Phil - re the Asquith Committee on Identification about which you enquired.
This is more usually known as the Troup Committee, for its chairman, Home Office civil servant Sir Edward Troup. (Asquith was the Home Secretary who set it up). The other two members were Macnaghten and Arthur Griffiths - at that time Inspector of Prisons.
Their remit was to decide whether Bertillonage - also known as anthropometry - or fingerprinting was to be preferred in keeping identification records of criminals. Bertillonage consisted of making a record of minute and exact measurements of the arrestees' physical features and the distances between them. It originated in France, and the French Police set themselves back at the beginning of the twentieth century by insisting on sticking to it in preference to fingerprinting.
The Troup Committee enthusiastically recommended both methods, with fingerprints being added to the mugshots and anthropometric data on a convict's record. In the event the fingerprints were of little use until a workable system of classification was devised.
The Macnaghten memoranda don't seem to me to have the faintest connection with the Troup Committee work - but I'm wary of being too definite about anything on these boards given the ingenuity and often extremely impressive thinking displayed by contributors.
Martin Fido
This is more usually known as the Troup Committee, for its chairman, Home Office civil servant Sir Edward Troup. (Asquith was the Home Secretary who set it up). The other two members were Macnaghten and Arthur Griffiths - at that time Inspector of Prisons.
Their remit was to decide whether Bertillonage - also known as anthropometry - or fingerprinting was to be preferred in keeping identification records of criminals. Bertillonage consisted of making a record of minute and exact measurements of the arrestees' physical features and the distances between them. It originated in France, and the French Police set themselves back at the beginning of the twentieth century by insisting on sticking to it in preference to fingerprinting.
The Troup Committee enthusiastically recommended both methods, with fingerprints being added to the mugshots and anthropometric data on a convict's record. In the event the fingerprints were of little use until a workable system of classification was devised.
The Macnaghten memoranda don't seem to me to have the faintest connection with the Troup Committee work - but I'm wary of being too definite about anything on these boards given the ingenuity and often extremely impressive thinking displayed by contributors.
Martin Fido
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