Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Invisible Men
- 1 Putting on the Uniform
- 2 Multifarious Duties
- 3 Discipline and Defaulters
- 4 Factions and Friendships
- 5 Police Unions and Federations
- 6 The Police and the Public: Animosity
- 7 The Police and the Public: Fraternizing
- 8 The Police and the Public: Women
- 9 Domestic Life
- 10 Taking off the Uniform
- Conclusion
- Appendix: Chief Constables in Birmingham, Liverpool, and Manchester, 1900–1939
- Bibliography
- Index
10 - Taking off the Uniform
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Tables
- Acknowledgments
- List of Abbreviations
- Introduction: Invisible Men
- 1 Putting on the Uniform
- 2 Multifarious Duties
- 3 Discipline and Defaulters
- 4 Factions and Friendships
- 5 Police Unions and Federations
- 6 The Police and the Public: Animosity
- 7 The Police and the Public: Fraternizing
- 8 The Police and the Public: Women
- 9 Domestic Life
- 10 Taking off the Uniform
- Conclusion
- Appendix: Chief Constables in Birmingham, Liverpool, and Manchester, 1900–1939
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Cause of Leaving: At own request (To assist Parents in business). At own request. To return to Merchant Service as Engineer. Own request (To join another Police Force nearer to his home). Died in Hospital as the result of motor cycle accident. At own request (Domestic Reasons). At own request (For betterment of his future). At own request (To take up other employment). At own request (Obtained position in Canada). At own request. (Lack of interest). At own request (to join Air Force).
The preceding chapters have described men entering the police force and living with its conditions and restrictions. Some did not make beyond their probationary year. Quite a few were dismissed or asked to resign for committing defaults, though fewer as force discipline improved after the war. But outside these cases, a significant minority of qualified constables left the police force before reaching retirement age. Some left voluntarily. Their reasons for leaving, and for losing the supposedly irresistible police pension, fell into two basic categories. First, men in their first years of service discovered that they did not care for or could not cope with police life. Restrictions were too severe, the job was different than expected, or the physical requirements were too great. Second, as men got older, they left for domestic reasons. Their families disliked the constantly shifting schedules, parents wanted sons to enter a family business, or promotions did not arrive as hoped.
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- Chapter
- Information
- Invisible MenThe Secret Lives of Police Constables in Liverpool, Manchester and Birmingham, 1900-1939, pp. 285 - 309Publisher: Liverpool University PressPrint publication year: 2010