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Lady Astor and the Ladies of the Night: The Home Office, the Metropolitan Police and the Politics of the Street Offences Committee, 1927–28
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 26 April 2012
Extract
Section 54 (11) of the Metropolitan Police Act 1839 criminalized the act of a common prostitute causing annoyance by soliciting in public.2 For the police to implement this legislation was no simple matter, as no definition of “prostitute,” or indeed “annoyance,” was scribed in statute law. Although common law aided the interpretation of this offense—the case of Rex v. de Munck (1918): “We are of the opinion that prostitution is proved if it is shown that a woman offers her body commonly for lewdness of payment in return”3—in practice, identifying a “common prostitute” and defining “annoyance” was left to the discretion of the individual police officer. Although specific squads were deployed to target streetwalkers in West End police divisions, where the presence of prostitutes was more likely to cause public offense, a “blind eye” was often turned to women soliciting in the less salubrious streets of the metropolis. Local knowledge gained on the beat and the informal advice of colleagues shaped an unofficial police policy of containment and toleration.4
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References
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181. Vigilance Record (January–February 1929), ns, nos. 1 and 2.
182. Self, Prostitution, 6–7, 136.
183. Justice of the Peace and the Local Government Review, 51, December 22, 1928; TNA, HO 45/24902, Locke minute, January 14, 1929; and ibid., Blackwell minute, January 21, 1929.
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218. TNA, HO 45/24902, Hill to Brass, July 5, 1929.
219. Ibid., Brass minute, March 26, 1926
220. WL, 3/AMS Box 44, Extraordinary meeting of the Financial Committee, April 24, 1933.
221. Bingham, Gender, Modernity and the Popular Press, 113, 141.
222. TNA, HO 45/24902, the Dowager Lady Nunburnholme, convenor of the Moral Welfare Committee and president of the National Council of Women, to the HO, June 25, 1935.
223. HC Debates, 5s., vol. 338, cols. 2209–12.
224. Ibid., vol. 341, col. 693.
225. WL, 3/AMS Box 46, MEC December 13, 1938.
226. TNA, HO 45/24902, K.B. Paice, private secretary to the parliamentary undersecretary, Geoffrey William Lloyd, minute November 22, 1938.
227. WL, 3 AMS Box 46, MEC February 14, 1939.
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