Spring 1998
War and the New Gloabl Order: Has Anything Really Changed?
David J. Bercuson
Total
Rhetoric, Limited War: Germany's U-Boat Campaign 1917-1918
Holger H. Herwig
Evaluation
of GPS-Aided Artillery Positioning and Orientation Methods
G. Lachapelle, M.E. Cannon and J. Bird
Some
Canadian Experience Suggesting Evolutionary Models of Innovations Involving Industry,
Government, and Universities
Cooper H. Langford, Martha W. Langford and R. Douglas Burch
Military
Law, the Canadian Militia, and the North-West Rebellion of 1885
Chris Madsen
Spring 1998 Main Page
Fall
1999 Main Page |
| Military Law,
the Canadian Militia, and The North-West Rebellion of 1885 |
Chris Madsen
University of Calgary
Introduction
On 18 March 1885, Louis Riel and a large group of
dissatisfied métis took up arms against the Dominion of Canada and declared their
own provisional government at Batoche, a small community south of Prince Albert on the
South Saskatchewan River. Fearful that the insurrection might encourage similar uprisings
among natives and métis in other parts of the North-West territories, the Dominion
government immediately sent a large field force from eastern Canada to suppress the
rebellion. Major-General Frederick Middleton, the general officer commanding the Canadian
militia, personally directed military operations in the field. After indecisive
engagements at Cutknife Hill and Fish Creek, Canadian troops defeated the rebels in battle
at Batoche, thereby bringing an end to active resistance. Riel and his acting government
surrendered several days later.
The North-West Rebellion was Canada's first truly
national military experience since Confederation. In contrast to the predominantly
British-run expedition against the Red River Uprising in 1870, the military forces
deployed during the rebellion were entirely under Canadian control and administration.
Although eventually successful, the campaign in 1885 exposed deficiencies in the existing
militia organization. Historians have cited tactical mistakes and cautiousness in
Middleton's strategy, the inability of the raw and inexperienced militia to subdue the
lightly armed rebels, poor equipment, and the lack of adequate supply and logistics
arrangements. Though valid, such criticisms underrate the militia's achievements during
the rebellion. Given the prevailing climate of fiscal restraint and public indifference
surrounding military matters in the country at the time, the militia actually performed
better than expected. Limited funds from parliament were barely sufficient to train the
amateur militia for less than two weeks every other year and maintain a small
instructional cadre. Yet, thousands of troops mustered at short notice, travelled enormous
distances under trying conditions, and engaged a determined enemy in military operations.
Throughout the conflict, the militia remained a disciplined military force instead of an
armed mob.
The behaviour of the militia reflected serious
efforts by British and Canadian officers to instill a degree of professionalism within
Canada's military forces between Confederation and the North-West Rebellion. Military law
was an important part of this professional development. Discipline rested on the
knowledge, dissemination, and application of military law. British and Canadian
legislation, along with accompanying regulations, provided the basis for a code of service
discipline. The content and administration of military law received considerable scrutiny
from British royal commissions and service authorities during the nineteenth century.
Officers learned about military law through various official and private publications as
well as formal courses of instruction at military schools. A good knowledge of the subject
became a prerequisite for qualification and promotion. Actual practice at the battalion or
company level reinforced the theoretical teaching of military law. Under the authority
vested by the regulations, officers dealt with offences or breaches of service discipline.
Military law promoted predictable behaviour during active operations.
Nineteenth Century Military Law
The military law from which the Canadian militia
drew its code of service discipline rested on traditions, customs, and practice as old as
the common law in Great Britain. The first recorded British military courts dated from the
Crusades and courts of chivalry in the Middle Ages. Although special ordinances issued by
the crown governed naval and military forces raised during times of war, a semi-permanent
court was established under the High Constable, the English king's military
commander-in-chief, and the Earl Marshal, the High Constable's chief of staff. Fearing a
usurpation of his royal prerogative, Henry VIII executed the High Constable, Edward Duke
of Buckingham, in 1521 and vested all responsibilities for military discipline within
British armies under the Earl Marshal. Over time, the court martial derived its name and
form from the court of the marshal. During the English Civil War, the crown and parliament
issued separate Articles of War to their respective military forces. A standing army
stayed in existence on British soil, but English civil courts reasserted their rights and
authority under common law over soldiers when the regulations lapsed at the end of
hostilities.
A formal statutory military code during peacetime
came into existence after the British parliament passed a Mutiny Act in 1689, in response
to a revolt among British units embarked at Ipswich for service on the European continent.
The Mutiny Act, renewed almost annually thereafter, and various Articles of War, issued by
royal prerogative to govern British military forces sent abroad, regulated the application
of military law. While the Articles of War were almost continuously in force during the
constant European and colonial warfare of the eighteenth century, the Mutiny Act had no
force outside of Great Britain until the British parliament extended its jurisdiction in
1802. The Mutiny Act and Articles of War then applied to British troops stationed on
garrison duty in North America and various militia in the territories of Upper and Lower
Canada, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, and Prince Edward Island called out from time to time
for training and active service.
The exact relationship between military law and
common law remained undefined. Each based its legitimacy on a parallel, but separate
historical development. The English civil courts frequently asserted jurisdiction over
serious offences of a civil nature, committed by soldiers in Great Britain. Conviction and
punishment by a military court was no guarantee against later trial before a civil
magistrate for the same offence. It was the equivalent of what military lawyers today call
`double jeopardy.' However, in actual practice, military authorities generally exercised
jurisdiction over service-related offences in Great Britain and offences, both service and
civil in nature covered by the Mutiny Act and Articles of War, among British and colonial
troops abroad. The competent military court to punish serious crimes was the court
martial, which existed in several forms: regimental, garrison, district, and general.
Despite popular misconceptions, military law generally kept pace with changes and reforms
to the common law. Use of the death penalty for many offences declined in favour of
corporal punishment and even full acquittal. Flogging, administered in a highly theatrical
and demonstrative manner for the rest of the troops, gradually became the preferred form
of punishment in the British army. The application of military law and corporal punishment
was far from uniform, and often varied from regiment to regiment because knowledge of
legal matters was uneven among officers and few books existed to guide them through the
Mutiny Act and Articles of War. In contrast to the civil courts, officers exercised
considerable discretion in the interpretation and administration of military law. As a
result, the infliction of corporal punishment steadily increased in quantity and severity
during the Napoleonic Wars.
During the early nineteenth century, demands for
reforms to military law and how it was administered coalesced around growing opposition to
corporal punishment. Flogging and branding were the most common punishments in a long list
of humiliating and painful corrective measures available to military authorities. In an
emotional campaign advocating total abolition, influential persons in the British
parliament and popular press depicted the practice of corporal punishment in the armed
forces as demeaning and inhuman. Public pressure became so strong that the British
government under prime minister Sir Robert Peel appointed a royal commission in 1835 to
examine the whole system of military punishments. Over the course of many meetings, the
commissioners heard testimony and took evidence from the Duke of Wellington, experienced
military officers, and the principal opponents of flogging. The royal commission
recommended some restrictions on the amount of flogging, but stopped short of its
suggested elimination. Military authorities remained convinced that corporal punishment
was essential for the proper maintenance of discipline within the armed forces.
Although the issue remained unresolved for several
decades afterwards, vocal public outcries against flogging following the Crimean War
eventually forced the British government to appoint another royal commission to consider
the reform of military law. After a particularly heated debate in the British House of
Commons during late 1867, the judge advocate general warned that a motion was imminent,
and he hoped to `prevent any vote which the Authorities at the Horse Guards consider would
be very prejudicial to the service by the appointment of a Commission.' The opponents of
flogging and other objectionable punishments were winning support among large segments of
the British public. Over objections from military authorities, the British government
imposed restrictions on the infliction of corporal punishment. From 1868 onwards, flogging
required proper sentence from a court martial and was restricted to offences on active
service involving mutiny or insubordination accompanied by personal violence. While
curbing the worst abuses associated with military law, the political decision left
military authorities without a familiar means of enforcing military discipline.
The royal commission, chaired by Colonel John Wilson
Patten, explored alternative forms of punishment, such as fines, imprisonment, and
discharge of convicted soldiers. Between March 1868 and April 1869, commissioners heard
testimony from distinguished members of the legal profession and senior military officers,
including Field Marshal H.R.H. the Duke of Cambridge, the commander-in-chief of the
British army. A final report concluded that the existing court martial system worked
sufficiently well, but found the sources of military law too complicated, guidance and
instruction for officers insufficient, and certain procedures unfair. Steps were required
to make definite improvements in how military law was administered. The Duke of Cambridge,
who took a sincere interest in the reform of military law, questioned whether the
restrictions on flogging were having a negative effect on discipline within the army. The
number of incarcerated soldiers at home and abroad had abruptly risen because varying
sentences of imprisonment largely replaced corporal punishment. Anxious to decrease the
amount of punished crime in the armed forces, military authorities acted upon the royal
commission's main recommendations.
The concern about too much complexity began a
process towards consolidation of the various legislative and other sources behind British
military law into a single service code. Charles Clode, a civilian lawyer employed at the
War Office on various legal and administrative matters, advised that the Mutiny Act
required revisions in light of the royal commission's findings. Indeed, the proposed
alterations were so extensive that he felt that a new statute, which incorporated the best
features from both the Mutiny Act and Articles of War in a single piece of legislation,
was more appropriate. The secretary of state for war asked Sir Henry Thring, the
parliamentary counsel, to prepare a suitable bill for presentation to parliament. Revived
in 1869 under the Treasury, the Parliamentary Counsel's Office drafted government
parliamentary bills, amendments, and motions and provided legal assistance to departments
within the British government, either upon request or as a matter of course for those
departments without the benefit of in-house legal advisors. Between 17 May and 26 July
1878, a select committee, chaired by Sir William Harcourt, examined the draft army bill in
light of testimony from a number of invited witnesses, including Thring, Clode, the Duke
of Cambridge, and the judge advocate general. Despite unreasonably wide terms of
reference, Harcourt's committee agreed that the proposed statute was a great improvement
over existing legislation. In 1879, the Army Discipline and Regulation Act came into
force, replaced two years later by the Army Act. Like the previous Mutiny Act, the Army
Act received annual approval from the British parliament after 1881.
Although the Army Act silenced the harshest critics
of the military justice system for the time being, military authorities disparaged what
they perceived as encroaching civilian influence over military law. A proposed provision
in earlier drafts sought to allow the governor general in a British colony to review and
confirm sentences from general courts martial under certain circumstances. These powers
usually rested with a senior officer holding a court martial warrant from the crown or his
designated confirming authority. In a self-governing colony like Canada, the governor
general necessarily felt compelled to consult the colonial cabinet and legislature.
Difficult legal cases were still referred to the judge advocate general in London for
advice on confirmation. Major-General Sir Garnet Wolseley, the British adjutant general,
objected to a formal right of appeal to the judge advocate general or some other civil
legal authority:
Those who know how difficult it is to maintain
discipline in an army - especially in an army constituted as ours is upon almost purely
civilian principles with a parliament always on the watch to check and find fault with the
conduct of those in military authority - know also how essential it is that the soldier
should learn to look to his officer alone for justice.
Unfortunately, some soldiers coming before courts
martial did not share Wolseley's faith in the impartiality of the military hierarchy. The
Duke of Cambridge remarked that defendants were frequently hiring solicitors or barristers
to represent them at trial before military courts. The intervention of legally trained
civilians at various levels of the military justice system demanded a higher standard of
knowledge and proficiency in the fundamentals of law among military officers.
Among the British royal commission's recommendations
was preparation of an official textbook on military law, issued by authority, for the
general reference of the armed forces in Great Britain and its colonies. Standard works by
Captain Thomas Simmons, Major-General Charles Napier, and Major-General George D'Aguilar
were still in use, but they were hopelessly out-dated. Many irregularities in the
administration of military law were undoubtedly due to an over-reliance on old books.
Pending issue of an official manual, Charles Clode produced his own book through a private
publisher in 1872. It was a comprehensive and detailed work. He argued that military law
could only be understood in a historical context because its legitimacy rested on a
separate development from the common law. Consequently, military officers required a
familiarity with the background and customs of military law. A committee which assembled
at the Horse Guards under instructions from the secretary of state for war on 2 May 1877
endorsed preparation of an official textbook, designed to enable all ranks to understand
more clearly the connection between civil and military law and promote more uniformity in
courts martial. Work towards consolidation of the existing sources into a single statute,
however, impaired the endeavour. Colonel Robert Carey, a deputy judge advocate, wrote a
book explaining the principles behind the Mutiny Act and Articles of War, but it was never
published outside the War Office because the Army Discipline and Regulation Act superseded
these authorities. The new legislation instead provided an opportunity for a more
ambitious and comprehensive manual based upon extensive civil legal experience.
The first official British manual of military law
was prepared and arranged under the direction of the parliamentary counsel. The process
began in July 1879 when the secretary of state for war asked Thring to produce rules of
procedure for the Army Discipline and Regulation Act and incorporate them in a textbook
which would contain the act, the rules of procedure, and explanatory notes on military
law. Gerald Fitzgerald, a member of the parliamentary bar, was general editor, while
several authors wrote individual chapters. At Thring's suggestion, Sir George Osborne
Morgan, the judge advocate general, thoroughly revised and added notes to the manuscript,
based upon the Army Act of 1881. The finished product then received approval from the Duke
of Cambridge. The War Office officially published the manual of military law in 1884. Its
fourteen chapters authoritatively dealt with the history of military law, military crimes
and punishments, powers of arrest, courts martial, the law of evidence, English criminal
law applicable to soldiers, the relation of civil courts to courts martial, constitution
of military forces, the law of enlistment, billeting, the soldier's relation to civil
life, the laws and customs of war, as well as the law of riot and insurrection. The manual
of military law was available for purchase through Her Majesty's Stationery Office and
received a wide public circulation. Republished in several editions in subsequent years,
the manual became an invaluable source on military law for officers, soldiers, and
civilian lawyers in Great Britain and the self-governing colonies.
Compared to the significant interest with military
law in Great Britain, the Canadian variant attracted less attention. The scale of Canadian
public inquiry never matched the British royal commissions. Beyond matters of fiscal
responsibility and blatant political patronage, the Dominion's parliament rarely took any
sustained notice of military matters. Defence remained a low priority among other social
and economic concerns in the new Dominion. Segments of the Canadian population distrusted
what they perceived as militarism, saw little need for the expansion of the existing
militia, and believed even more firmly that they did not want to pay the associated costs.
In general, the level of emotional debate was also lower because flogging was less common
in Canada. British commanders faced a major problem with desertion among troops in North
America, particularly when labour markets in the United States offered the attractions of
steady employment and high wages. Flogging proved a poor deterrent because severe
punishments simply gave disgruntled soldiers another reason to run-away. Since the
Canadian militia was constituted on a voluntary basis, aggrieved or dissatisfied soldiers
could always leave or choose not to re-enlist at the end of their three-year engagements.
Even before the British finally abolished corporal punishment in 1881, the Canadian
militia generally relied upon persuasion rather than intimidation in enforcing military
discipline among its ranks.
The Canadian militia used British military law,
modified by Canadian legislation and regulations to meet particular Canadian
circumstances. In 1867, the British North America Act gave the new Dominion of Canada
responsibility for defence and maintenance of its own military forces during peacetime.
The older provincial militia organizations were incorporated into a larger national
framework. In 1868, a Militia Act established four classes of men liable for military
service, different types of volunteer and reserve militia, military districts, and annual
paid drill of no more than sixteen days (subject to parliamentary vote). The Militia Act
supplemented rather than replaced existing British military law. When mobilized, the
Canadian militia remained subject to the statutes and regulations in force within the
British army. Since certain provisions in British sources were not entirely suited to the
Canadian situation, Canadian officials drafted additional regulations. In 1870, the
Department of Militia and Defence issued regulations under the authority of the Militia
Act. The Regulations and Orders for the Canadian militia replaced previous regulations
issued on an interim basis by the Canadian adjutant general and promoted greater
uniformity among Canadian military forces. In terms of discipline and organization, the
Canadians compared themselves favourably to the territorial army in Great Britain. The
Militia Act sought to place the Canadian militia on a footing as near as possible to the
standard of British volunteers in order to meet the Dominion's minimal defence needs.
Canadian officers and soldiers in the North-West field force fell under the disciplinary
provisions of the Army Act, as applied by the Militia Act and its regulations. The
military law which regulated the militia in Canada during the nineteenth century
originated from a variety of British and Canadian sources.
Military Legal Instruction
Statutes, regulations, and manuals were useless
without informed officers and other ranks. The late nineteenth century featured the
transition between older traditions of amateurism and a growing sense of professionalism
within British and Canadian military forces. Education, intelligence, and experience
gradually took precedence over background, financial means, and social standing. The
introduction of formal instruction in military law resulted from a general movement to
improve the intellectual attainments of officers. General Sir Henry Murray, in a lecture
to military cadets at Sandhurst, stressed the importance of the subject in their
professional development:
Formerly a notion used to prevail that Courts
Martial in their proceedings and decisions were to be governed rather by honour than law -
now this altogether is a mistake; honour, it is true is a noble influence, but it is
rather of a capricious nature - each Gentleman seems to exhume the right of having his own
code of it. Whereas law goes doggedly to its point - one counsel may represent it in a
particular light and another counsel may show it in a different one, but still there
remains the law founded on experience and reflection as a safe path to the administration
of justice. For this reason I think that the study of military law is an important branch
of education in any candidate for a Commission in the Army.
Professional qualification required a requisite
knowledge of military law. With every increase in rank, the officer was expected to have a
better level of understanding. Self-study and formal courses of instruction, measured by
qualification and promotion examinations, guaranteed a minimum knowledge of military law.
The Canadian militia originally benefited from the
training and educational opportunities afforded by the presence of British regular troops
in Canada. In response to tensions surrounding the American seizure of the British steamer
Trent during the American Civil War, military schools of instruction, connected
with British regiments stationed in Quebec and Ontario, had been established from 1864.
The schools provided certificates of qualification after a course of individual and
structured study, which included military law and relevant regulations. British
instruction inspired some militia officers onto greater efforts. A handbook, compiled by
Major Thomas Scoble for the guidance of Canadian volunteers on active service, included
two chapters on the Militia Act, Queen's Regulations, and Articles of War. Such books were
important because geographical distance and time constraints worked against large
attendance at British military schools.
Unless fortunate enough to live in close proximity
to an urban area and a British garrison, most militia officers relied upon reading books
and regulations on hand in their locality. There was undoubtedly some awareness of leading
American authorities, including Dr. Francis Lieber's code for the Union army during the
American Civil War. British books, however, were generally more readily available.
Although somewhat dated, written sources were sufficient for Captain Alexander Tulloch, a
garrison instructor with the 69th Regiment in Halifax, to prepare and publish a set of
lectures on military law. The books were about all that was left behind as British regular
troops left Canada. After signing the Treaty of Washington, the British government
withdrew its imperial garrisons, with the exception of those at the naval bases of Halifax
and Esquimalt. The Canadian militia assumed sole responsibility for its own military
training and education.
Although British military schools closed, the
Dominion government established two permanent schools of gunnery, attached to artillery
batteries at Kingston and Quebec. Lieutenant-Colonel George French and Lieutenant-Colonel
Thomas Strange, two Royal Artillery officers on loan from the British government, were the
first commandants. The gunnery schools offered long and short courses of instruction for
officers, respectively of twelve and three months duration. Subjects of study followed
closely the course of studies at the Royal Military Academy at Woolich, the British army's
main educational institution for prospective artillery officers. Strange had been an
instructor at Woolich for five years, and French was a former member of the Royal Irish
Constabulary. The artillery embodied the more intellectual side of the militia.
Enrollments at the gunnery schools were small, but the quality of instruction remained
high. The curriculum aimed at imparting a thorough grounding in technical, military, and
administrative duties. Examination questions in military law at the gunnery school in
Quebec during November 1874 demanded a good general knowledge of the Militia Regulations,
Queen's Regulations and Orders, and Articles of War, as applied to the Canadian militia.
Upon gaining certificates, officers were expected to return to their militia units and
assume roles as instructors. To further these activities, printing presses at the gunnery
schools distributed recent examination questions and an artillery manual with a section on
discipline. As the only efficient military schools of instruction in Canada for many
years, the gunnery schools trained officers from other service branches as well. An
infantry short course required individuals to pass written examinations on the Militia
Act, Queen's Regulations and Orders, and interior economy. The gunnery schools - prefixed
with Royal after 1880 - furnished an indispensable means of formal military legal
instruction for a select number of motivated militia officers.
The Royal Military College of Canada, which opened
at Kingston in June 1876, became another institution giving formal instruction in military
law. Heavily inspired by the United States Military Academy at West Point, the curriculum
comprised a mixture of civil and military subjects. The War Office offered a select number
of commissions in the British army on a competitive basis to graduates with the highest
standing in each year. Cadets received instruction in military administration and law
during the sixth and fifth classes in the military college's four year academic programme.
The first cadets, who used Wolseley's published pocketbook for field service as a
textbook, learned about special laws relating to soldiers, the history of British military
law, military crimes and punishments, the constitution and practice of courts martial, as
well as rules of evidence. Wolseley's book was a forerunner to the British army's later
published field regulations. Cadets predominantly learned British military law with a
slight Canadian emphasis. The appointment of a professor in military history, military
administration, and law greatly improved the standing and teaching of the subject.
Major Douglas Jones, a Royal Artillery officer
loaned from his regiment by the British government, arrived in Kingston during the summer
of 1879 to fill the professorship. Drawing upon considerable experience in staff and
regimental duties, he broadened the scope of the law course to include martial law,
comparisons between military and civil law, preliminary steps before trial, court martial
procedure, military law applicable to the Canadian militia, and courts of inquiry. As
texts, cadets consulted the Militia Regulations and Orders and published notes on military
law, prepared by Major Jones at the suggestion of the military college's commandant. These
notes were given a wider circulation outside the Royal Military College of Canada and
became recommended reading for serious militia officers. Changes consequent upon the new
Army Act soon made the notes dated. Therefore, Major Jones prepared a revised and expanded
textbook on military law in 1881. Classes usually consisted of lectures, followed with
reading and answers on questions asked by him. The textbook delved more deeply into
particular topics and allowed Major Jones `to gain the full attention of the Cadets to my
lectures, which I should fail in doing had they to be busily engaged in taking copious
notes, and enables me to proceed more rapidly.' Although a conscientious teacher, Jones
held strong opinions on certain controversial military topics, and he resigned from the
Royal Military College of Canada in 1884.
Major Edward Nash, another Royal Artillery officer
sent from Great Britain, took over the position of professor of military history, military
administration, and law at the Royal Military College of Canada. Despite the change in
instructors, the subject matter of the law course remained virtually identical. Under the
Militia Regulations and Orders, a select number of militia officers attended the Royal
Military College of Canada for a special long course of instruction, designed to suit them
for staff and instructional duties. Nash lectured on various aspects of administration and
military law to this small group in addition to his normal duties teaching the cadets. The
courses at the Royal Military College of Canada provided good quality instruction in
military law for militia officers and cadets, some of whom subsequently entered British or
Canadian service.
The long-awaited opening of infantry and cavalry
schools of military instruction allowed further opportunities for formal courses in
military law. Although originally authorized with the gunnery schools, the other military
schools were delayed because of fiscal restraints and organizational problems.
Lieutenant-General Edward Selby-Smyth, the general officer commanding the Canadian
militia, and his successor, Major-General Richard Luard, repeatedly stressed to the
Dominion government the importance of these schools for developing discipline among
officers and non-commissioned officers. A number of provisional schools across the country
had already achieved good results. At one such school in Quebec, officers were required
`to attend as supernumeraries on District Courts Martial, and to make special report as to
how the proceedings were carried out.' Practical observation reinforced theoretical
teaching and lectures. Permanent military schools - three infantry and one cavalry -
opened at Toronto, Fredericton, St. John's, and Quebec City in January 1884. Like the
Royal gunnery schools, these schools offered long and short courses with a military law
component. Together, the permanent military schools of instruction sent back qualified
militia officers to rural and city corps.
Prior to the North-West Rebellion, the majority of
Canadian militia units performed paid training of sixteen days for artillery and twelve
days for all other arms every two years. Upon mustering, officers were required to read
the conditions of service to their soldiers and to inform them that they were now subject
to military law. Training usually involved exercises in a number of practical and
theoretical subjects. For guidance, officers and other ranks consulted the Militia
Regulations and Orders, most recently published in 1883, the manual of military law, and
various privately published books. The most popular among the last was Lieutenant-Colonel
William Otter's guide for the administration of an infantry formation which included
sections on discipline, courts martial, offences, complaints, and defaulters. Although
instruction was far from uniform, most soldiers gained some familiarity with military law
and certainly learned enough to know the difference between right and wrong in the
military environment. The availability of published regulations and books shifted the onus
onto the individual to know what was expected of him under military law. In general, city
corps were in a much better state than their rural counterparts. Literacy was more
widespread, and local patrons or businessmen contributed funds to buy uniforms, equipment,
and books. A nucleus of trained officers, graduated from the Royal Military College of
Canada and the permanent schools of military instruction, set a good example for the rest
of the battalion or company. Major-General Middleton, who assumed command of the Canadian
militia on 12 July 1884, inherited the fledglings of a disciplined force of citizen
soldiers.
Discipline in the Field
Deployment of the Canadian militia in the North-West
translated the study and teaching of military law during peacetime into actual practice on
active service. Middleton divided the field force into three columns under separate
commanders: he proceeded against the forces of Riel and Gabriel Dumont, the rebel military
leader, in the direction of Batoche; Lieutenant-Colonel Otter relieved Battleford and
attempted to engage defiant natives under Chief Poundmaker north of the town; and
Major-General Strange, recalled from retirement near Calgary, moved to Edmonton and then
to beleaguered Fort Pitt along the North Saskatchewan River. Since other historians have
described the resulting military operations and battles in considerable detail, this
section instead focuses on various legal aspects of the campaign and how Canadian soldiers
interpreted and administered military law. The conflict represented one of the most
difficult and potentially nastiest types of warfare; it was an internal security
operation, in which military forces were used against a disgruntled and armed segment of
the country's own civil population. The Canadian militia encountered all the hazards and
limitations such a military operation entailed.
The most important task facing the field force was
to maintain discipline and expected behaviour within the ranks. Success on the battlefield
relied in large measure upon soldiers obediently following the orders and directions given
them. Middleton, who had doubts about the capabilities and readiness of the Canadian
militia at the outbreak of the rebellion, initially asked for despatch of British regular
troops from Halifax. The Dominion government, however, refused to comply with the request
and insisted that Canadian soldiers were better suited for the campaign. In contrast to
the British army, the Canadian militia generally attracted a better class of men from the
general civic community; merchants, bank clerks, farmers, lawyers, students, retired
soldiers, and other members of respectable society were included in its ranks. In the
opinion of Lieutenant-Colonel George Denison, Canadian troops during the rebellion
`behaved splendidly, keen to obey every order, always willing, and preserving perfect
discipline. Not the stolid discipline, the result of years of routine, but the discipline
of zeal and enthusiasm, based upon the common desire of us all to do the very best we
could for our country, and for the credit of our corps.' A sense of cause, patriotism, and
a stake in their community provided soldiers with the strongest motivations for behaving
themselves. In this regard, the Canadian militia considered itself superior to the older,
standing armies of Europe.
The amount of punished crime among soldiers during
the North-West Rebellion was relatively low. Besides training and background, several
factors contributed to this state of affairs: the relative shortness of the campaign,
constant movement and marches, concentration into camps when not employed in combat
operations, remoteness from the temptations of towns and settlements, clear instructions
and orders, and the willingness of officers and non-commissioned officers to act
decisively to prevent crime. Perhaps the most important, however, was a prohibition in the
North-West territories on the possession and consumption of alcohol. Like Wolseley during
the 1870 expedition, Middleton denied liquor drinking privileges to volunteers in the
current campaign. The effect on discipline was noticeable. Lieutenant John Preston, an
officer with `D' company of the Midland battalion, attributed an almost complete absence
of crime to the strictly enforced ban on alcohol:
Our Battalion had been recruited largely in the
towns of the Lake Ontario waterfront, from hard-bitten sailors and dock workers,
who, if liquor had been generally available, would sometimes have been in trouble; but
without anything strong to drink they were the finest and best-behaved and most loyal
troops possible; and the same was generally true of all our rank and file.
The removal of a mood-altering catalyst promoted
better behaviour among the Canadian troops. Their attention remained focused completely on
the tasks at hand. The small number of offences were handled in a summary fashion.
Battalion and company commanders dealt with a
variety of infractions against service discipline. The most common were insubordination,
negligent performance of duties, falling asleep during guard duty, improper upkeep of
equipment, misappropriation of supplies, and accidental shootings. Under the Militia
Regulations and Orders, officers awarded summary punishments after confirmation of the
alleged offences. Not every soldier readily accepted the prescribed penalty. In his diary,
Private Robert Allan described how a soldier under arrest for swearing at a sergeant major
`was ordered to have 4 hrs pack drill today (being the first [offender] we have had he
would not do anything he was told), so he was brought back to the guard tent &
handcuffs put on. I believe he will be given another chance tomorrow.' In the field,
summary punishments were usually preferred to more formal legal proceedings. Facilities
for imprisonment were limited, and every convicted soldier removed from active service
placed an added burden on the rest of the troops in the company. Courts of inquiry
investigated misconduct on the part of some soldiers, but available evidence suggests that
no general courts martial were held in the field during the rebellion. The dispersal of
the field force over a wide geographical area and the limited number of officers with
sufficient seniority and experience to sit as presidents or members of courts martial were
most likely contributing factors.
There was also a general lack of serious offences,
such as murder, rape, and violent assault, requiring trial by a formal military court.
Officers handled potentially serious situations in other ways. Lieutenant Lyndhurst
Wadmore, an officer in Otter's Battleford column, described a soldier who `flew at me on
parade; kicked him and threatened to shoot, but did not like to order this.' Some men
inevitably broke down psychologically under the stress of battle and fatiguing marches.
Defaulters usually deserved pity rather than punishment. In his annual report to the
Dominion government, Major-General Middleton remarked on `an almost total absence of such
Military crimes as are usual with Regular Troops.' Both on the line of march and in
combat, the Canadian militia displayed a commendable degree of discipline for hastily
recruited and at best, partially trained amateur soldiers.
Nonetheless, keeping such troops under proper
control posed some significant problems. The special correspondent for the Toronto Mail
reported that Canadian soldiers plundered métis houses at Clarke's Crossing, broke
furniture and possessions belonging to a Madame Tourand at Fish Bay, and shattered windows
on homes with careless gunfire. Incidents of wanton pillaging and looting were more common
than the minister of militia and defence, Sir Adolophe Caron, was willing to admit in the
House of Commons. Existing law and custom allowed the destruction of private property in
the course of military operations and recognized the right of military forces to
requisition necessary supplies from local inhabitants. International jurists, following
upon the ideas of Hugo Grotius and Emerich de Vattel, merely argued that these activities
should be kept in proportion to the ultimate object of defeating the enemy. Strict orders
from Middleton, read out after drill practice, prohibited soldiers from entering houses or
farms on the line of march, `except those authorized to do so & they could take
provisions but had to keep a strict account of anything taken, and anything taken had to
be handed over to the Quarter Master.' Despite the threat of severe punishment, soldiers
still seized goods and livestock for personal gain without apparent distinction between
property belonging to supporters of the rebels and the settlers they were sent to protect.
At Battleford, complaints about unauthorized requisitions became so frequent that
Lieutenant-Colonel Otter acknowledged that `stringent means must be taken to remedy it.'
Parliamentary inquiries into allegations of looting during the rebellion, including the
questionable seizure of furs by the Major-General himself, eventually led to Middleton's
later resignation and return to Great Britain in 1890.
Although under no legal obligation, the Dominion
government intended to settle accounts after the conflict. The time of year and sparse
settlement on the prairies restricted the amount of foraging which could be profitably
done. The field force purchased supplies from the Hudson Bay Company's existing network
and other private companies. The Dominion government paid dearly for the privilege, but
the system proved workable and dependable. Without question, the Canadian militia was in a
far better position than its opponents.
Faced with really no other alternative, the rebels
and truculent natives seized or requisitioned whatever supplies they required. The
insurrectionists had captured badly-needed arms and ammunition during initial encounters
with the North-West Mounted Police, but not as much as they perhaps could have. An utter
lack of preparation for a prolonged conflict against organized military forces
characterized the rebel side. Riel's faith in Providence was no substitute for a good
supply base. As fighting with Canadian troops exhausted stocks of food and ammunition, the
rebels increasingly lived off the surrounding countryside. Settlers who were unsympathetic
to the rebel cause or resisted forced appeals for supplies faced threats and intimidation.
Riel absolutely refused to allow Dumont to adopt guerrilla tactics against Middleton's
forces. Many opportunities to seize convoys along the field force's extended, vulnerable
supply lines were subsequently lost. Captured wagon trains allowed native warriors under
Poundmaker and Big Bear to prolong resistance for a short time after Riel's surrender. For
the most part, the rebels fought against the Canadian militia in very traditional ways.
General observance of the laws and customs of war on
both sides precluded an escalation of the conflict to a more ruthless and unpleasant
level. Middleton's instructions from the Dominion government were simply `to vindicate the
law and to put down armed resistance to it.' To achieve this object, the Major-General was
given considerable latitude to do what he thought appropriate for the situation. Middleton
was a veteran of the Maori uprisings in New Zealand, the Hindu Santhal Rebellion, and the
Indian Mutiny. He was fully prepared to adopt extreme measures of reprisal if the rebels
adopted guerrilla warfare or flaunted recognized customs. Once breached, the contemporary
laws of war allowed destruction of living dwellings, seizure of property, and summary
execution of francs-tireurs and irregular combatants. The most immediate precedents
were the Franco-Prussian War and the American Civil War. Nineteenth century Military
Realists, such as the Prussian officers Carl von Clausewitz and Helmuth von Moltke,
declared that legal restraints were useless under modern war conditions. Military
necessity, as determined by the course of events and commanders in the field, was the only
guiding principle. General William Sherman had put into practice during the Union army's
march across the southern United States his belief that the mere act of rebellion against
the duly constituted legal authority deserved severe punishment. Middleton, however, was
not willing to pursue a deliberate campaign of terror and retribution without some sort of
provocation. The rebels respected flags of truce, treated most prisoners reasonably well,
and ultimately surrendered according to the prescribed fashion. In return, Middleton and
the Canadian militia handled the defeated rebels and natives with fairness and respect.
Riel, Poundmaker, Big Bear, and their principal followers were handed over to civil
authorities for detention and trial.
At the end of hostilities, each side blamed the
other for atrocities allegedly committed during the rebellion. Physical evidence and
eyewitness testimony strongly incriminated some of the insurgents. At Frog Lake, Cree
warriors had seized and killed nine civilians, including the local native agent and two
Roman Catholic priests. Their mutilated and charred bodies were still lying on the open
ground when Canadian soldiers arrived several weeks later. The press in eastern Canada
gave full accounts of the improprieties in grisly detail. Fortunately, the main fighting
was already finished before most of the Canadian militia became fully aware of these
crimes. The sight made at least one soldier's `blood run cold and then heat up quickly.'
Deliberate massacres inflamed passions and encouraged a desire for revenge. Claims, often
several years after the fact, that Canadian troops had killed helpless defenders during
the storming of Batoche were more difficult to substantiate. Such acts were committed in
the heat of battle and often under very confused circumstances.
Earlier in the century, troops forced to besiege and
assault defiant towns and cities were given considerable license to ransack and slaughter
the enemy inhabitants. It was the penalty for continued resistance and refusal to
surrender upon reasonable demand. Military law and the laws of war generally did not hold
soldiers responsible for killings in connection with active operations, unless accompanied
by some particularly brutal or malicious conduct. Refusing quarter to other combatants was
deplorable, but it was not technically a crime under the laws and customs of war prior to
codification with the Hague and Geneva Conventions in the twentieth century. Although
troops destroyed arms and gunpowder before marching away from Batoche, they left métis
women and their belongings unmolested. Unlike the rebels, the Canadian militia respected
the status of non-combatants and never killed prisoners.
Conclusion
Throughout the North-West Rebellion in 1885, the
Canadian militia acted as a disciplined military force. Soldiers obediently followed the
orders given them, committed relatively few crimes, and respected the accepted rules
governing warfare at the time. Good behaviour was not the result of chance, but instead
arose from concerted efforts to impart a sound knowledge of military law among militia
officers and other ranks in the years preceding the rebellion. Although a Militia Act and
accompanying regulations came into existence, the Canadian militia still relied mostly
upon Imperial legislation. Significant developments took place during this time in the
reform and application of military law in Great Britain and by extension the
self-governing colonies. Militia officers learned about military law through formal
courses of instruction at military schools and individual study in official manuals and
privately published books. Military law was considered an important subject for better
unit administration and the successful conduct of active operations. A significant
proportion of Canadian troops, at least among the officers, knew their rights, duties, and
responsibilities under the law. An investment in the teaching of military law during
peacetime paid dividends in the field.
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