Thomas Bland Strange

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For other uses, see Strange (disambiguation).
Thomas Bland Strange in 1871
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Thomas Bland Strange in 1871

Thomas Bland Strange (15 September 18319 July 1925) was a British soldier noted for his service with the Canadian militia during the North-West Rebellion of 1885. Strange was a retired Major-General at the time of the rebellion, and was raising cavalry horses near modern Calgary, Alberta. At the outbreak of the rebellion, his old friend Adolphe-Philippe Caron, who was minister of militia and defence in the government of Sir John A. Macdonald, asked Strange to organize a field force for the District of Alberta. This force, consisting primarily of inexperienced militiamen and a few members of the North-West Mounted Police, participated in the Battle of Frenchman's Butte fighting forces under the command of Cree leader Big Bear.

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[edit] References

Strange, Thomas Bland. (1893) Gunner Jingo's jubilee, London. Strange's autobiography.

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