
NickLangley
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PART 3 - POLICE FORCES OF THE WORLD
NickLangley replied to Mervyn Mitton's topic in Police Forces of the World
Thread drift I know. Here is a short film about the City of Plymouth Police's signing-off parade prior to amalgamation with the Devon & Exeter and Cornwall forces to create Devon & Cornwall Constabulary. -
PART 3 - POLICE FORCES OF THE WORLD
NickLangley replied to Mervyn Mitton's topic in Police Forces of the World
Take a look at www.britishpolicehelmet.co.uk -
The shield was introduced as part of fashion designer Hardie Amies's revamp of the traditional tunic. Having a top fashion designer working on a uniform design is a bit of a contrast with the committee of ACPO members and civil servants who came up with the quite appalling (and poorly made) fleece and cargo pant combination that is now on issue. With the old shields the uniform manufacturers never got round to the idea of having a proper badge keep so they did tend to fall off. Thames Valley continue to wear a shield but after twenty plus years officers are still attaching the badge to their radio loops because there is no proper badge keeper on their uniform shirts. As for plastic insignia I believe that Hertfordshire also had one though they had the good sense to go for a slightly more upmarket Stabrite version. Still tacky though
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Dorset and Bournemouth merged 43 years ago. At the time the County Borough of Bournemouth was in Hampshire - the border was moved as part of the 1974 local government reorganisation. From memory it was Dorset Constabulary pre-amalgamation; then Dorset and Bournemouth Constabulary until 1974 and Dorset Police post 1974. D&B was one of the few forces - along with Kent and GMP - to adopt a chest shield with the officer's serial rather than having collar (sic) numbers. Alas, as with Kent and GMP, this was not the kind of high quality shield worn by US law enforcement but a very cheap item that would not have looked out of place in a Xmas cracker. I am pretty sure that the shield had an all blue centre rather than black. Again from memory a number of UK forces - including Merseyside, GMP and Essex - adopted these tatty looking coloured cap, badges in the early to mid 80s and I'm pretty sure GMP still wear them. Horrible. As always I'm open to be corrected!
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Italian Carabinieri Visor Cap
NickLangley replied to Paul L Murphy's topic in Police Forces of the World
The Italians always do things stylishly. Yet if the Italians can consciously design a smart cap the corollary to that must be that British uniform committees deliberately select cap styles that owe more to Fred Scuttle - and for a reason. -
With a four digit collar serial it's unlikely to be a small borough force. Here is a link to a picture of a City of Manchester constable whose uniform and belt buckle are very similar. Manchester constable And here is another photo of two Manchester officers from 1910. It looks as if there is a large collar badge on the RH officer holding the suffragette. Manchester constables
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Mervyn, I agree 100% that SCs would never be issued with fireams. My view is that it isn't impossible to imagine SCs deciding to carry their own (legally held) weapons without sanction from higher-up the chain of command. Imagine my shock when I once saw a police poster from WW2 bearing the stark warning "LOOTERS WILL BE SHOT". Unthinkable today.
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Off thread, I know, but still pertinent to the difference between the Dixon of Dock Green image of policing in Britain and the reality before the modern era. Look at the newsreel coverage of the General Strike and the authorities were not shy about putting on shows of strength. In the modern era it would be unthinkable to have armoured cars rumbling through the streets of Britain as a precaution against industrial unrest. And, in 1958, Nottingham City Police deployed firehoses to break up the "race riots" in the St Ann's area of the city. The force subsequently acquired a secret stock of colonial-style wicker riot shields and long staffs though these were never used. The Home Office would have had kittens at the very idea.
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Mervyn, I wouldn't totally discount the possibility of SCs having crossed rifles insignia. There are a number of SC badges on this thread that have been issued (Rowley Regis for example) by boroughs that never had a regular force of their own. The British police's squeamishness about firearms is very much a post WW2 thing. There were no restrictions on firearms ownership in Britain until the middle 1920s, so it's not beyond the bounds of possibility that during WW1 SCs decided to arm themselves "just in case".
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Kevin, the bowler plate was a jolly sensible idea. It made the SC easily identifiable and every adult male wore a titfa'. Why Nottingham City and the county came up with this solution I can't say but I do know of someone who may. An ex-city officer who specialized in SC insignia (KH) who you might have come across in your own collecting activities.
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re: post #250. What is the significance of the three heraldic devices on the badge? The top one would seem to be from City of Exeter (the Exeter force used a castle as a collar dog) but that was a separate force until the formation of the very short-lived Devon & Exeter force in the late sixties. The other two emblems I can't place but neither is City of Plymouth.