The fighting was over by the time they got around to hanging Riel. He was captured at the Battle of Batoche.
Louis Riel was convicted of treason and was hanged in Regina, Northwest Territories, on November 16, 1885. (Regina is now the capital of the Province of Saskatchewan.) Riel is the only person in Canada's history to have been executed for the crime of treason.
Louis Riel was executed on November 16, 1885.
Riel was charged with high treason following continued unrest among the Metis tribes in Manitoba. He was found guilty and hanged on November 16, 1885. Contemporaries of Riel, including at least one member of the jury that convicted him, held him responsible for the 1870 execution of pro-Canadian settler Thomas Scott, who had opposed the Red River Rebellion led by Riel.
Louis Riel didnt fight metis people, he was a metis, he was fighting FOR the metis
because he was a traitor
Riel was hanged in present day Regina, Saskatchewan.
Louis Riel was convicted of treason and, despite a recommendation by the jury for mercy, was hanged on November 16, 1885.
On November 16, 1885, at 8:18 a.m., Louis Riel was hanged. The drop was eight feet. Death was pronounced four minutes later by the Coroner, Dr. H. Dodds.
He did nothing he got hanged at 41
Louis Riel Murdered Thomas Scott. ======================== Louis Riel did not murder Thomas Scott. In fact, Riel did not kill anyone. Louis Riel was convicted of treason and was hanged in Regina, Northwest Territories, on November 16, 1885. (Regina is now the capital of the Province of Saskatchewan.) Riel is the only person in Canada's history to have been executed for the crime of treason.
Louis riel was 41 years old during the battle of batoche
Louis Riel has been dead for over 125 years. He was convicted of treason, and was hanged at Regina on November 16, 1885. He is buried in Winnipeg.
Louis Riel was hanged and convicted for treason in 1885 for leading the North-West Rebellion in Canada. The rebellion was against the Canadian government's encroachment on Métis rights and land ownership in the prairies. Riel was seen as a threat to Canadian sovereignty, and his actions were deemed treasonous by the government.
Yes, Louis Riel was a politician and revolutionary, in the region that is now Manitoba and Saskatchewan, in the 19th century. He was eventually hanged, but is now remembered as an important leader with a just cause.
In 1885 Louis Riel was the leader of the Metis and first Nations people of western Canada against the Canadian government. After his capture in the North-West Rebellion, he stood trial and was found guilty of treason. He was then hanged.
Louis Riel was convicted of treason and was hanged in Regina, Northwest Territories, on November 16, 1885. (Regina is now the capital of the Province of Saskatchewan.) Riel is the only person in Canada's history to have been executed for the crime of treason.
The uprisings (also known as the Riel Rebellion) were led by Louis Riel, who was ultimately tried and hanged for treason.