( as told by our founder, a decendent of the Assinboines tribe )
Early one summer in the 1690s, a band of Assiniboines
was camped on the banks of the Assiniboine River, about ten miles
west of present day Winnipeg.
A young Cree brave from Lake Winnipegosis entered the Assiniboine camp
and asked if he might marry the chief's daughter. The chief was offered
a beautiful and spirited snow-white steed,
a Blanco Diablo, which came from the famed breed in Mexico, and an
agreement was reached.
This agreement upset a Sioux brave from Devil's Lake
in North Dakota, also in love with the chief's daughter. He vowed
to capture and torture his rival under the pretext of a reprisal
for past wars. Aware of the danger, the Assiniboine chief saddled
the white horse, and advised the couple to escape under cover of darkness.
When the Sioux learned of the escape, they followed,
and eventually overtook the couple on the west bank of the Assiniboine
River a few miles west of where the St. Francois-Xavier parish church
now stands. Arrows killed both warrior and his bride.
The white horse escaped, and according to legend,
continued to roam the neighbouring plains for many years. The Assiniboines
believed that the spirits carried the horse to
the spirit world where he was reunited with the Cree brave.
The aboriginal peoples named this land, where the white horse ran
free in honour of the powerful animal. Our founder named this
winery in honour of the white horse as well.