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RCMP Museum ~ Musée de la GRC


RCMP Historical Timeline
* Main text from http://www.rcmp.ca/history/highlights_e.htm
* Images from the National Archives of Canada - click any image to see a larger view.
*
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A. Origins

  • conception: Sir John A. Macdonald, Canada's first Prime Minister and Minister of Justice
  • inspiration:the Royal Irish Constabulary and the mounted rifle units of the United States Army
  • purpose: to bring law, order and Canadian authority to the North-West Territories (present-day Alberta and Saskatchewan)
  • legal authority: Act of Parliament (36 Vic, ch 35), May 23, 1873; Order in Council 1134, August 30, 1873
  • organization: appointment of officers and recruitment for the North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) commenced September 25, 1873, and concluded in the spring of 1874
  • initial deployment: the great "March West", approximately 275 officers and men, with horses and equipment departed Dufferin, Manitoba on July 8, 1874, and arrived in present-day southern Alberta in October

    B. Early role, 1874-1905 Reference: pa-202180.gif (early patrol)
  • general law enforcement detachments were established throughout the prairies and a patrol system instituted in order to police effectively the entire region
  • established friendly relations with the First Nations, contained the whisky trade and enforced prohibition,
  • supervised treaties between First Nations and the federal government Reference: pa-202188.gif (early Officers)
  • assisted the settlement process by ensuring the welfare of immigrants, fighting prairie fires, disease and destitution

    C. Expansion and Reorganization, 1895-1920
  • Mounted Police jurisdiction extended to the Yukon in 1895 and to the Arctic coast in 1903
  • prefix "Royal" conferred on the NWMP by King Edward VII in June 1904
  • Royal Northwest Mounted Police (RNWMP) contracted to police the new provinces of Alberta and Saskatchewan in 1905 Reference: pa-202194.gif (early detachment)
  • Mounted Police responsibilities extended to northern Manitoba in 1912
  • First World War: border patrols, surveillance of enemy aliens, enforcement of national security regulations
  • provincial policing contracts terminated in 1917, RNWMP now responsible for federal law enforcement only in Alberta, Saskatchewan and the territories; in 1918, however, enforcement extended to all four western provinces
  • in 1920, federal policing is reorganized, the RNWMP absorb the Dominion Police and become the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP); responsibility for federal law enforcement extended to all provinces and territories Reference: pa-202181.gif (various RNWMP uniforms)

    D. Development of the RCMP, 1920-1994
  • the RCMP return to provincial policing in 1928 under contract to Saskatchewan
  • detachments established in the eastern and high Arctic in the 1920s to protect Canadian sovereignty in the region Reference:  pa-202178.gif (Dog Team)
  • provincial policing responsibilities assumed in Manitoba, New Brunswick, Nova Scotia and Prince Edward Island, 1932
  • men and vessels of the Preventive Service, National Revenue, are absorbed in 1932, thus creating the RCMP Marine Section
  • development of "national police services" in the 1930s, including fingerprints, crime index, firearms registration, photo section, forensic laboratory (Regina, 1934) Reference: pa-202177 (forensic lab)
  • transportation and communication improvements: cars, trucks, motorcycles, ships, aircraft, telephones, radio, the RCMP supply vessel ST. ROCH makes her historic voyage through the North-West Passage, 1940-1942 Reference:  pa-202182.gif (St Roch)
  • protection of national security during the Second World War, 1939-1945
  • provincial policing contracts extended to include British Columbia and Newfoundland in 1950
  • expansion and evolution of RCMP security operations: Special Branch, 1950, Directorate of Security and Intelligence, 1962, Security Service, 1970; creation of a separate agency, the Canadian Security Intelligence Service (CSIS), 1984 Reference:  pa-202179.gif (Air Services)
  • the Canadian Police Information Centre (CPIC) established in 1972
  • expansion of duties and responsibilities in the 1970s: airport policing, VIP security, drug enforcement, economic crime
  • first women recruited as uniformed regular members, September 1974
  • expansion of international police duties, 1990s: Namibia, Yugoslavia, Haiti, Kosovo, Bosnia/Herzegovina, East Timor, Guatemala, Croatia, Western Sahara



  • All contents © 1999-2005

    Last update: 2005.01.15