Railway detectives in the United Kingdom

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For their history after 1947, see British Transport Police#History.

Detectives were employed by private railway companies in the United Kingdom almost right from the start of passenger services in the 1820s.

Early days[edit]

The first railway employees described as "police" can be traced back to 30 June 1826. A regulation of the Stockton and Darlington Railway refers to the police establishment of "One Superintendent, four officers and numerous gate-keepers". This is the first mention of railway police anywhere and was three years before the Metropolitan Police Act was passed. They were not, however, described as "constables" and the description may refer to men controlling the trains rather than enforcing the law. Specific reference to "constables" rather than mere "policemen" is made by the BTP website article "A History of Policing the Railway"[1] which states "The London, Birmingham and Liverpool Railway Companion of 1838 reports 'Each Constable, besides being in the employ of the company, is sworn as a County Constable.'" Further reference is made by the BTP[2] to "an Act of 1838...which according to J. R. Whitbread in The Railway Policeman' (Harrap, 1961) was the first legislation to provide for any form of policing of the railway whilst under construction, i.e. to protect the public from the navvies more or less."

The modern British Transport Police was formed by the British Transport Commission Act 1949[3] which combined the already-existing police forces inherited from the pre-nationalisation railways by British Railways, those forces having been previously formed by powers available under common law to parishes, landowners and other bodies to appoint constables to patrol land and/or property under their control.[citation needed] This is distinct from the establishment of a police force by statute, as applicable to the Metropolitan Police in 1829; BTP did not have jurisdiction on a statutory basis until the enactment of the Transport Police (Jurisdiction) Act 1994,[4] which was subsequently amended by the Railways and Transport Safety Act 2003.[5]

Policeman versus constable[edit]

Some early-19th-century references to "railway police" or "policemen" do not concern constables but instead describe the men responsible for the signalling and control of the movement of trains (it is still common colloquial practice within railway staff for their modern equivalents in signal boxes and signalling centres to be called "Bobbies"). These personnel carried out their duties mostly in the open beside the track and were often dressed in a similar manner (e.g. a top hat and frock coat) to early police constables but were not directly concerned with law enforcement. Historical references (including those originating from the BTP itself) to when the first group of true "constables" was organised to patrol a railway should be treated with caution. This warning is repeated by the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) webpage dealing with MPS records of service which on the matter of records of other forces held by the Public Record Office (now the National Archives) states: "The occasional references to 'Police Department' in the railway staff records relate to signalmen etc., although some were simultaneously county constables."[6]

Navigators[edit]

A huge workforce was required to build the ever-expanding railway system. These armies of rough workers – navigators, or "navvies" for short – brought fear into rural Victorian England.[citation needed] The Special Constables Act 1838 was passed, which required railway and other companies to bear the cost of constables keeping the peace near construction works.[citation needed]

1838-1900[edit]

The continually expanding network of railways gave criminals new opportunities to move around the country and commit crime. The railways were pioneers of the electric telegraph and its use often involved the arrest of criminals arriving or departing by train. On 1 January 1845 a railway police sergeant became the first person to arrest a murderer following the use of an electric telegraph.

In 1838 the Royal Mail was conveyed by rail for the first time. The first mail thefts were reported shortly afterwards. In 1848 the Eastern Counties Railway lost 76 pieces of luggage in just one day, and by the following year thefts from the largest six railways amounted to over £100,000 a year.

The first railway murder was committed by Franz Muller, who robbed and killed a fellow passenger on a North London Railway train in 1864; however, railway police were not involved in his apprehension.

The first arrest abroad by the British police was made in 1874 when a Metropolitan Police inspector accompanied by a railway police inspector went to the United States to arrest an embezzler.[citation needed]

1900-1945[edit]

From 1900, several railway companies re-organised their police forces. The London, Brighton and South Coast Railway virtually reformed their police force from scratch in that year, followed by the Great Eastern Railway, the North Eastern Railway and Midland Railway in 1910, the Caledonian Railway in 1917 and lastly the Great Western Railway in 1918.[citation needed] The Railways Act 1921 amalgamated over one hundred separate railway systems (of which about 20 had organised police forces) into four groups:

Each had its own police force controlled by a chief of police. These four forces were organised in the same way; each split into a number of divisions headed by a superintendent, divided into a number of divisions posts led by an inspector. Detectives worked with their uniformed colleagues at most locations. Many 'non-police' duties were retained, however, with officers acting as crossing keepers or locking and sealing wagons.[citation needed] During the Second World War, the strength of the railway police doubled. With many men conscripted, special constables and women police were again employed.[citation needed] With nationalisation, these were ultimately subsumed into the British Transport Commission Police.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "A History of Policing the Railway". British Transport Police. Archived from the original on 5 June 2007.
  2. ^ "The Scottish Railway Police". British Transport Police. Archived from the original on 29 May 2007.
  3. ^ "Transport Police (Jurisdiction) Act 1994". Legislation.gov.uk. Retrieved 17 February 2019.
  4. ^ "Transport Police (Jurisdiction) Act 1994". Statutelaw.gov.uk. 24 March 1994. Retrieved 8 June 2009.
  5. ^ "Explanatory Notes to Railways and Transport Safety Act 2003 – Background – paragraph 59". Opsi.gov.uk. 11 August 2003. Retrieved 8 June 2009.
  6. ^ Metropolitan Police. "Metropolitan Police Records of Service". Metropolitan Police. Archived from the original on 11 July 2006. Retrieved 2014-02-19.