Hi All,
The Metropolitan Police came in for a fair amount of criticism during the Whitechapel murders.
Here is the American journalist Blakely Hall, London correspondent of the New York Sun, in an extract from a long article comparing American, British, French, German and Russian police.
Syracuse [NY] Sunday Herald, October [7, 14 or 21] 1888—
"The astounding career of crime of the mysterious Whitechapel murderer of London has called attention to, in some respects, the most remarkable body of men in the world. Anything to equal the stupidity, density and general opaqueness of the average British detective it is impossible to imagine. When I went to London I took letters to the most famous of the London policemen—Chief Inspector Littlechild of Scotland Yard. I found him a remarkably affable and pleasant man, and he seemed to have a fair grasp of the criminal question in London, but the men beneath him looked as though they had been especially built and designed by nature to serve as butts to the playful wit and fancy of clever criminals. That [? ? ?] word 'chump' describes the average London sleuth-hound."
A number of not very flattering illustrations, like the following, accompanied the text.
Regards,
Simon
The Metropolitan Police came in for a fair amount of criticism during the Whitechapel murders.
Here is the American journalist Blakely Hall, London correspondent of the New York Sun, in an extract from a long article comparing American, British, French, German and Russian police.
Syracuse [NY] Sunday Herald, October [7, 14 or 21] 1888—
"The astounding career of crime of the mysterious Whitechapel murderer of London has called attention to, in some respects, the most remarkable body of men in the world. Anything to equal the stupidity, density and general opaqueness of the average British detective it is impossible to imagine. When I went to London I took letters to the most famous of the London policemen—Chief Inspector Littlechild of Scotland Yard. I found him a remarkably affable and pleasant man, and he seemed to have a fair grasp of the criminal question in London, but the men beneath him looked as though they had been especially built and designed by nature to serve as butts to the playful wit and fancy of clever criminals. That [? ? ?] word 'chump' describes the average London sleuth-hound."
A number of not very flattering illustrations, like the following, accompanied the text.
Regards,
Simon
Comment