Intergenerational Storytelling in Mary and Her Métis Grandma

MODES of TRAVEL: Intergenerational Metis Storytelling, details Red River Carts

To understand this history, it helps to look at transportation. In Grandma’s time, people travelled in modern horse-drawn carriages. But before that, earlier Metis people used Red River carts.

Noteably, the carts were constructed entirely of wood, bound with rawhide and held together by wooden pins. As a result of this practical design, families could easily repair them.
The wood rubbing against wood created a powerful squeaking sound that carried for miles across the prairie and rolling hills. Consequently, people often said, “…the squeaky creaking was the Red River ballad.”

Intergenerational Metis Storytelling: Red River cart or wagon wheel with rawhide.

I was told that those Red River carts creaked because they were made without metal nails. Yes, even the nails were made of wood. Later, in my generation, we had modern horse-drawn Democrat buggies.

Intergenerational Metis Storytelling: A man's hand is placing a wooden peg nail into the Red River car axle.
Duncan Cowichan Exhibition Grounds
Metis Rendezvous 2025

By the end of the summer, we Métis had a lot of smoked and dried buffalo meat. Importantly, this food carried us through the winter.”

Red River cart replica with wood wheel with wood nails.
Red River cart replica with wood wheel with wood nails.

Intergenerational Metis Storytelling talks of Prairie Life, Travel with SCOUTS (1900s)

Meanwhile, Grandma told her stories with warmth and friendly humour. In addition to recounting history, she sprinkled in playful expressions like, “Saskabush… hee heeee”.

Grandmas’ Intergenerational Metis Storytelling: Saskatchewan, Traveling in wagons and relying on Scouts


…For instance, camping with a group of people who had travelled from different parts of Saskabush… hee heeee. You knew I meant Saskatchewan. At the time, almost everyone was travelling by wagon or cart with extra horses. Sometimes horses become lame and can’t pull anything heavy.

Intergenerational Metis Storytelling about prairie back roads

http://Photo by Gauravdeep Singh Bansal on Unsplash


Because of this, scouts were important because they would scooooot. After all, that’s what scouts do, scoot ahead to check that the trail or road conditions are passable for wagons. So, we tried to make the horses’ or oxen’s work as easy as possible because we didn’t want them to become injured on a rough trail. With that in mind, you can imagine how much we valued the scouts.

However, the history of the prairies also carries deep sorrow. The government wanted to clear the prairies of buffalo primarily to gain more land for farmers. To achieve this goal, officials deliberately targeted Indigenous Peoples’ main food source. They felt it was necessary to exterminate the Indigenous people. Intergenerational Metis Storytelling, documents this history.

By destroying the bison herds Indigenous peoples’ ability to survive with any level of autonomy was also gone. Some consider the governments’ actions as attempted extermination of the people. Therefore, this was more than cultural oppression. But grandma’s storytelling itself is an act of resistance—preserving voice and memory.

BUFFALO SLAUGHTER


It was a deliberate government policy to subdue Indigenous Peoples by removing their food source. This is how Grandma recounts the history.

Grandma’s voice took on a menacing tone regarding the slaughter of the bison. Yet, through her storytelling, she actively resisted erasure and preserved memory, voice, and truth for future generations.

…However, the North American railways, with the government policies, had the intention to starve Indigenous Peoples. Specifically, the government decided to exterminate the buffalo because that would make the Indians dependent on the colonizing government. 1 ( https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/buffalo-hunt )

Intergenerational Metis Storytelling Calf feeding on mother bison

Photographer Gauravdeep Singh Bansal https://unsplash.com/photos/green-grass-field-under-blue-sky-during-daytime-BYJGuUu6UkM

Some will tell you that in the 1870s, there was a steady demand for buffalo products, which encouraged massive slaughter in N. America. So, yes, there was a demand for bison products. But to say that’s why the buffalo population dwindled would be a lie.

BUFFALO BONE CHINA

Although many people know about the fur trade, fewer understand its connection to bone china. Years after Grandma passed, I watched Dana Claxton’s 1997 video. It was titled Buffalo Bone China. Only then did I fully understand what Grandma meant when she said,“There are buffalo bones in my tea set.”

Intergenerational Metis Storytelling Bison Skull and bomes

Shot this photo at the Red Deer Museum and Art Gallery
https://reddeermuseum.com/

PERFORMANCE ART visual art with dramatic execution.

Intergenerational Metis Storytelling Bone china teapot with prairie rose pattern

How Art Highlights History and Reality

COLONIAL POLICIES


Grandma continued her well-informed rant.

I must tell you somethin’ ‘suga plum’. Government policies had nothing to do with bone china; that was similar to a side hustle.
( https://www.metismuseum.ca/media/document.php/13888.Buffalo%20Bone%20Picking.pdf ). 8 Instead, the purpose of killing off the bison was to conquer and control the Indians’ land at any cost. As a result, the buffalo paid the price, but so did all prairie people because it was the main source of food; this was especially true for the Indians.
One way the government did this was to encourage men to ride the trains and shoot buffalo after buffalo after buffalo. They riddled the prairies with bison bones. The land became a never ending grave yard. Ultimately, this would destroy the buffalo herds and cause severe suffering for N. America’s Indigenous Peoples.

In the final analysis, Dana Claxton’s art and Mary and her Metis Grandma both embody Intergenerational storytelling. When Grandma shares with Mary, history radiates from Grandma as though she is the sun or the moon. Through story, art, and truth, they intentionally pass knowledge from Elders to future generations.


I hope you found this post informative yet interesting, and will check back at ritajasperart.com
Thank you.
Rita Jasper

  1. Foster, J. E., (March 7, 2006) Buffalo Hunt, Near Extinction and Recovery. Retrieved November 2021 from https://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.ca/en/article/buffalo-hunt ↩︎
  2. Wikipedia contributors. (2011, May 27). File: Bison skull pile edit.jpg – Wikipedia. Retrieved February 11th, 2026 https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Bison_skull_pile_edit.jpg ↩︎
  3. Bone china manufacturing in North America began on a commercial scale around the turn of the 20th century, primarily led by Lenox. While England dominated production from the 1790s onward, American manufacturers, notably Lenox in Trenton, New Jersey, began producing high-quality, translucent bone china in the early 1900s
    Lenox, Inc. | Encyclopedia.com. (n.d.). Retrieved February 11th 2026 https://www.encyclopedia.com/books/politics-and-business-magazines/lenox-inc ↩︎
  4. Sadly, I cannot find the video anymore, but I found this image at Claxton’s website. Retrieved February 12, 2036 https://ahva.ubc.ca/events/event/dana-claxton-revisited/ ↩︎
  5. Buffalo Bone China — Dana Claxton. (n.d.). Dana Claxton. Retrieved August 12, 2025. https://www.danaclaxton.com/artwork/buffalo-bone-china ↩︎
  6. I don’t know if this is exactly what Claxton is referring to, but
    “… 
1) Sacred bundles are important cultural artifacts in many Indigenous American traditions, representing the spiritual power and medicine of their owners. These bundles, often wrapped in animal hides, contain a variety of objects that hold significant meaning, such as tobacco, feathers, and various ceremonial tools. They are believed to have supernatural abilities to aid in healing, attract love, …” 
Sacred bundles | Health and Medicine | Research Starters | EBSCO Research. (n.d.). EBSCO. Retrieved February 12, 2026 https://www.ebsco.com/research-starters/health-and-medicine/sacred-bundles
2)
    2) “When we carry sacred items, we carry them with the recognition that everything in Creation has spirit, including the animals and plants, the rocks, the water, the moon and the stars. Even one feather of a bird has spirit. When we carry a feather in our bundle and use it for our personal prayers and in ceremony, we are calling on the spirit of that bird for help and guidance.”
    Sacred items and bundles – Anishnawbe Mushkiki. (2021, April 7). Anishnawbe Mushkiki. Retrieved February 12, 2026 https://mushkiki.com/programs-services/sacred-items-and-bundles/ ↩︎
  7. Dana Claxton; Revisited – Department of Art History, Visual Art & Theory. (2021, August 16). Department of Art History Retrieved February 12, 2026 https://ahva.ubc.ca/events/event/dana-claxton-revisited/ ↩︎
  8. Besides selling bison bones for manufacturing bone china, the bones were processed into fertilizers, sugar refining, etc. First Nations, Metis and settlers collected bones to sell to railroad agents and agents of eastern manufacturing companies in the US and Canada during the late 19th century. The bones were shipped to industrial centres like Chicago, Detroit, and St. Louis for processing.
    Barkwell, L., Montana Historical Society, & Foster, M. (1989). Buffalo Bone picking. In S. Breilmeier (Ed.), Thunderstorms and Tumbleweeds 1887-1987 East Blaine County (p. 25). Blaine County Centennial Book Committee. Retrieved February 11th, 2026
    https://www.metismuseum.ca/media/document.php/13888.Buffalo%20Bone%20Picking.pdf ↩︎