
NickLangley
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Even more interesting than the former Windsor Borough police was Eton College's very own police force. I don't know anything much about it but I presume it had a similar type of jurisdiction to the former Oxford University Police - the Bulldogs. Here's a link to a picture of the Eton College Police badge. Eton Colllege Police
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Nottingham County Special Constabulary certificate of service. County Councils didn't receive official coats of arms until the 1930s so in this instance they made one up. This didn't go down very well with the College of Arms and they subsequently ordered the police authority to desist. As a stop-gap (until 1937 when Nottinghamshire Council received its official grant) the county constabulary used the chairman of the police authority's personal coat of arms - often called the peacock crest.
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Prior to WW2 there were some 1,600 fire brigades in Britain. In some areas - such as Nottingham City - the police force was also responsible for the local fire brigade. Nottingham City Police Fire Brigade In 1938 the all volunteer Auxilliary Fire Service was established to provide a back-up to the various local brigades. In 1941 the National Fire Service was set-up by amalgamating the AFS the local brigades. In 1947 the NFS was abolished and fire services returned to local government but with only County Borough and County Councils having responsibilty.
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January 1st, 1915! The Allied and Central Powers' armies are eyeball to eyeball on the Western Front and we have a Chief Constable still planning for some fantastical invasion across the North Sea. I suspect the Chief had a bit too much of the Captain Mainwaring in his psychological make-up. Absolutely rivetting stuff. Can't wait for 1918's evacuation plans!
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Indeed, I am from Nottingham originally. It's telling that fifty years after his resignation Captain Popkess still has better name recognition in and around the city than the current Chief Constable. During his thirty years as city Chief Constable he was responsible for a whole slew of policing firsts and it was said that the Nottingham force was generally five to ten years ahead of any other force in Britain. Here is a link to a couple more videos about the "famous Captain Popkess". BBC Nottingham
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Indeed, I am from Nottingham originally. It's telling that fifty years after his resignation Captain Popkess still has better name recognition in and around the city than the current Chief Constable. During his thirty years as city Chief Constable he was responsible for a whole slew of policing firsts and it was said that the Nottingham force was generally five to ten years ahead of any other force in Britain. Here is a link to a couple more videos about the "famous Captain Popkess". BBC Nottingham
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No, I'm not ex-job, though I've always had an interest in the history of policing. As a youngster I used to collect insignia from English city, county borough and borough forces and I'm thinking of resuming collecting after a thirty year hiatus. If you enjoyed the previous clip here's an even better one from (IMHO) the finest police force in Britain. Pathe News
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At the time the Metropolitan Police introduced the Velocette - as a low-cost way of providing motorized transport for officers - constables were still expected to follow military custom and acknolwedge more senior officers with a salute. Easy if you are on foot but astride a motorbike ... problematical. The solution was to allow PCs to acknowledge their superiors with a nod instead. Hence Noddy bike.
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If you compare this with a typical Special Constable's lapel badge it is of a very poor quality. It has all the hallmarks of the type of badge issued during the General Strike (1926) when thousands of Specials were sworn-in at very short notice because of fears of revolutionary activities around the UK. I would hazard that the SC is little more than a motif to fill the centre of the badge and could be from anywhere. Here are some examples of the kind of insignia issued by various Scottish burgh and county forces in the early part of the 20th Century. Look at the sheer quality. Scottish force insignia
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Staffordshire County Police wore the Met-style helmet until the force's amalgamation with Stoke on Trent City Police in 1967. The new force was named Staffordshire County and Stoke-on-Trent Constabulary. The force adopted the City's coxcomb helmet but with a County-style oval helmet plate. In 1974 the name was changed to Staffordshire Police and a Guelphic Star plate was adopted. So the two helmets are not contemporaneous.
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A Police Cap?
NickLangley replied to leigh kitchen's topic in Great Britain: Mervyn Mitton's British & Colonial Police Forces
Nepal was never part of the British Empire so the Imperial Crown is totally wrong.. I take the point about the Newfoundland Constabulary and NP rather than NC on the button. If it isn't a Newfie's uniform item I'd tend towards it being from a Canadian municipal police department. -
A Police Cap?
NickLangley replied to leigh kitchen's topic in Great Britain: Mervyn Mitton's British & Colonial Police Forces
This is definitely not a UK piece of uniform. Off the top of my head I'd go for Newfoundland Police. A quick check confirms that the Royal Newfoundland Constabulary currently wears a cap with a light blue band.