On November 16, 1885, the Canadian government executed Metis leader
Louis Riel for high treason in the wake of the "Northwest Rebellion" that had pitted the Metis (descendants of French traders and native tribes) in what is now Saskatchewan against Canadian troops.

Although Riel has lately been
rehabilitated as an indigenous francophone patriot of the Canadian West, his
trial and execution remain sore points between English and French Canada.