Ralph Garvin Apow was born on June 8, 1905 at Morley, Northwest Territories, the second of four children to Josiah Apow and Amelia Mildred Mumford. Steinhauer was a Treaty Indian of Cree descent. Steinhaurs's father Josiah would die in 1908, and his mother would marry James Arthur Steinhauer on October 12, 1910, a descendant of the Cree Methodist Missionary Henry Bird Steinhauer. He married Isabel Florence Margaret Davidson on November 20, 1928 and had five children. In 1937, Ralph Steinhauer was diagnosed with tuberculosis and a decision was made to send the three eldest children to a residential school. After his recovery, his wife Isabel would educate the children at home after their request to have the children educated at a community school was denied on the basis of their Indigenous heritage. Steinhauer would become a farmer and began clearing a 16-hectare homestead, and would continue farming until his death in 1987. During the Great Depression Steinhauer would supplement his farming work with other labour such as logging and cutting fence posts. He died in Edmonton on September 19, 1987, following pulmonary problems.
Education
Ralph Steinhauer moved schools several times as a child due to his father's work as a missionary. Steinhauer would attend the residential school in Red Deer, the Doucet, Roseneath, Vilettea and Stry schools in northern Alberta and for three years starting in 1920 the Brandon Indian Residential school in Manitoba, and finished with a Grade 8 education. When Prime Minister Pierre Trudeau asked him to be the lieutenant-governor of Alberta, he responded, "I'm not schooled for a thing like this... You're plucking a person out of the farmyard and an Indian at that."
Career
In the 1920s, he became district president of the United Farmers of Alberta. He was a founder and the president of the Indian Association of Alberta. He ran unsuccessfully as the Liberal candidate for the House of Commons of Canada in the Alberta riding of Vegreville in the 1963 federal election, placing a distant third behind Progressive ConservativeFrank Fane and Social Credit candidate Metro Tomyn. Steinhauer would be the second Treaty Indian to run as a candidate in a federal election. He was chief of the Saddle Lake Indian Band for three years between 1966 and 1969. He would establish the Saddle Lake Centennial Development Association which became a successful farming venture for the First Nation.
10th Lieutenant Governor of Alberta
On the advice of Prime Minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, Ralph G. Steinhauer was appointed Lieutenant Governor of Alberta effective July 2, 1974. This appointment was made by Jules Léger, Governor General of Canada. His Senior Aide-de-Camp was Lieutenant-Colonel John H. Quarton, and his Secretary was M. Patricia Halligan. Federal Justice MinisterOtto Lang would explain the significance of the appointment to the Edmonton Journal saying "The Queen's appointment of an Indian is historic in that it was the Queen who built a trust with the Indians of Canada so many years ago." Steinhauer was known for voicing his personal opinions regarding Indigenous issues in Canada while holding the generally apolitical role as Lieutenant Governor. In 1977, during the opening of the third session of the 18th Alberta Legislature Steinhauer would read the speech from the throne while dressed in the full regalia of a Nehiraw Chief, and on one his final days in the Legislature, Steinhauer while giving Royal Assent to legislation reflected on his time as Lieutenant Governor and in thanking the members of the assembly remarked "May the Great Spirit remain with you, and will you always carry on such a well-done job", becoming the first time the Great Spirit had been invoked in the provincial legislature. In a 1976 speech delivered at the University of Calgary, Steinhauer presented a list of injustices inflicted upon Indigenous peoples, and going so far as to suggest he might withhold Royal Assent for legislation affecting First Nations until there was some improvement. In July 1976 Steinhauer headed a delegation commemorating the signing of Treaty Six and Seven to Buckingham Palace. He had convinced PremierPeter Lougheed to support and finance the trip as well as received the support of the Governor General noting "it is the wish of the native people that a representative deputation of Chiefs…should visit the United Kingdom". However, the Governor General and federal government wanted assurances that the visit to England would not be a political event and Steinhauer agreed to ensure the occasions's apolitical nature. Upon being presentedto the Queen, disregarded apolitical protocol and proceeded to raise Indigenous issues. On his return to Edmonton, Steinhauer's account would be printed in the Edmonton Journal "I was just stating facts. Because of the Indian Act, aren’t we wards of the government? Isn’t that a fact? You should read the act. Just about every clause begins ‘With the consent of the governor-in-council the Indians shall…". Later in 1977 Steinhauer would be approached by several First Nations, the Alberta Human Rights and Civil Liberties Association about the potential effects of the proposed Bill 29 Land Title Amendment Act and the potential effect of amendments on Treaty rights in Northern Alberta. Steinhauer had the legislation studied by a legal firm and in the end granted Royal Assent. Ralph G. Steinhauer served as Lieutenant Governor until his successor was appointed effective October 18, 1979. He then returned to his farm at Saddle Lake.