Buckskin brigadier : the story of the Alberta Field Force

Type
Book
Authors
Edward McCourt ( McCourt, Edward )
 
Category
General Library Collection  [ Browse Items ]
Publication Year
1955 
Publisher
Pages
150 
Subject
Riel Rebellion 1885 -- Juvenile literature 
Abstract
"Indian uprising!" was a terror which haunted western settlers for long years. In 1885, when a dissatisfied band of Cree Indians attacked the settlers at Frog Lake, the call for volunteers went out and the western districts of Alberta and Saskatchewan were organized for defense against a possible full-scale rebellion. In Alberta, a rancher living near Calgary took the lead - the "buckskin brigadier," Major-General Tom Strange, whose achievement deserves high rank among the great stories of Canada. He whipped into shape a strangely assorted force of raw militia, cowboys, and Mounted Police and led them more than 500 miles in pursuit of Chief Big Bear's war-band. The little Army went through rugged, heavily-wooded country where all the military advantages lay with the Indians. They engaged in many hard-fought encounters and finally compelled the surrender of the Indian leaders and the release of white settlers who were held as hostages. Buckskin Brigadier tells the story of that long pursuit and the mend who shared it: the colorful scouts attached to the Mounted Police Force and commanded by the legendary Sam Steele; the inexperienced Militia-men from Montreal and Winnipeg; and the man who dominated the entire campaign against the North West Rebellion - brilliant, eccentric, and courageous Tom Strange. 
Number of Copies

REVIEWS (0) -

No reviews posted yet.

WRITE A REVIEW

Please login to write a review.