AM
Demos Pricing

Bobbies and Peelers: The Metropolitan Police Act of 1829

On this day in 1829 the first units of the London Metropolitan Police appeared on the streets of London, under Sir Robert Peel. Having become Home Secretary in 1822, Peel set to work laying the legislation in place that would enable the very first English police force. Peel’s force consisted of 17 divisions, each with 4 inspectors and 144 constables, and took its home in 4 Whitehall Place. As the base outgrew 4 Whitehall Place and took up neighbouring buildings it soon became synonymous with a nearby street, Great Scotland Yard, which of course gave name to the Metropolitan Police HQ we know today. Meanwhile, the police force itself became known after its founder as the ‘bobbies’ and ‘peelers’ (or, if you’re a fellow East Lancastrian like Peel himself, ‘the dibble’).

This bit of “on this day” history prompted me to have a dig into our vibrant resource full of street scandal and vice, London Low Life. An extract from an 1805 London tourist guidebook soon told me that up until 29th September 1829 the safety of the streets in 19th century London had relied on parish constables and night watchmen. The guide assures nervy visitors ‘such is the safety of this great metropolis by night, that not less than 2044 beadles, watchmen, and patroles are put on duty every evening’. I’m not sure I know exactly what a beadle is but something tells me I would have felt much safer in the hands of a police force.

London: being a complete guide to the British capital; containing a full and accurate account of its buildings, commerce, curiosities ... including a sketch of the surrounding country, with full directions to strangers on their first arrival, 1814 © The Lilly Library, Indiana University.

Having said this, the new police force was not particularly well-received and it had many critics – as this Morris & Newman cartoon suggests.

Police evidence illustrated., n.d. © The Lilly Library, Indiana University.
 

Whilst browsing through London Low Life I also came across the following 1889 issue of Police & Public – a weekly London newspaper sharing police and general news.

Police and public, 1889 © The Lilly Library, Indiana University.

Just below the copyright guarantee ‘Entered at Stationers’ Hall’ (cue our latest collection Literary Print Culture: The Stationers’ Company Archive), the front cover holds some news story gems, perhaps with a little truth twisting at play. From a Thames Police court case on Daniel Leary who was arrested for breaking a washing basin over his father’s head, to news of a lady’s hand found inside a giant halibut caught by fishermen, I suspect Peel had something a little more ground-breaking than halibuts and washing buckets in mind when he deployed his policing troops upon the streets!

All of these documents alongside many more are available in London Low Life. For more information, including trial access, please contact info@amdigital.co.uk. Also make sure to check out London Low Life’s interactive mapping feature here!

​Full access restricted to authenticated academic institutions which have purchased a licence.


Recent posts

A newspaper notice from Vincent Zamore about re-marrying after not hearing from his wife for 22 years.
He said, she said: Blame and repudiation between husbands and wives in Caribbean newspapers

Explore how newspapers reveal the personal alongside the political, from global events to everyday life. This blog uncovers striking public notices from Trinidad, where husbands and wives used the press to renounce responsibility for one another, offering a rare glimpse into relationships, gender roles and legal realities.

Black and white newspaper clipping showing two women, including a photo of Noor Inayat Khan.
Amplifying Indian women's voices with primary sources, part one: Noor Inayat Khan

Noor Inayat Khan's story, revealed through wartime intelligence records, uncovers the realities of espionage and the extraordinary courage of a woman whose legacy challenges how we remember the Second World War.