


News Letter Excerpts
Red River Metis Cart
According to the journal of North West Company fur-trader Alexander Henry (the younger), the carts made their first appearance in 1801 at
Fort Pembina, just south of what is now the United States border. Originally the carts were small horse-drawn affairs, with three-foot solid wheels cut from
large trees, carrying up to 450 pounds. Later, larger wheels with four spokes were used and gradually the red river carts with their huge, many-spoked wheels
evolved, carrying nearly twice as much. Some had "tires" made of shaganappi (green rawhide).
In 1878 Harper's Magazine carried a description of the red river cart, written by reporters who visited the territory and left a legacy of
interesting information and sketches:
It is simply a light box with a pair of shafts, mounted on an axle connecting two enormous wheels. Ther is no concession made
to the aversion of the human frame to sudden violent changes of level; there is no weakness of luxury about this vehicle. The wheels are broad in the
felloes (rims), so as not to cut through the prairie sod. They are long in the spokes, so as to pass safely through fords and mud holes. They are very much
dished so that they can be strapped together and rawhide stretched over them to make a boat. The whole cart is made of wood; there is not a bit of metal
about it, so that, if anything breaks, the material to repair it is easily found. The axles are never greased and they furnish an incessant answer to the
old conundrum: "What makes more noise than a pig in a poke?"
Each wheel was said to have its own peculiar shriek, announcing the coming of a train from a great distance. (Grease
or oil would have only mixed with the dust, wearing down the axles.) As it was, a cart often used four or five axles on the trip to St. Paul from the Red River
settlement. Harness was made from a buffalo hide, often in one piece. Carts moved single file, except when in danger from Indians, when they traveled several abreast. Each driver controlled five or six carts strung out behind him,
each ox tied to the cart ahead.
Metis Resource Centre
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