The series was created by Canadian film-maker
Radford Crawley in collaboration with the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation, the
BBC and the
Australian Broadcasting Commission. It was shot on a new soundstage at Old Chelsea, a community of
Chelsea, Quebec, and on location in
Aylmer, Quebec and
Outlook, Saskatchewan. The main writers for the series were George Salverson,
Munroe Scott and Vincent Tilsley of the BBC, who also acted as script editor. Music was composed by William McCauley. The CBC aired the series at a cost of $8,000 per episode, and the BBC paid $10,000 per episode. The series had a budget of $1,400,000, and took a year to film. The producers bought an old airplane without wings, and mounted it in a field. When there wasn’t enough natural snow, snow was shoveled in front of the airplane’s engine to produce a blizzard effect. Special heaters were used outdoors to keep the cameras operating in freezing weather.
R.C.M.P. was realistic in portraying small-town Canadian life, and often had the look of a documentary. The series used the characters’ rural isolation, the changing weather conditions, and the cultural differences between whites and natives as focal points for episode stories. Crawley had hoped to sell the series to a United States television network, and was disappointed with needing to settle for less profitable syndication status, but the American television networks weren't interested in buying a foreign series unless they were involved in its production. Though Crawley had hired Hollywood-based
Bernard Girard as head of production, that did not satisfy the U.S. networks, who wanted more control over the series they broadcast, so the series was syndicated to United States television stations. == Episodes ==