There are no knights on white horses for a long time…but there are members of the Canadian mounted police. Brave fellows on fine horses. You can learn more about this structure at the Royal Canadian Mounted Police Heritage Centre.
In general, all Federal and national police forces in Canada have been called the Royal Canadian Mounted Police since 1920. All about Canadian law enforcement can be found in the eponymous museum, which was created in Regina in 2005. Although it could have opened seventy years earlier. The exhibits began to be collected in 1933, or even earlier.
There is everything you need to know about Canadian Mounted Police: uniforms of different years, police badges, official cars. But be careful with this...it's better just look at firearms. The museum also has a collection of letters, photographs, and archival documents. The entire collection of thirty thousand exhibits will impress you! It's like an embarrassment of riches. You want to remember everything! The museum's exhibits are dedicated to the life and work of Canadian police officers from the end of the 19th century to the present day.
For example, there are guns that were used in 1874 or police equipment of the last patrol on dog sleds. The museum has seven major exhibitions, as well as thematic and temporary exhibitions.
It's like touching the cherished and mysterious. After all, the police is something formidable. Police officers are defenders and fighters against crime. It is interesting to see how they lived and protected the peace of citizens in the past. It turns out that police officers in Canada not only protected citizens. They also delivered mail, put out fires, and helped landowners.
It is interesting to look at both the exhibits and the museum itself. The asymmetrical building was built by the architect Arthur Erickson. The roof of the museum resembles sail or springboard.