Saskatchewan Provincial Police

Saskatchewan Provincial Police
Abbreviation SPP
Agency overview
Formed 1917[1]
Dissolved 1928[2]
Legal jurisdiction Provincial
Headquarters Regina

The Saskatchewan Provincial Police was a police force in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan that existed from 1917 until 1928 under the Saskatchewan Provincial Police Act.[3]

Created in 1917 to replace the North-West Mounted Police, which was strained by involvement during World War I at the homefront with border patrols, enemy surveillance, and national security enforcement. The force took over provincial policing needs while national policing in Saskatchewan were still conducted by the RNWMP.

The force had maximum strength ranging from 145 to 175 officers in the 1920s. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police "F" Division serves as provincial police[4] after increasing costs led to the provincial government outsourcing provincial policing.[5]

Organization

The SPP was led by a Commissioner of Police:

  • Charles Augustus Mahoney (1869–1941) 1917–1928 – former veteran Ontario Provincial Police officer was Chief Constable of the Saskatchewan Secret Service 1911-1917 [6]

The force's rank and file consisted of a mix of former RNWMP officers, military personnel and others with no policing experience.

The other ranks on the force:

  • Assistant Commissioner
  • Inspector
  • Noncommissioned officer
  • sworn non-commissioned member
    • constable
    • Sergeant

The force had 79 detachments across the province[7] and commanding headquarters in Regina.

See also

References

  1. , A Brief History of Policing in Canada, retrieved October 11, 2017
  2. , A Brief History of Policing in Canada, retrieved October 11, 2017
  3. http://www.qp.gov.sk.ca/documents/english/statutes/historical/1930-CH-79.pdf
  4. "Encyclopedia of Saskatchewan-SPP". 2010-07-11. Retrieved 2009-09-16.
  5. "Saskatchewan Settlement Experience". www.saskarchives.com.
  6. http://underdog.usask.ca:2080/theses/submitted/etd-03182009-131110/unrestricted/Robertson_Duncan_Francis1_sec_nc_1976.pdf
  7. http://www.reginalibrary.ca/blogs/index.php?blog=7&title=stories_from_our_past_the_saskatchewan_p&more=1&c=1&tb=1&pb=1


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