Record Details
Book cover

Marie-Anne : the extraordinary life of Louis Riel's grandmother

Book  - 2008
971.201 Lagim -S
1 copy / 0 on hold

Available Copies by Location

Location
Victoria Available
  • ISBN: 0771080298
  • ISBN: 9780771080296
  • Physical Description xvi, 307 pages : maps
  • Publisher Toronto : McClelland & Stewart, [2008]

Content descriptions

Bibliography, etc. Note:
Includes bibliographical references (pages 265-274) and index.
Immediate Source of Acquisition Note:
LSC 32.99

Additional Information

Syndetic Solutions - Summary for ISBN Number 0771080298
Marie-Anne : The Extraordinary Life of Louis Riel's Grandmother
Marie-Anne : The Extraordinary Life of Louis Riel's Grandmother
by Siggins, Maggie
Rate this title:
vote data
Click an element below to view details:

Summary

Marie-Anne : The Extraordinary Life of Louis Riel's Grandmother


Compulsively readable, this first social history of the opening up of the Canadian West is a triumph of historical detective work and gives us Siggins at the top of her game. While researching the biography of Louis Riel, Maggie Siggins became aware of a figure lurking in the background who had had a profound influence on the great Canadian reformer. This was his grand-mother Marie-Anne Lagimodiere, nee Gaboury. As Siggins' research progressed, she came to regard Marie-Anne as the most exceptional Canadian woman of the nineteenth century. The perils of Laura Secord and Susanna Moodie paled in comparison, yet she remains largely unknown. Beautiful and rebellious, Marie-Anne was still unmarried at twenty-five -- unheard of in 1800s Quebec habitant society. Furthermore, once she did marry Jean-Baptiste Lagimodiere, she insisted on accompanying her fur trapper husband to the uncharted wilderness of western Canada. The year was 1807, and no European woman had yet ventured west of the Great Lakes region. For the next thirty years, she would live among the native people or at fur-trading forts from Pembina to Edmonton House, leading an undoubtedly difficult life but one with freedoms unknown to women in western societies of her time. Drawing from primary sources, Siggins paints a vivid portrait of life in the West, from survival on the plains and bison hunts to the tribal warfare triggered by the fur-trade economy. Through it all, Marie-Anne survived and thrived, living to ninety-six, the matriarch of a large and diverse family whose descendants still live in Manitoba.