Before the Bobbies. The Night Watch and Police Reform in Metropolitan London, 1720-1830
112 Before the Bobbies By 1815, Home Secretary Lord Sidmouth commanded approximately 250 men for policing London, in five differ ...
Night Watch to Police, 1811-28 113 arrest. Requests for additional men ranged from as few as four or six to as many as 400.^57 B ...
114 Before the Bobbies which policed four districts, each district patrolled by 22 men, two sub- inspectors, and ~one inspector. ...
Night Watch to Police, 1811-28 115 The magistrates, exercising their new authority over parish watchmen, suspended White for two ...
116 Before the Bobbies Denied the opportunity to make major changes in the police of greater London, Peel contented himself with ...
Night Watch to Police, 1811-28 117 watch committee established an early evening patrol as 'the best means of preventing Street R ...
(^118) Before the Bobbies of St Luke were aware of Islington's reforms. But a suggestion from the police magistrates at the Wors ...
Night Watch to Police, 1811-28 119 fifties and a very rare man turns up now and again in his sixties, usually someone who has gr ...
120 Before the Bobbies Measures taken to attract better men were also intended to lessen the attractiveness of bribes and/or the ...
Night Watch to Police, 1811-28 121 amateur and professional. A key reason why this continued was the issue of cost. Amateurs sti ...
122 Before the Bobbies have, each of them ... only an equal and concurrent jurisdiction: they are 'jointly and severally' author ...
Night Watch to Police, 1811-28 123 The magistrate is at present an officer intrusted [sic] on the one hand, with the power of pr ...
124 Before the Bobbies the division of labour gradually diffuses itself through every department of civilized life, and affords ...
8 Why 1829? 'Why 1829?' is a key question asked by historians of London's police. Why was Robert Peel successful in establishing ...
(^126) Before the Bobbies Peel learned between 1822 and 1828 how to get legislation passed through Parliament, particularly as h ...
Why 1829? 127 government supporters (Peel's brother William), Whigs (Sir Francis Burdett) and two aldermen from the City of Lond ...
128 Before the Bobbies The new Home Secretary was not necessarily pleased with the quality of policing under the police offices. ...
Why 1829? 129 interdependence of the three topics of crime, police, and penal reform; and of the futility of pursuing reform in ...
130 Before the Bobbies by returning to committal statistics, reiterating that property crime in parti- cular was on the rise.^19 ...
Why 1829? 131 for St James, Piccadilly, who had been employed on the watch for 35 years. Some witnesses from 1822 appeared again ...
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