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5 - Police Unions and Federations

Joanne Klein
Affiliation:
Boise State University, Boise, Idaho
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Summary

There is no comparison between what is expected from the policeman of to-day and the policeman of old … [But] because we have evolved from the ‘Bobby of old’ to what we are today, you are not paying us as much as the lowest paid labourer.

PS George Miles, Liverpool City Police

We believe that policemen have for years suffered in silence; they have had no medium through which they could voice their grievances excepting through a few friends in Parliament.

PC William Sinclair, Birmingham City Police

[I]t was considered by the authorities that we had means of representation. We put forward that it was not so and that up to the present we have many grievances but have no means of airing those grievances.

PS Matthew Seaman, Manchester City Police

During the nineteenth century, policing had been ranked as an unskilled working-class job, comparable to unskilled agricultural labourers. Three-quarters of constables left with under five years' service, and only fifteen per cent made it to retirement age. Few of the men patrolling the streets qualified as experienced policemen. With the 1890 Police Act and growing police responsibilities, this began to change. In Manchester, of the men joining between 1900 and 1914, only a third left with under four years' service, and nearly a quarter put in at least twenty-six years of service. The numbers remaining in the force might have been higher if the First World War had not drawn away so many men.

Type
Chapter
Information
Invisible Men
The Secret Lives of Police Constables in Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham, 1900-1939
, pp. 132 - 166
Publisher: Liverpool University Press
Print publication year: 2010

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