Canada's History

Red serge sesquicent­ennial

The RCMP marks 150 years of service.

- by Nelle Oosterom

There are mixed feelings about the Royal Canadian Mounted Police’s landmark anniversar­y on May 3, given the heat the force has been under in recent years. Admissions of racism, sexism, and other issues have tarnished the reputation of this iconic institutio­n.

However, the force provides security and policing for around 150 municipali­ties and seven hundred Indigenous communitie­s across the country, and the Mountie in red serge is still widely seen internatio­nally as a symbol of Canada.

It all began in 1873, with the creation of the North West Mounted Police (NWMP). The Métis Red River Resistance of 1870, followed three years later by the slaughter of about thirty Assiniboin­e people in the Cypress Hills (in what’s now Saskatchew­an) by American whisky traders, spurred Prime Minister John A. Macdonald to send the new paramilita­ry force to the northwest frontier in 1874.

The hardships endured on the “Great March West” by the first three hundred recruits are the stuff of legend. Over the two-month-long journey, the Mounties resorted to drinking contaminat­ed water, and they contracted diseases such as dysentery, malaria, typhoid fever, and pneumonia. Running short of food, the men also suffered due to the weather conditions. More than thirty Mounties deserted during the 1,300-kilometre journey to Fort Whoop-Up, near modern-day Lethbridge, Alberta.

Once in place, the Mounties quickly won the trust of Indigenous peoples.

“The North West Mounted Police rescued the Blackfoot” from the American whisky traders, Calgary historian Don Smith has written. “Sent west to end the incidents of violence the force quickly accomplish­ed its goal.”

The NWMP earned more goodwill by providing Lakota Chief Sitting Bull and his people — refugees from American Army attacks — temporary protection in Canada. However, that relationsh­ip later soured. The NWMP — and its successor, the RCMP — enforced increasing­ly draconian measures to limit the movements of Indigenous peoples and to force children into residentia­l schools.

For decades, Euro-Canadian society mostly viewed the force with pride. The heroics of Mounties like Sam Steele

in enforcing order on gun-toting American fortune seekers during the Klondike gold rush inspired many a Hollywood movie.

In 1920 the North West Mounted Police and the Ottawabase­d Dominion Police merged to become the Royal Canadian Mounted Police.

Steeped in tradition, the force has undergone seismic changes in recent years. It began accepting women as regular constables in 1974. Targetted recruitmen­t of visible minorities started in 1987. People of diverse genders and sexual orientatio­ns are no longer purged — as they were between 1955 and 1996. In 2006, Beverley Busson became the first female RCMP commission­er.

Despite these progressiv­e steps, the RCMP entered its sesquicent­ennial under a cloud: A class-action suit alleging a culture of systemic bullying within the RCMP is underway. Commission­er Brenda Lucki announced her retirement in February after facing months of criticism and calls for her resignatio­n. As she told an inquiry into a 2020 mass shooting in Nova Scotia, “Culture change in an organizati­on of thirty thousand people takes time.”

Informatio­n about events planned for the anniversar­y — including the famed Musical Ride — can be found at the force’s website, rcmp.ca.

 ?? ?? Members of the North West Mounted Police take part in a mounted parade near Calgary in 1901.
Members of the North West Mounted Police take part in a mounted parade near Calgary in 1901.
 ?? ?? The Royal Canadian Mounted Police allowed women to be constables beginning in 1974.
The Royal Canadian Mounted Police allowed women to be constables beginning in 1974.
 ?? ?? Above left: Tourists greet a mounted RCMP officer on Parliament Hill in Ottawa in 1952. Above right: A group of North West Mounted Police officers in Dawson City, Yukon, in 1901. Above: A map depicts the route travelled by the NWMP during the “Great March West” in 1874. The current borders of Manitoba, Saskatchew­an, and Alberta are shown for reference.
Above left: Tourists greet a mounted RCMP officer on Parliament Hill in Ottawa in 1952. Above right: A group of North West Mounted Police officers in Dawson City, Yukon, in 1901. Above: A map depicts the route travelled by the NWMP during the “Great March West” in 1874. The current borders of Manitoba, Saskatchew­an, and Alberta are shown for reference.
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