Digital Exhibit
Bibliographyut
Primary Sources
Begg, Alexander. Alexander Begg’s Red River Journal and Other Papers Relative to the Red River Resistance of 1869-1870. Manuscript/document collection. Toronto: Champlain Society, 1956. 395-566. From Internet Archive, https://archive.org/details/alexanderbeggsre00unse/page/94/mode/2up, (accessed March 5, 2025).
MacAdam, Adam. Communications from Adam McAdam, Originally Published in The Montreal Herald, in Reply to Letters Inserted Therein under the Signature of Archibald McDonell [i.e. Macdonald], Respecting Lord Selkirk’s Red River Colony. Microform collection. Montreal (Lower Canada): Printed by W. Gray, 1816, From Internet Archive, https://archive.org/details/cihm_51872/page/n23/mode/2up, (accessed March 5, 2025).
Pritchard, John. Glimpses of the Past in the Red River Settlement from Letters of Mr. John Pritchard, 1805-1836. Pamphlet. Middlechurch, Man.: Rupert’s Land Indian Industrial School Press, 1892. From Internet Archive, https://archive.org/details/glimpsesofpastin00prit/page/8/mode/2up, (accessed March 8, 2025).
The Selkirk Treaty and Map. From Archives of Manitoba, https://www.gov.mb.ca/chc/archives/hbca/spotlight/selkirk_treaty.html, (accessed March 21, 2025).
Secondary Sources
Bindon, Kathryn M. “Hudson’s Bay Company Law: Adam Thom and the Institution of Order in Rupert’s Land 1839–54.” In Essays in the History of Canadian Law: Volume I, edited by David Flaherty 43–87. University of Toronto Press, 1981. http://www.jstor.org/stable/10.3138/j.ctt1vgw8g9.7
Brophy, Susan Dianne. A Legacy of Exploitation: Early Capitalism in the Red River Colony, 1763-1821. 1st ed. Vancouver: University of British Columbia Press, 2022. doi:10.59962/9780774866378.
Bryce, George. The Romantic Settlement of Lord Selkirk’s Colonists: (The Pioneers of Manitoba). Winnipeg: Russell, Lang, 1995.
Bumsted, J. M. Lord Selkirk: A Life. Lord Selkirk. 1st ed. Winnipeg: University of Manitoba Press, 2008.
Bumsted, J. M. Trials & Tribulations: The Red River Settlement and the Emergence of Manitoba, 1811-1870. Winnipeg: Great Plains Publications, 2003.
Catty, James P. Canada’s Most Significant Merger. CA Magazine (Toronto : English Edition). Vol. 116. Toronto: Canadian Institute Of Chartered Accountants, 1983.
Dick, Lyle. “The Seven Oaks Incident and the Construction of a Historical Tradition, 1816 to 1970.” Journal of the Canadian Historical Association 2, no. 1 (1991): 91–113. doi:10.7202/031029ar.
Foster, Meg. “Online and Plugged In?: Public History and Historians in the Digital Age.” Public History Review 21 (2014): 1–19. doi:10.5130/phrj.v21i0.4295.
Frye, Ronald and Douglas Spragge. "Manitoba's Red River Settlement: Sources for Economic and Demographic History." Archivaria 9, (79, 1980): 179-193. https://ezproxy.library.uvi c.ca/login?url=https://www.proquest.com/scholarly-journals/manitobas-red-river-settlement-sources-economic/docview/2528223843/se-2
Ens, Gerhard J. Homeland to Hinterland: The Changing Worlds of the Red River Metis in the Nineteenth Century. University of Toronto Press, 1996. https://canadacommons-ca.ezproxy.library.uvic.ca/artifacts/1892605/homeland-to-hinterland/2642654/
Red River Ancestry. “James Sinclair (1811-1856).” From Red River Ancestry, https://www.redriverancestry.ca/SINCLAIR-JAMES-1811.php, (accessed March 22, 2025).
Selkirk, Thomas Douglas, and J.M. Bumsted. The Collected Writings of Lord Selkirk. Winnipeg: Manitoba Record Society, 1984.
Trofanenko, Brenda, and Kevin Kee. “Playing into the Past: Reconsidering the Educational Promise of Public History Exhibits.” In Pastplay, 257-269. University of Michigan Press, 2014.