A Northwest Canadian Mounted Police Constable in 1876. |
On
May 23, 1873 acting on the advice of Canadian
Prime Minister John A. Macdonald Queen Victoria gave her personal approval to the establishment of the North West Mounted Police. Macdonald was keen on extending authority over the vast,
lightly populated Northwest Territories,
discouraging the ever expansionist
United States from moving into the vacuum, and preventing
the kind of full scale Indian warfare that characterized the American frontier.
The
unit was originally conceived of as an army
cavalry unit to be called the Northwest
Rifles modeled after the Indian
Army’s famed Khyber Rifles. But Macdonald feared that the military
form might antagonize the native peoples and the United States
and possibly lead to conflict. Instead
he decided to turn to the civilian, paramilitary police Royal Irish Constabulary as his
model. Rank and file members were designated as Constables. But it was
organized as a lancer cavalry unit and
outfitted in standard Imperial red
tunics and colonial white pith
helmets.
The
first force under Commissioner Arthur
French was trained and assembled at Fort Dufferin in Manitoba and
was dispatched on its first deployment
on July 8, 1874, the Long March to Fort
Whoop-Up in what is now southern Alberta.
Fort Whoop-up was a trading
post established by Americans operating from near-by Montana Territory. Its trading staples included plenty of fire water and the purpose of the
expedition of 22 officers and 287 constables and sub-constables was to stamp out the trade. Of more real
concern may have been reports that the traders were flying the American flag over the fort.
Word
of the advancing force was enough to cause the Americans to abandon the fort
and French established his first frontier
post, Ft. MacLeod nearby. The force clearly established Canada’s claim to the west and made possible a southern route for the trans-Canadian
railway.
The
NWMP early duties include continued suppression of the whiskey trade, keeping peace among native tribes,
and general law enforcement. Each post
commander was sworn in as a Justice
of the Peace so that the force had judicial
as well as police power and over
vast areas was the only form of
organized government. Because the
force gained a reputation for treating native people fairly, even in disputes with whites, peace was
generally kept. When Sitting Bull and thousands of Sioux crossed the border in 1876 after
the Battle of the Little Big Horn seeking
the protection of the Great White Mother (Victoria), NWMP
under James Morrow Walsh maintained
order at the Sioux settlement at Wood
Mountain and the presence of a large armed force dissuaded the American Cavalry from any cross border adventures.
In
1885 the NWMP would see their first, and only, widespread domestic use as a military
force in suppressing the Métis (a distinct culture of mixed native and European, mostly French, dissent) under the leadership of Louis Riel. Simultaneously
there was an uprising of dissident Cree which the government tied to the
Métis. After the rebels enjoyed some early successes, Riel was defeated in a bloody three day Battle of Batoche on
May 9. On June 9 the last significant
band of Cree were routed and dispersed at Loon
Lake. Riel and the Cree chief Poundmaker surrendered in June. Other leaders escaped into the United
States. Poundmaker and other Cree
leaders were sentenced to prison
while eight natives were hung for crimes. Riel was hung, causing controversy and protests
by French speaking Canadians who ever after regarded the NWMP as an instrument of Anglo domination. The remaining Cree and other native allies
were pacified with increased rations. Peace was secured on the frontier and the Canadian Pacific spurred to
completion.
The NWMP began to
enter international folk lore with
the Klondike Gold Rush of 1896. With prospecting intensifying in the Yukon Territory and a growing presence
of American miners and whiskey
traders in the region—which always set
off alarm sovereignty bells in Ottawa—NWMP
authority was extended to the Yukon
and an initial force of twenty officers were dispatched to the region to keep
order and enforce customs duties on
Americans pouring in over the border from Skagway,
Alaska. In fact a brief attempt was made to assert
Canadian control over Skagway, but
the force settled for a customs port at the top of the pass leading to Dawson
and the heart of the mining district.
In
1885 the NWMP would see their first, and only, widespread domestic use as a military
force in suppressing the Métis (a distinct culture of mixed native and European, mostly French, dissent) under the leadership of Louis Riel. Simultaneously
there was an uprising of dissident Cree which the government tied to the
Métis. After the rebels enjoyed some early successes, Riel was defeated in a bloody three day Battle of Batoche on
May 9. On June 9 the last significant
band of Cree were routed and dispersed at Loon
Lake. Riel and the Cree chief Poundmaker surrendered in June. Other leaders escaped into the United
States. Poundmaker and other Cree
leaders were sentenced to prison
while eight natives were hung for crimes. Riel was hung, causing controversy and protests
by French speaking Canadians who ever after regarded the NWMP as an instrument of Anglo domination. The remaining Cree and other native allies
were pacified with increased rations. Peace was secured on the frontier and the Canadian Pacific spurred to
completion.
The NWMP began to
enter international folk lore with
the Klondike Gold Rush of 1896. With prospecting intensifying in the Yukon Territory and a growing presence
of American miners and whiskey
traders in the region—which always set
off alarm sovereignty bells in Ottawa—NWMP
authority was extended to the Yukon
and an initial force of twenty officers were dispatched to the region to keep
order and enforce customs duties on
Americans pouring in over the border from Skagway,
Alaska. In fact a brief attempt was made to assert
Canadian control over Skagway, but
the force settled for a customs port at the top of the pass leading to Dawson
and the heart of the mining district.
The RCMP rigidly enforced minimum grubstake
requirements to prevent starvation,
which had occurred the first season
of the rush. Miners without sufficient supplies were turned back. And there were thousands because word of the
Rush came in the midst of one of the worst of the periodic economic Panics
in America sending many desperate men
north to find their fortunes.
The police also
worked to keep out hand guns, an
American favorite, as a way to reduce
crime and tried to control gambling
and prostitution as well. Known
criminals were quickly deported. The presence of the police in the gold field prevented the violence and claim jumping that was typical of most gold rush areas. When observers
retuned from the fields they unanimously
remarked on the contrast between the violence
and anarchy on the Alaskan side of the border and the relative peace kept by the force that
earned a new nickname—the Mounties. Soon they were heroes of dime novels, melodramas,
and early silent pictures in the
U.S. and Canada.
In 1904 the NWMP adopted the flat brimmed Stetson hat with a high four-pinch crown as the official
headgear of the unit, replacing the detested white pith helmets, which were
entirely unsuited for use in the
north. Many units had unofficially been using the hats for
years on patrol, wearing the helmets
only on Parade or ceremonial occasions.
The same year King Edward VII bestowed the title Royal to the name in recognition of service of Police
members who volunteered in the Canadian Rifles and other regiments during the Boer War.
Royal North West Mounted Police found their jurisdiction
growing. The Arctic and Yukon had already been added, and soon the newly organized provinces of Alberta, Saskatchewan, and Manitoba in the years leading to the First World War.
The war brought a new role—“border patrols, surveillance of enemy aliens, and
enforcement of national security
regulations.” This new national
security role would lead the force in controversial
new directions, including massive
surveillance and monitoring of
many unions, socialist organizations,
ethnic associations, and of French
Canadians who were constantly suspected
of separatist intentions.
In 1918 RNWMP was dispatched
to help occupy the Russian port of Vladivostok as part of the Canadian
Expeditionary Force sent to join the Allied
effort aiding White forces in the Russian Civil War.
The following year they were called in to quell the Winnipeg General Strike and opened fire on the strikers killing 4
and injuring 30. They frequently intervened in labor disputes for the
next thirty years and began to be considered
strike breakers and scab herders
by working people.
In 1920 the Dominion
Police were merged into the
force under the new name Royal Canadian
Mounted Police (RCMP) which was given expanded
authority as a national police force
with authority to enforce Federal Law
in all Provinces and Territories and officially adding counterintelligence
operations to its national security portfolio.
The official badge of the Royal Canadian Mounted Police since 1920. |
Among regular targets of the RCMP were the Communist Party of Canada, the One Big Union (Canadian counterpart of the Industrial Workers of the World), and minority ethnic and cultural
groups. Ukrainians who were arriving in the Prairie Provinces in large
numbers to escape the bloody civil
war at home, were particularly targeted because they included both Red and
White sympathizers. Chinese
were also targeted and two percent of all Chinese immigrants were deported by the RCMP for alleged violation of the Opium laws.
Special squads were organized for strike breaking and a semi-secret Legion of Frontiersmen united
sworn officers with right wing
civilian vigilantes.
During the ‘30’s more duties were added as the RCMP
absorbed the Preventative Services,
National Revenue creating the new RCMP Marine
Section, a naval arm with duties
analogous the American Coast Guard. The RCMP
schooner St. Roch became the first
ship to ever cross the Northwest
Passage from west to east and later the first vessel to make the crossing in one season.
With Canada’s entry into World War II with the rest of
the British Commonwealth, security
functions were reorganized as the RCMP Security Service.
In 1949 Newfoundland
became a full member of the Canadian Federation and the RCMP absorbed its
former police unit, the Newfoundland
Rangers.
The Red Scare
of the 1950’s was as intense north of the border as south and the RCMP was empowered
to “screen out subversive elements
from the public sector.” The witch
hunt of public servants was extensive and was soon broadened to include investigations of alleged homosexuals on the grounds
that their “aberrant sexual behavior”
made them susceptible to black mail and extortion. The RCMP even
devised a Fruit Machine meant to discover secret homosexuals by monitoring pupil dilation when viewing beefcake pictures. Hundreds of civil servants lost their jobs before the program was finally discontinued.
The rise of
the separatist Parti Québécois in
the ‘70’s resulted in widespread abuse
by the RCMP and led to a special
commission which finally recommended the RCMP be stripped of intelligence duties and a new Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS) be created.
The Musical Ride. |
Beginning in 1974 women
were included in the force. Today
the RCPM is a force of almost 19,000 sworn officers and another 9,700 unsworn
support personnel. It is the national
police force and provides policing to all Provinces and Territories except Ontario and Quebec, which maintain their own provincial forces. They also
contract as local law enforcement in
many small cities and towns.
They also provide border and customs services and maintain a security
function, including expanded
anti-terrorist authority.
The familiar red tunics with Sam Browne belts, Stetson hats, blue jodhpurs with yellow
stripe, and high boots remain
the dress uniform and a nation symbol of Canada. Daily
uniforms are usually blue or grey standard police style. The
RCMP fulfills many ceremonial guard
functions at state occasions and
maintains the famous Musical Ride, a
mounted unit with matching black horses
that performs elaborate drills,
including a full charge with leveled lances, to musical accompaniment.
During the Vancouver
Winter Olympic Games of 2010, the RCMP were featured as a national symbol in both the opening and closing
ceremonies including the whimsical
and humorous closing program, but
also in the formal raising and lowering of the Olympic Flag. It seemed like
the Mounties and the Maple Leaf Flag were
the two things that Canadians wanted the world to remember about
them.
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