(Redirected from Éphrem-A Brisebois)Inspector 'Éphrem-A. Brisebois' (
7 March,
1850 –
13 February,
1890) was a
politician, soldier, and
police officer with the
North-West Mounted Police (NWMP) of
Canada.
Early career
Brisebois showed himself to be an excellent student and was fluently bilingual in English and French. At 15 he dropped out of school to fight for the
Union Army in the
American Civil War and went on to spend a further three years serving in
Italy with the volunteer unit "
Devils of the Good Lord".
Life as an officer
In
1873, he was chosen by Sir
John A. Macdonald, because of his military experience (and
Conservative politics), to be one of nine commanding officers with the new NWMP. He distinguished himself as a trainer, and showed remarkable foresight by attempting to enforce strict restrictions on
buffalo hunting (over-hunting, among other reasons, led to a massive decline in the buffalo population). However, he was criticized for an inability to maintain discipline among his men, and his decision to take a common-law
Métis wife. As his division's insubordination reached near-mutiny proportions, he clashed more and more with his direct superior
James Farquharson Macleod. On Macleod's suggestion, Fort Brisebois was renamed to Fort Calgary (now
Calgary, Alberta) in June of
1876, and Brisebois resigned in August.
Political life
Brisebois then rode, alone, 1200 kilometres to
Winnipeg. Eventually, he returned to
Quebec, and helped a Conservative candidate,
Désiré-Olivier Bourbeau defeat a
Liberal cabinet minister named
Wilfrid Laurier (the future
Prime Minister). In
1880, he was made the registrar of land titles, and assigned to
Minnedosa, Manitoba. He and his wife Adelle (whom he had legally married sometime after resigning from the NWMP) led an active social life, founding a showshoe club and holding
Roman Catholic church services in their home. During the
Northwest Rebellion of
1885, he helped mobilize militia units.
Death
He died of a heart attack in Winnipeg in
1890, and was buried in
St. Boniface, Manitoba.
External links
★
Biography at the ''Dictionary of Canadian Biography Online''
★
RCMP Biography of Brisebois