(2) Crime [in Victorians]. British Library, undated.
www.bl.uk/learning/histcitizen/v ... rimepunishment.html
Note:
(a) “At last, in 1829, the Metropolitan Police force was established, with their headquarters in Scotland Yard, just off Whitehall,.[sic] Their uniform made them look more like park‐keepers than soldiers - they walked their beats in top hats and blue swallow‐tailed coats, armed only with truncheons. * * * The Metropolitan Police Act of 1839 gave them wide powers. Small boys could be arrested for bowling hoops or knocking on doors”
(i) Immediately followed is a pictorial that says, “Satirical cartoon about the Metropolitan Police Act, 1839,” depicting they in top hats and swallow‐tailed coats.
(ii) For “bowling hoop,” see hoop rolling
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hoop_rolling
(In English the sport is known by several names, hoop and stick, bowling hoops)
(iii) Police uniforms and equipment in the United Kingdom
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Police_uniforms_and_equipment_in_the_United_Kingdom
Quote:
“The Metropolitan Police officers were unarmed to clearly distinguish them from military enforcers, which had been the system of policing seen before the 1820s. Their uniform was also styled in blue, rather than the military red.
“From 1829, to [1863], Metropolitan Police officers wore blue swallow tail coats with high collars to counter garroting. This was worn with white trousers in summer, and a cane-reinforced top hat * * * In 1863, the Metropolitan Police replaced the tailcoat with a tunic, still high-collared, and the top hat with the custodian helmet
(b) “several of the foreign detectives who had crossed the Channel to watch for suspected foreign criminals went to watch for them on English race courses, instead”
(i) watch (vi) :to be expectant : WAIT <watch for the signal>”
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/watch
(ii) The repeated “watch for’s” mean the same.
(iii) The second use of “watch for” is sarcastic.
(c) “In the previous century [eighteenth century, that is] Jeremy Bentham had dreamt up a novel idea for an innovative prison design: a ‘Panopticon’, built in a star shape with radiating wings, so that daylight and fresh air reached every cell and, more importantly, the warders could oversee every wing from a central core. They were certainly an improvement on the old medieval prisons. Bentham’s first creation, Millbank, had been built in 1821.”
(i) Jeremy Bentham
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jeremy_Bentham
(1748-1832)
(ii) Millbank
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Millbank
(an area in the City of Westminster; located by the River Thames; The area derives its name from a mill house belonging to nearby Westminster Abbey)
(d) “The main receiving territory [to accept exiles] was Australia: an average of 460 convicts were sent there each year, but some were sent to Gibraltar, or fever‐ridden Bermuda.”
ridden (adj): “harassed, oppressed, or obsessed by —usually used in combination <guilt-ridden> <debt-ridden>”
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/ridden
(e) “In 1853 the colonies refused to accept England's convicts any longer * * * There was a shortage of prison accommodation. Long term prisoners were transferred to provincial prisons, or to the dreaded Hulks – decommissioned warships anchored in the mud off Woolwich.”
Woolwich
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Woolwich
(located in the Royal Borough of Greenwich [of London]; section 1.1 Toponymy)
(f)
(i) A legend says, “Victorian broadside about a transportation, c1800 - 1853."
broadside (printing)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Broadside_(printing)
(Historically, broadsides were posters * * * or simply advertisements)
(ii) A poster whose legend reads, “The Trial and Sentence of Dr Barnard, c1800-1860.” The verdict was “guilty” and the sentence, “transported for life.”
transport (vt): “to send to a penal colony overseas"
www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/transport
(g) A sectional heading is “The hulks,” which is the plural form of “hulk.”
hulk (ship)
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hulk_%28ship%29
(h) “Executions were still public. Thomas Cook ran excursion trains to promising executions.
Thomas Cook
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Cook
(1808-1892; founded the travel agency; 1841 saw “the first privately chartered excursion train to be advertised to the general public, Cook himself acknowledging that there had been previous, unadvertised, private excursion trains”)
|