Dawson Trail Park Stories for Exhibition

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Dawson Trail Arts & Heritage Tour Exhibit Location: Dawson Trail Park Proposals are sought for an artistic commission to create an exhibit for a 20 ft x 10 ft outdoor space in the Dawson Trail Park in Richer, Manitoba. The work or works will render the artist’s vision or artistic representation(s) of two stories that will be featured in the exhibit. Interpretive exhibit panels will accompany the exhibit(s) along the lines of the text and images that follow below. Each of the two stories represents a different aspect of the history of the Dawson Trail in Manitoba. The first is the story of the lost gold of the Wolseley army’s pay somewhere along the Dawson Trail that has never been found. It is a fun story that includes some mystery and celebrates an old tale that all the locals know about and has been told and retold many ways. This story is also representative of the clashes and conflict that were commonplace between the Indigenous inhabitants of the region and the Government of Canada who sent Wolseley’s Army (The Red River Expedition) to the North-West to quell the Resistance. The second is the story of the history and significance of lumbering in this region. The first settler families that established themselves in the Richer area owned and operated sawmills which supplied lumber to the fast-growing Red River Settlement for construction and heating. Logs from this region were used for everything from the building of the St. Boniface Cathedral to the construction of the Dawson Trail’s corduroy road. Story 1: The Lost Treasure of the Dawson Trail

Somewhere along this dotted line lies a legendary treasure waiting to be found. Dawson Trail - treasure trail? Story by Michael Posner in Blom, R.R. (1980, April). Taché Rural Municipality 1880-1980 (P.36). Commissioned by The Council of the Rural Municipality of Taché. Derksen Printers, Steinbach: Manitoba. Retrieved from University of Manitoba digital collections June 3, 2020, http://hdl.handle.net/10719/3055598

There are at least three stories of treasures lost along the Dawson Trail. Two stories concern the payroll for Col. Garnet Wolseley’s Red River Expedition troops. According to one version, a soldier was travelling on horseback along the Dawson Trail with about $10,000 worth of gold, the payroll for the troops with Wolseley’s Red River Expedition of 1870-72. First Nations, who did not appreciate the presence of the army in their territory and had launched several complaints already by this point that they had not received the compensation promised to them

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