Lieutenant Colonel A.C.D. Pigott’s Battlefield Manuscript, 1885 Resistance (04)


Title: Lieutenant Colonel A.C.D. Pigott’s Battlefield Manuscript, 1885 Resistance (04)
Creator: Lieutenant Colonel A.C.D. Pigott
Subject: 1885, Resistance, Métis, Military, Dumont, Gabriel, Duck Lake, Batoche, Middleton, General Middleton
Description: Lieutenant Colonel A.C.D. Pigott wrote this document entitled “Resumé of the Riel Rebellion” during various engagements of the 1885 Resistance. This is one of only a few first-hand accounts by any member of the Canadian army during the 1885 Resistance. Pigott chronicled the 1885 Resistance from the March 26, 1885 skirmish at Duck Lake to the campaign against First Nations warriors from Big Bear’s and Poundmaker’s camps. These pages focus largely on battling the First Nations and list troop movements and the advance of columns by Generals Otter and Strange. This document also contains a number of appendices, not numbered in sequential order, including a map of the Battle of Fish Creek and a second-hand transcription of a correspondence between Big Bear, General Middleton and Louis Riel. Page 4 of this document discusses the aftermath of the Métis victory at the battle of Duck Lake. Pigott wrote that 11 Métis or “rebels” and 10 soldiers were killed, with 39 soldiers wounded. The number of Métis casualties seems very high. He further wrote that Gabriel Dumont and the Métis rode off to Batoche, with the Métis dead and wounded and the wounded soldiers were shipped to Saskatoon. This document, part of A.C.D. Pigott’s 1885 personal correspondence, is part of the A.C.D. Pigott Collection, which was acquired by the Gabriel Dumont Institute in October 1991 by the Ted Pappas family of Vancouver, British Columbia. The collection includes: Louis Riel’s English-French dictionary, Lieutenant Colonel Pigott’s 1885 Resistance battlefield manuscript, and a number of artifacts taken off the battlefield including: an inscribed watch, a pipe, a bullet maker and a buffalo powder horn (both from the Métis trenches), a carved wooden container taken from Big Bear’s camp, a First Nations decorative bracelet and horsehair braiding, which may have been traded for food by somebody captured by the Boulton’s Scouts.
Publisher: Gabriel Dumont Institute
Date: 1885
Type: Image
Format: image/jpeg
Language: English
Date of Copyright: October 26, 2004
Coverage: Saskatchewan
GDI Media Location: DVD 2
GDI Media Filename: onloc_30.jpg

Related Categories

Category Resistance
Category Pigott Document Collection