In the Prairie provinces the Royal Canadian Mounted Police
constitute the provincial police forces of Alberta, Manitoba, and
Saskatchewan. The history of the Force in this region began when the
North West Mounted Police was authorized by an Act of Parliament on May
23, 1873. The purpose of the new Act was to bring law and order
to the Canadian west. During 1873 and 1874 the Mounted Police
arrived on the Prairies and built posts. For the next forty years
or so the Royal North West Mounted Police was the sole law enforcement
body in the Northwest Territories, except for municipal forces.
After 1905, when Alberta and Saskatchewan became provinces, policing
was carried out by the Force on a contract basis. The two
provinces paid $75,000 a year each to the federal government for the
services of the Mounted Police. On renewal of the contracts in
1915, it was arranged that either the provinces or the federal
government could cancel on giving one year’s notice. However, as
the First World War entered its third year in 1916, this arrangement
was interrupted.
After war broke out in 1914, many members of the Royal North West
Mounted Police took their discharge to join the army. There had
been a move to send a Mounted Police cavalry unit overseas, as had been
done in the South African War, but this plan was abandoned because no
more cavalry was required at the time. Moreover, the Force was
needed at home for duties beyond routine law enforcement. The
United States was still neutral in 1916 and the federal government was
fearful of raids by enemy aliens and sympathizers resident in that
country. Since not enough soldiers were available, the task of
patrolling the border fell to the Royal North West Mounted
Police. In addition, there were large number of Germans and
Austrians on the prairies whom the government wanted to keep under
surveillance.
The fears Ottawa had about raids from south of the border were
heightened in 1916 with the interception of a telegram from the German
Foreign Office to the German Embassy in Washington. This telegram
called for the destruction by sabotage of the Canadian Pacific
Railway. This information made the Canadian authorities even more
apprehensive about the aliens in the prairie provinces. The long
border with the United States presented enough problems in the
prevention of raids. If enemy aliens in western Canada were
incited to acts of sabotage to coincide with raids from American
territory, the situation could become even worse.
The federal government was not about to take any chances. In July
1916, Ottawa requested Mounted Police Commissioner A. Bowen Perry to
give his opinion on the matter. Perry stated that he did not
believe there was any likelihood of trouble on the Prairies at the
moment but the danger certainly existed. The Commissioner had no
doubt that effective measures needed to be taken to discourage any
possible act of sabotage. However, under current conditions, the
Royal North West Mounted Police could not assume any further
duties. In order to do so, Perry stated, the Force would have to
be relieved of all ordinary police duties and more men would have to be
recruited and manpower redistributed.
Acting on the instructions of Prime Minister Robert Borden, the
Commissioner investigated the matter further and submitted a full
report to Ottawa on October 11, 1916. His basic recommendation
was that the Royal North West Mounted Police should be relieved of
ordinary police commitments in the prairie provinces (excluding the
Northwest Territories and the Yukon Territory) and restricted to
federal service for the duration. Thus freed, the Force could
then deal effectively with the alien problem.
Following Perry’s report, the federal government decided to withdraw
the Force from all regular police service in Alberta, Saskatchewan and
Manitoba. With proper notice the contracts with Alberta and
Saskatchewan could not have been terminated earlier than June 30,
1918. The contract with Manitoba was not due to expire until July
1, 1918. However, these contracts were only temporary, and the
federal authorities felt that the provincial governments concerned
would consent in the interests of the war effort and the defence of
western Canada.
As it turned out, the three provincial governments offered no
resistance to the cancellation of the contracts. On November 29,
1916, the appropriate orders-in-council were issued by Ottawa.
The date set for the termination of the agreements was January 1, 1917,
but the government of Alberta requested an extension to March 1, on the
grounds that their arrangements were not yet complete. The
federal government agreed without hesitation.
All that remained was to define the jurisdiction of the Royal North
West Mounted Police in the prairie provinces. Essentially, the
Force was responsible for federal laws, patrolling the international
boundary, and handling any trouble with enemy aliens. All
other police duties were to be taken care of by provincial and
municipal forces with Mounted Police assistance when requested.
The cancellation of the contracts in 1917 ended over forty years of
policing the prairies by the Royal North West Mounted Police. The
Force was a respected organization in the Canadian west and this change
did not come without protest. For example, on January 6, 1917,
the livestock and agricultural associations of Alberta submitted a
petition to the federal government calling for the retention of the
Mounted Police. At a convention of the United Farmers of Alberta,
held in Edmonton on January 27, 1917, a resolution urging the retention
of the Force was passed unanimously. But these and other protests
failed to move the federal government. Ottawa was not to become
involved in provincial policing in the west until 1928, when the Royal
Canadian Mounted Police absorbed the Saskatchewan Provincial
Police. Alberta and Manitoba followed suit in 1932.
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