Canada's History

The Priest Who Shaped a Province

Abbé Noël-Joseph Ritchot gave legitimacy to the cause of Louis Riel and the militant Red River Métis, and he was central to Manitoba joining Confederat­ion.

- By Philippe Mailhot

The untold story of the cleric who helped the Métis resistance win provinceho­od for Manitoba 150 years ago.

On the south grounds of the Manitoba legislativ­e building stands a larger-than-life statue of Louis Riel that recognizes the Métis leader’s pivotal role in the creation of Canada’s fifth province. In its literal shadow is a bronze National Historic Sites and Monuments Board plaque commemorat­ing Noël-Joseph Ritchot, the Red River missionary who actually negotiated Manitoba’s entry into Confederat­ion.

Although his role was almost equal to that of Riel, Abbé Ritchot, despite being Riel’s éminence grise, rarely merits more than a brief historical footnote. Baptized as Joseph-Noël, he also signed as Noël or N.J. He was deeply involved with the Red River Settlement’s activist Métis before Riel became their leader and the voice of the resistance to Canadian rule. From the summer of 1869, when he first helped to legitimize and to support Riel’s emergence as a leader, and continuing until the latter’s departure for Montana, Ritchot acted as Riel’s trusted confidant, mentor, chief diplomat, advocate, and lobbyist.

The Red River Settlement of the 1860s was no longer an isolated fur trade outpost. The old water routes to York Factory on Hudson Bay and to Montreal had been superseded by ox cart trails to St. Paul, Minnesota. The communal Métis bison hunts that once saw hundreds of two-wheeled Red River carts return to Fort Garry laden with pemmican were now having difficulty locating the ever-diminishin­g herds. Years of drought and grasshoppe­r infestatio­ns devastated the settlement’s river-lot farms that stretched three kilometres back from the water.

The demographi­cs of the settlement were changing as well. The predominan­tly Métis parishes, both English- and Frenchspea­king, had grown steadily since the initial wave of laid-off fur trade employees was invited to settle at the Forks — the confluence of the Red and Assiniboin­e rivers in what is now downtown Winnipeg — by the Hudson’s Bay Company after it merged with the North West Company in 1821. By the 1850s, agricultur­al land had become harder to find in Upper Canada. The prairie west, “empty” save for the First Nations peoples, the Métis, and the fur traders who lived there, in some

cases for many generation­s, became a tempting new frontier for Upper Canadian ambitions. These newcomers trusted that the lands they occupied with the permission of the HBC would soon become part of Canada. Many took up farming near Portage la Prairie, about fifty kilometres to the west of the Red River Settlement. Commercial­ly minded settlers began to expand the small village of Winnipeg where the Portage Trail met Main Street, about a kilometre and a half north of what is now known as Upper Fort Garry.

The self-styled Canadian Party, a new movement led and embodied by Dr. John Christian Schultz and the newspaper the

Nor’Wester, took shape. An imposing figure, Schultz personifie­d the Anglo-Ontarian intoleranc­e of all things Catholic and French that had made Canadian politics such a balancing act in the 1850s and 1860s. He was a bombastic supporter of union with Canada who had little but contempt for the HBC and most of the long-time residents of the Red River Settlement.

Fear of a “second Quebec” to the west lurked in the minds of many Ontarians, both those who still lived in the province and those who had moved to Red River. The arrogant and

disrespect­ful “Canadas” — members of the Canadian Party — were contemptuo­us of local HBC authoritie­s, to the point of organizing what they described as the liberation of prisoners they felt had been jailed unfairly. In the words of historian George Stanley, “They challenged the Company régime, they ridiculed it, they refused to obey its orders, they tore the trappings of dignity from it, they bared its nakedness and revealed its puny muscles.”

The British North America Act of 1867 had made provision for the new Dominion to acquire the region. After all, the dream of a British North America, bonded by railways stretching from Nova Scotia to British Columbia, could only be fulfilled by acquiring the vast territorie­s known as Rupert’s Land that belonged to the HBC. As the company’s stockholde­rs saw a way to reap profits through real estate as opposed to furs, serious discussion­s between Canada and the HBC approached their culminatio­n in the spring of 1869. As Canada prepared for the transfer, no one on either side of the Atlantic saw fit to let the ten thousand-plus residents of the Red River Settlement know how the Dominion would treat them, their landholdin­gs, or what they saw as their rights and customs.

The behaviour of Prime Minister John A. Macdonald’s administra­tion confirmed the poor regard in which Canada was already held among the original residents of Red River. When starvation threatened the settlement in 1868, Canadian “aid” took the form of a crew sent to build the Dawson Road, which would link the settlement to Lake of the Woods for the benefit of colonists from Canada. The crew’s arrival and mission were a complete surprise to local HBC authoritie­s. The Métis employed on the project were paid in vouchers, which were redeemable only at the store owned by the hated Schultz and at its inflated prices.

Details of the transfer of HBC lands to Canada came into the settlement either through the pages of the Nor’Wester, which extolled the move, or via the annexation­ist press in St. Paul, which predicted dire consequenc­es for the original settlers. By late in June 1869, tension had become particular­ly high among the French Métis, who felt especially vulnerable and maligned by the Canadas. They found sympathy, support, and guidance in the curé of St. Norbert, Abbé Noël-Joseph Ritchot.

Born in L’Assomption, Lower Canada, in 1825, Ritchot had been appointed to St. Norbert shortly after his arrival at Red River in 1862. A burly man with an impressive beard,

he remains a legendary figure among the Métis.

One story had it that a man arrived at a St. Norbert store looking to challenge the strongest man around. Ritchot lifted a hundred-pound (forty-five-kilogram) sack of flour onto the counter with one hand, which prompted the brawler to make a quick exit. Ritchot saw the Métis as an isolated and embattled extension of French Canada; he shared their suspicion of les anglais and understood that their lifestyle, which he respected, was suited to their environmen­t. The large Acadian community in L’Assomption, also wary of the English, may have helped to inspire Ritchot’s passionate desire to support the Métis. That desire would place him squarely in the path of those who wanted to oppose Riel and to remake the Red River Settlement into a firmly English-speaking and Protestant community.

In the eyes of Riel’s enemies, the Métis leader and his followers were pawns in a “Popish plot” to thwart Ontario’s ambitions in the West. Ritchot and Red River’s diplomatic and conciliato­ry bishop, Alexandre-Antonin Taché, were cast as the true agitators behind the movement. In the eyes of the Canadian Party, the Catholic Church had too much influence and represente­d a local example of the menace they believed existed in Quebec.

A promising student, Riel had been sent east from the Red River Settlement at the age of fourteen in the hope that he would continue his education and come back as a Catholic priest. Returning ten years later, in July 1868, Riel was young to assume a leadership position in a traditiona­l Métis sense. He and his plans were bolstered by Ritchot’s support, and there is no evidence that Riel was in any way subservien­t to Ritchot, or especially to Taché.

Speculatin­g that land claims made prior to the transfer of territory from the HBC would later be recognized by the Dominion, two leading members of the Dawson Road survey crew attempted to stake out lands just west of St. Norbert late in June 1869. But John Snow and Charles Mair were chased off by Baptiste Tourond — who would later serve in several of the settlement’s legislativ­e bodies — and others. The region southwest of the Forks was regarded as part of the Métis birthright via an entente nationale (a nation-to-nation agreement) with the English Métis.

From his St. Norbert pulpit at Sunday mass, Ritchot announced that Tourond had called for an assembly the next day. Notes on the early days of the resistance, which Ritchot prepared later, make it clear that the priest was in attendance and was more than a simple observer. He participat­ed freely in this and other meetings unhindered by any interferen­ce from the absent bishop. Indeed, Taché, anticipati­ng difficulti­es in the settlement, had stopped in Ottawa while on his way to Rome to offer his influence as an intermedia­ry. He was brushed off by George-Étienne Cartier, the federal minister of militia and defence, but was later summoned home by the Canadian government in the hope that he could pacify his flock.

Father Georges Dugast summarized the opinions of the

Métis — and of Ritchot — in a mid-August note to Taché. “How is it that, since we have not been sold as slaves, a foreign government has the right to come here to make us laws, to take possession of a country that belongs to us, without consulting us in any manner,” he wrote. “We will not refuse to become a part of the Confederat­ion. But we are men and we will not enter like cattle.”

Anticipati­ng that Canadian immigratio­n to the area would pick up in the spring of 1870, Canada sent out John Stoughton Dennis and his survey crews in July 1869. As Ritchot later informed Cartier, Dennis and his crew referred to each other with titles such as “colonel, major, captain; in the end to the final valet, they bestowed themselves with titles and airs of grandeur.” In his account, Ritchot also noted that, “excited solely by a young man of theirs” — namely, Riel — a small group decided that it had to act against “the injustice and the injury being made to the nation by Canada.” And so, on October 11, 1869, Riel and others placed their feet on the survey chain of a Canadian crew and told them they had no right to work on lands claimed by the Métis.

The challenge quickly made Riel and his followers a force to be dealt with. Powerless before the ambitions of Canada, the local HBC authoritie­s were equally ineffectiv­e in deterring Riel from advancing his program, first to prevent the assumption of Canadian authority and then to persuade the other settlers to support his efforts to negotiate entry into Confederat­ion. Riel intended that this would be achieved by organizing the settlement’s first democratic­ally elected provisiona­l government to administer the territory and to draw up a list of rights that would serve as a basis for discussion.

Not that there was much evidence of good faith on Ottawa’s part. Even before the execution of Thomas Scott, whom a military tribunal had found guilty of treason against Riel’s provisiona­l government, Macdonald had taken steps to undermine Riel. A participan­t in several counter-insurgenci­es in the settlement, Scott was a difficult prisoner who repeatedly threatened to shoot Riel and who even angered his fellow captives with his violent proposals.

The HBC’s Donald A. Smith, who would later become the

company’s governor, was sent to Red River as a federal commission­er. He spoke of Canada’s good intentions and willingnes­s to negotiate, all the while distributi­ng Canadian funds to Riel’s enemies. Failing in his secret mission — counter-coups by the Canadas had fizzled miserably — Smith executed his cover mission. In February, he extended the invitation for a delegation from Red River to go to Ottawa to negotiate an end to the crisis. The leader of the delegation would be Riel’s trusted confidant, Ritchot.

Although Fort Garry had replaced St. Norbert as the headquarte­rs of the resistance, Ritchot had continued his involvemen­t. On December 1, 1869, in the teeth of a howling blizzard, William McDougall ineffectiv­ely proclaimed the assumption of Canadian rule over the Northwest and his role as lieutenant-governor of the territory. At the request of Riel, Ritchot and Dugast drafted a rebuttal that was printed on the press of the Nor’Wester, which the Métis had seized. The “Declaratio­n of the People of Rupert’s Land and the North West” was signed by Riel as secretary of the provisiona­l government and by John Bruce in one of his final acts as figurehead president.

In the last days of 1869, Dr. Charles Tupper (who later became prime minister) arrived in the region to recover his daughter, whose husband, Captain Donald R. Cameron, had been a member of McDougall’s presumptiv­e administra­tion. On October 30, Cameron had arrived at La Barrière, the Métis stronghold in St. Norbert. The bridles of his horses were seized, and his wagon of household belongings was confiscate­d. He was then ordered to return to Pembina, south of the U.S. border. When Tupper arrived in Fort Garry, he was sent to St. Norbert, where Cameron’s horses, carriage, and household goods arrived the next day. Tupper later wrote about telling Ritchot that the “rebels” could never hold the country and that, if bloodletti­ng could be avoided, the leaders “would be entitled to great considerat­ion.” Ritchot’s response was apparently to say that the Métis could simply withdraw to the plains and fight indefinite­ly until aided by the Americans, perhaps suggesting that annexation­ists in St. Paul would be eager to join the fray.

The activist priest was also involved in discussion­s about whether the sentence of death would be carried out against Thomas Scott. Taché’s successor, Bishop Adélard Langevin, later claimed that Ritchot had told Riel that he did not question the right to execute Scott but had endeavoure­d to dissuade him. (This assertion was countered by Riel’s brother Joseph, as well as in an affidavit sworn by André Nault and Elzéar Lagimodièr­e the same year. The two men attested that Riel attempted to have the tribunal spare Scott’s life.) For his part, Ritchot was said to have declared, “Make an example of him. If you do not execute this man, they will begin again.”

In the third week of March 1870, as authorized by the provisiona­l government of Assiniboia, Ritchot, Judge John Black, and Alfred Scott left for Ottawa. The chief law officer of the settlement, Black represente­d the English settlers. Scott, a bartender, represente­d the American element. With Ontario in an uproar over Thomas Scott’s execution, Ritchot and the saloon-keeper travelled via the United States to Ogdensburg, New York. From there, for their safety, they were escorted to Ottawa by Gilbert McMicken, the Dominion police commission­er who was also Macdonald’s spy chief.

Ritchot and Scott arrived in Ottawa on April 12. They were soon joined by Black, who had no fear of travelling through Ontario. Prior to the start of negotiatio­ns, Scott and Ritchot were twice briefly arrested on warrants that had been privately sworn by Thomas Scott’s brother. The arrests angered the British, who were informed that Canada had secretly paid the delegates’ defence costs. Ritchot used the time to hold informal discussion­s with Cartier, the militia minister and, later, acting prime minister during Macdonald’s extended illness, and with Secretary of State Joseph Howe and Governor General John Young, Baron Lisgar. Ritchot pushed to have the Red River delegation formally recognized as diplomats and for a start to the talks.

On April 25, the formal negotiatio­ns with Macdonald and Cartier finally began, in secret, in Cartier’s home. They concluded eight days later, with Macdonald later denying that they had happened. When presenting the Manitoba Act in the House of Commons on May 2, he claimed, “we have discussed the proposed Constituti­on with such persons who have been in the North West as we have had an opportunit­y of meeting.” If Macdonald or Cartier took any notes from the talks, they have either been destroyed or their whereabout­s are unknown.

Macdonald struggled with an almost impossible balancing act, one that may have led to a breakdown in his health. On

one hand, he wanted to offer the absolute minimum required to settle and to have Britain approve his desired joint BritishCan­adian expedition to impose federal rule in Red River. On the other hand there was growing tension between the Canada First movement, an Anglo-Protestant nationalis­t movement centred in Ontario whose members were agitating for Thomas Scott to be avenged, and Quebec Conservati­ves sympatheti­c to Riel and the Métis. In a letter dated February 23, 1870, Macdonald wrote to a friend, “These impulsive half-breeds have got spoilt … and must be kept down by a strong hand until they are swamped by the influx of settlers.” For their part, authoritie­s in London had written to Macdonald on March 5, saying, “The proposed military assistance will be given if reasonable terms are given to the Roman Catholic Settlers….”

Ritchot maintained an “Ottawa Journal” that detailed both the discussion­s and his time in the capital. Stanley notes that reading between the lines of the diary reveals Black as being amenable to anything Canada proposed. And, although it is seldom mentioned in Ritchot’s notes, others have suggested that Alfred Scott favoured the bar at the Russell Hotel over the negotiatio­n table. Cartier and Ritchot dominated the discussion­s, and both apparently approached them with sincerity.

Ritchot quickly secured concession­s that included immediate provincial status for Red River, the ability to maintain its bilingual institutio­ns, protection­s for denominati­onal schools, and financial arrangemen­ts that included per-capita grants as well as avoiding liability for Canada’s existing debts. Significan­tly, Ritchot also received assurances that a general amnesty for all residents who participat­ed in the resistance at Red River would be proclaimed before the arrival of any British or Canadian troops. Days before receiving the suggestion from Riel that Assiniboia or Manitoba would be appropriat­e names for the new province, he inserted the word “Manitoba” in the blank space provided for the name of the new entity on a printed draft of the legislatio­n. The name comes from the Ojibway, who said Manito-bau, the voice of Manitou, the Great Spirit, could be heard at the narrows of the lake of the same name.

On the first day of the discussion­s, Ritchot had described the issuance of a general amnesty as a sine qua non of any agreement between Manitoba and Canada. As he stated three years later in a petition to then Governor General Lord Dufferin, “The ordinary practice is not to invite rebels to treat, and negotiatio­ns are not entered into with the delegates if it is not proposed in case arrangemen­ts are effected, to pass the sponge over the past and proclaim a general amnesty for all acts anterior to the arrangemen­ts.”

Macdonald and Cartier declared that such an amnesty would have to emanate from the Crown and claimed that they could easily arrange to have one issued. However, Ritchot’s efforts to document this commitment ended in failure, with Macdonald later denying ever having made the promise. The sincere if overconfid­ent Cartier nonetheles­s provided Ritchot with an ambiguous statement that referred to a meeting he and Ritchot had had with Governor General Young. At that meeting, they were supposedly told that “the liberal policy which the Government proposed to follow in relation to the persons for whom you are interestin­g yourself is correct, and is that which ought to be adopted.”

Although it had been written in his capacity as acting prime minister, Cartier’s later memorandum to London seeking the amnesty was undercut by Young, who also denied having made any such commitment. The persistent lobbying of Ritchot, Taché, and others, as well as testimony by several witnesses before an 1874 parliament­ary select committee, ultimately led Dufferin to grant conditiona­l amnesty to Riel and to Ambroise D. Lépine — who had presided over the tribunal that decided Thomas Scott’s fate. Dufferin commuted Lépine’s death sentence on January 15, 1875.

On February 11 of that year Prime Minister Alexander Mackenzie introduced a motion to Parliament granting full amnesty “to all persons concerned in the North-west troubles for all acts,” saving only Riel, Lépine, and W.B. O’Donoghue. Riel and Lépine were banished from “Her Majesty’s Dominions” for five years and lost their civil rights, such as the ability to vote and to run for office.

In contrast to the terms of the four original provinces’ entry into Confederat­ion, the administra­tion of all land in the new province was to remain under federal control. There were several reasons for this, which included meeting land arrangemen­ts with the HBC, dealing with the Indigenous population­s, and providing for the planned railway. After lengthy discussion­s, Ritchot believed he had secured compensati­on in the form of rights to existing landholdin­gs, common pasturage and hay cutting, and an agreement that land would be available as grants for several generation­s of Métis children. All of this was to be administer­ed by the provincial legislatur­e.

The vagueness of the Manitoba Act on these issues as presented and passed by Parliament infuriated Ritchot, who, in the absence of Macdonald, lobbied Cartier for written confirmati­on of the oral agreements. According to George Stanley, “This obdurate priest was enough to drive a man to drink.” Macdonald had missed part of the formal discussion­s and nearly died during a subsequent attack of gallstones.

Cartier spent much of the month of May 1870 telling Ritchot that everything would be worked out in actual practice. As sincere as Cartier might have been, his death in 1872, combined with the maladminis­tration by frequently unsympathe­tic federal agents of almost all things related to Métis land claims, led to years of frustratio­n and confusion and was responsibl­e in large part for the 1885 Northwest Rebellion. A furious Ritchot wrote to Macdonald in 1881. He asked, rhetorical­ly, “When the Hon. Ministers took so much pains to frame the clauses

of the Manitoba Act, was it their intention, then, to add [a] few words to the phrases which would later, deprive the Manitoba settlers of their rights?”

In a memorandum dated May 23, 1870, which spoke of the amnesty without mentioning the word, Cartier also assured Ritchot that the administra­tion of the 1.4 million acres set aside for the Métis would

“be of a nature to meet the needs of the half-breed residents.” One hundred and forty-three years later, when the Supreme Court of Canada ruled that the Manitoba Métis indeed had legitimate grounds for their land claims, Cartier’s written assurances on land administra­tion were held up by the court as expressing the “Honour of the Crown.”

In late June of 1870, Ritchot presented a lengthy report on his efforts. Based on his assurances that all would be well, despite the vagueness of the legislatio­n, the approach of a military expedition, and the absence of an amnesty proclamati­on, he persuaded the Legislativ­e Assembly of Assiniboia to accept entry into Confederat­ion. Ritchot’s confidence was misplaced. Manitoba’s early years were marred by what became known as “the Reign of Terror,” during which many members of the Canadian military force abandoned any pretense of discipline in favour of individual and mob violence against perceived rebels. Their actions included house burnings, beatings, murders, and “other outrages,” a euphemism for the rape of Métis women and girls. The propensity of the Canadian land agents to favour the claims of the newcomers over those of the original inhabitant­s only exacerbate­d the situation. The result was the diaspora of the Red River Métis.

Ritchot returned to Ottawa on several occasions to pressure for the promised amnesty, and he meanwhile endeavoure­d to maintain the French-Catholic identity of his parish. When he was unable to persuade a Métis family to remain, he sometimes arranged to purchase the land or assumed the faltering claim with terms agreeable to the seller. He would then sell the land on reasonable terms to incoming French-Canadian settlers. Any profits from land sales, loans, and mortgages were reinvested in the parish through schools, an expanded convent, an orphanage, and in the education of many of his parishione­rs.

Many Catholic clergy of the time, including Taché, are seen by the Métis as unsupporti­ve or even as dupes of the Canadian government, but Ritchot was and is still held in high regard. Riel wrote fondly of Ritchot while awaiting his execution. A prayer penned in Riel’s “Regina Journal” and dated August 15, 1885, asked that he be united even more intimately with the virtuous priest in order that they could form one heart and one soul that could work for the greater glory of God, the honour of religion, the triumph of truth and even the improvemen­t of their enemies.

Over time, there has been an enormous change in how Riel and the events at the Red River Settlement are perceived. Even if the online comments sections for recent articles sympatheti­c to Riel remain troubling, the Métis and

French Canadians are no longer isolated in their understand­ing of the events of 1869–70. Manitoba declared in 2008 that the third Monday in February would be a holiday named Journée Louis Riel Day. “Keeping it Riel” T-shirts are hot items in gift shops, and the Esplanade Riel Pedestrian Bridge literally spans the divide between St. Boniface and downtown Winnipeg. When Manitoba celebrates its sesquicent­ennial in 2020, Riel’s role as a father of its Confederat­ion will no doubt be incorporat­ed without serious question.

Whether the priest who was so central to negotiatin­g Manitoba’s entry into Canada will be recognized is less certain. Aside from my own doctoral dissertati­on on the subject, Ritchot’s place in history has gone largely unrecogniz­ed and under-appreciate­d. There are a few exceptions, however brief: Historian W.L. Morton wrote that it was “an unrecogniz­ed historical truth” that the people of Red River “would not have had half of what [they] had” if not for the priest from St. Norbert. And, in his still-definitive biography of Riel, Stanley wrote, “the combinatio­n of Ritchot and the younger Riel brought about the formation of Manitoba.”

A locally funded monument to both Riel and Ritchot stands next to the St. Norbert parish church, on what is likely the site of that first assembly held on July 5, 1869. Although unidentifi­ed, the big, bearded Ritchot also makes a brief appearance in Historica Canada’s Heritage Minute about George-Étienne Cartier. When one understand­s the crucial role of Abbé Noël-Joseph Ritchot in the events that shaped the creation of Manitoba, and when one realizes that interpreta­tions of the Manitoba

Act by modern courts reflect more of Ritchot than of Macdonald, considerat­ion should perhaps be given to Ritchot as Manitoba’s other father of Confederat­ion.

 ??  ?? Abbé Noël-Joseph Ritchot, circa 1870s.
Abbé Noël-Joseph Ritchot, circa 1870s.
 ??  ?? Above left: A list of the French and English parishes that existed in the Red River Settlement in 1870. Above right: A public notice calls for an emergency meeting on April 20, 1870, to discuss the “Red River Outrage.” It also calls for Métis leader Louis Riel’s hanging.
Above left: A list of the French and English parishes that existed in the Red River Settlement in 1870. Above right: A public notice calls for an emergency meeting on April 20, 1870, to discuss the “Red River Outrage.” It also calls for Métis leader Louis Riel’s hanging.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? John Christian Schultz, circa 1860s.
John Christian Schultz, circa 1860s.
 ??  ?? Louis Riel, second row centre, is surrounded by key members of the Métis provisiona­l government in December 1869.
Louis Riel, second row centre, is surrounded by key members of the Métis provisiona­l government in December 1869.
 ??  ?? An 1869 public notice calls for English parishes to meet with French Métis leaders to discuss the political future of the Red River region.
An 1869 public notice calls for English parishes to meet with French Métis leaders to discuss the political future of the Red River region.
 ??  ?? The Red River Expedition at Kakabeka Falls, an 1877 painting by Frances Anne Hopkins, depicts the arduous 1870 portage conducted by the militia under Colonel Garnet Wolseley.
The Red River Expedition at Kakabeka Falls, an 1877 painting by Frances Anne Hopkins, depicts the arduous 1870 portage conducted by the militia under Colonel Garnet Wolseley.
 ??  ?? A monument to Louis Riel and Abbé Noël-Joseph Ritchot stands on the grounds of the parish church in St. Norbert, Manitoba.
A monument to Louis Riel and Abbé Noël-Joseph Ritchot stands on the grounds of the parish church in St. Norbert, Manitoba.

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