including the District of Assiniboia, into the Canadian Confederation. The assembly requested that “Assiniboia” become Canada’s fifth province. However, Louis Riel proposed instead the name Manitoba. The province was created 15 July 1870.

To ensure Manitoba’s smooth transition to Canadian authority, Colonel Garnet Wolseley persuaded HBC representative Donald Smith to revive the original HBC council and greet Lieutenant-Governor Sir Adams George Archibald formally on 2 September 1870. The first Assiniboia then officially ceased to exist. (See also Manitoba and Confederation.)

A post-Confederation map of Canada, printed in 1879. It shows early boundaries for the provinces of Quebec, Ontario and Manitoba, as well as the North-West Territories before the creation of Alberta and Saskatchewan.

District of Assiniboia: 1882–1905

On 8 May 1882, the federal government created four “provisional districts” in the North-West Territories: Alberta, Assiniboia, Athabasca and Saskatchewan. Assiniboia was the southeastern district, occupying what is now southern Saskatchewan. The districts, designed “for the convenience of settlers and for postal purposes,” were roughly equal in size and natural resource distribution.

A post-Confederation map of Canada, c. 1889\u201395, depicting the districts of \r\nKeewatin, Assiniboia, Saskatchewan and Alberta, as well as the North-West Territories and provinces of Manitoba and British Columbia.\r\n

With the 1887 grant of two seats in the House of Commons and the use of the district boundaries to determine representation in the Territorial Assembly, a district consciousness developed among the rapidly growing farm communities along the Canadian Pacific Railway. When provincial status and new boundaries were being considered in 1904–05, Assiniboia and Saskatchewan were potential names. Minister of the Interior, Clifford Sifton, preferred Assiniboia, but when residents of the northern district asked that their choice be used, he acquiesced. (See also Saskatchewan and Confederation and Autonomy Bills.)

A 1906 map of Canada, showing the newly created provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan, and yet-to-be finalized boundaries for the North-West Territories, Manitoba, Ontario and Quebec.

Contemporary Usage

Today the name applies to a number of local districts in the prairie region. A now-extinct federal constituency of Assiniboia, located in southeastern Saskatchewan, was prominent in 1919, when an independent farmers’ candidate defeated a former provincial Liberal cabinet minister, and again in 1935 when it sent former premier James G. Gardiner to Ottawa to become federal minister of agriculture.