Creating A Policed Society?: The Police and The Public in the Victorian West Riding, c.1840 – 1900
David Taylor
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Creating a Policed Society? Provides an analysis of the evolution of policing and its impact on society in the West Riding of Yorkshire during the Victorian era. Unlike many previous police histories, which have focussed on specific (mainly urban) forces, it looks at developments across a region and brings out the complex and ongoing debates about policing, the diversity of police provision and the varied impact and responses that took place. As well as drawing on earlier works devoted to specific towns, the book offers a wide-ranging approach that utilises a range of hitherto underused sources that provide important insights into the details of police experience, both individual and collective. The book is structured around three major problem areas that have a relevance beyond the bounds of the West Riding. They are: (1) the extent to which the various police forces can be seen to be efficient; (2) the extent to which the Victorian West Riding can be seen as a policed society; and (3) the extent to which the policing in the county can be described as consensual. The author argues, firstly, that, despite ongoing problems retention, discipline and ill-health, most late-Victorian forces in the West Riding satisfied their local and national masters of their efficiency and were significantly less inefficient than their mid-century counterparts. Secondly, it is argued that notwithstanding the limitations to police powers, the Victorian West Riding was recognisably a policed society (or more accurately, a collection of policed societies), not least in the eyes of the majority of the local community. Finally, despite clear demonstrations of popular hostility to the police, in towns and country, in the third quarter of the nineteenth century and the persistence of anti-police sentiments, particularly in certain districts and among certain social groups, it is argued that, by a realistic and dynamic (rather than absolutist) definition of policing by consent, the Victorian West Riding was policed more by consensus than coercion.
David Taylor is emeritus
professor of history at the University of Huddersfield and is the author of
numerous books and articles on Victorian policing, including Policing the
Victorian Town: The Development of the Police in Middlesbrough, c.1840-1914,
Basingstoke, Palgrave Macmillan, 2002 and Beerhouses, Brothels and Bobbies:
Policing by consent in Huddersfield and the Huddersfield District in the
mid-nineteenth century, Huddersfield University Press, 2016. |
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Details
Published Published By Pages ISBN DOI Chapters Nov. 29, 2024 Huddersfield University Press 428 978-1-86218-233-2 10.5920/policedSociety 14 License Information Published by University of Huddersfield Press University of Huddersfield Press The University of Huddersfield Queensgate Huddersfield HD1 3DH Email enquiries university.press@hud.ac.uk Text © David Taylor 2024 This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License Images © as attributed Every effort has been made to locate copyright holders of materials included and to obtain permission for their publication. The publisher is not responsible for the continued existence and accuracy of websites referenced in the text. A CIP catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library. ISBN: 978-1-86218-233-2 Front cover: Image reproduced by kind permission of Ray Ricketts Citation Taylor D. 2024. Creating A Policed Society?: The Police and The Public in the Victorian West Riding, c.1840 – 1900 -
Chapters
Creating A Policed Society?: The Police and The Public in the Victorian West Riding, c.1840 – 1900 has the following Chapters:
- Prelims
- 1. Introduction
- 2. Saying no to a county force, c.1840-1856
- 3. Creating a county police force: the early years under Col. Cobbe
- 4. The WRCC and the public in the 1850s and 1860s
- 5. The later years of the WRCC: consolidation and careers, c.1870-1900
- 6. Policing the county, c.1870 to 1900
- 7. Policing the “great towns”: Bradford, Leeds and Sheffield to 1856
- 8. An inspector calls: Policing the "great towns" after 1856
- 9. Policing the community in the "great towns" after 1856
- 10. The medium-sized forces: Halifax and Huddersfield
- 11. Policing the community in Halifax and Huddersfield
- 12. Anachronisms and arrivals – the smaller borough forces
- 13. Conclusions
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