
NickLangley
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The Staffordshire Police as we know it today (formally, Staffordshire and Stoke-on-Trent Constabulary) was formed on 1 April 1974 with the amalgamation of: Stafford County Police Borough of Newcastle under Lyme Police City of Lichfield Police Stoke on Trent City Police and The Staffordshire Constabulary. It would be remiss to omit the Hanley Borough Police. This formed the nucleus of the Stoke on Trent County Borough Police when, in 1910, the town was created from the six Potteries towns of Hanley, Burslem, Longton, Fenton, Tunstall and Stoke upon Trent. Stoke on Trent became a city in 1925.
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POLICE GLOVES
NickLangley replied to Mervyn Mitton's topic in Great Britain: Mervyn Mitton's British & Colonial Police Forces
Where I used to live, Nottingham, white cotton gloves were still part of the summer uniform until the early 1980s. In shirt-sleeve-order the gloves would be folded neatly over the constable's uniform belt. -
The traffic helmet was definitely for real. Other forces tried jackets with flashing lights on them. As for the straw helmet it was a victim of the Home Office's desire for standardisation. Many, many US agencies wear basket weave hats in hot weather to this day. Northumbria Police adpted the comb style helmet which looks particularly inappropriate with the modern police fashion of very cheap wicking t-shirts and cargo pants that leaves most UK forces, in the inimitable words of Terry-Thomas, looking like an "absolute shower".
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The straw helmets were worn in the post Great War era until the early 1930s. They were abandoned because the Home Office wanted less variation in uniform style between the forces. Luton was unique in that it had a borough force until 1947 when it was merged with Bedfordshire Constabulary. In 1964 Luton became a County Borough and was so entitled to have its own force again. It was reformed on January 1st 1964 but in July of that year the Home Secretary used his powers to dissolve the force on the grounds of "efficiency". The County Borough Council appealed through the courts but to no avail as the new Police Act sealed the force's fate.
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US Air Police Warrant Badge
NickLangley replied to FrontlineAntiques's topic in Police Forces of the World
This reminds me of going to the USAF open day at RAF Mildenhall in the late 1970s and, what can only be described as the Air Policemen's performances, as they directed the traffic.:lol: