Birmingham Parks Police
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Birmingham Parks Police was a small police force maintained by Birmingham City Council, Birmingham Corporation to police the parks and open spaces of Birmingham, United Kingdom. They were first formed in 1912 and were disbanded in 1962, when they were replaced with Park ranger, Park Rangers.


History

The parks of Birmingham were, at first, patrolled by Birmingham City Police. In the 1880s, the Parks Committee of the Corporation applied to Worcestershire Constabulary for additional officers to patrol Cannon Hill Park, because whilst the park was maintained by the Corporation, it was mainly used by ratepayers of Worcestershire. In 1883, the Birmingham Corporation (Consolidation) Act permitted the Corporation to appoint park keepers as constables.section 72, Birmingham Corporation (Consolidation) Act 1883 (c. lxx) They were required to take the police oath, oath that a constable of the regular city police took under the Municipal Corporations Act 1882. They then had the "powers, authorities and privileges" of such a constable within the corporation's parks, whether within the limits of the city or not. In the late 1880s, reports in the Birmingham Post, Birmingham Daily Post show that both Cannon Hill Park and Calthorpe Park had become the location for sexual assaults on both adults and children, and the Parks Committee was keen to have more police to patrol Cannon Hill Park. Minutes of the Parks Committee from 1907 suggest that the Committee thought that the levels of policing in the parks were insufficient, and that ordinary park employees were often left to deal with situations themselves. It was reported that: Birmingham Parks Police was founded in 1912, and went on to patrol the parks until 1962, when they were replaced by Park Rangers. After their creation, the Committee noted that criminal proceedings had been started against several people for "indecent exposure and indecent conduct with young girls in the parks". As with many occupations, women were first appointed to the Parks Police during World War I - partly to replace Recruitment to the British Army during the First World War, conscripted men, but also to assist in the supervision of children who used the parks. After the war, it was also thought that female police officers might help to prevent indecent exposure and sexual assaults on children. The National Council of Women of Great Britain presented an appeal to the Parks Committee in 1924 for more police, particularly women police officers "in the interests of public morality and decency and particularly for the safeguarding of little children", complaining that the supervision of parks was inadequate, and citing several recent cases of "misconduct and indecency", particularly at Warley, Cannon Hill, Swanshurst and Sparkhill parks.BCC Parks Committee Minutes, Meeting of 5 May 1924 (BA&H: BCC 1 BO/1/1/6)


See also

*Law enforcement in the United Kingdom *List of defunct law enforcement agencies in the United Kingdom


References

*Main reference
ConnectingHistories.co.uk: "Birmingham Parks Police Badge"
{{Birmingham parks Parks and open spaces in Birmingham, West Midlands History of Birmingham, West Midlands Defunct park police forces of the United Kingdom Birmingham City Police