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Police and police boxes on the streets in the past

police on streets

The reason that we saw policemen so often was that the walked to street to spot crime and to be available to the public. This was called 'walking the beat'.

A policeman's uniform early 20th century

Richard Smith, policeman from Surrey in the early 1900s. Photo courtesy of Don Billing.

British policeman in genuine 1940s uniform

Policeman in 1940s uniform, photographed at Brooklands 1940s day.

A policeman's beat

Guest contribution

What the beat was

The 'beat' consisted of a section of local streets. Each constable was allocated his own beat which he was required to patrol on a regular timed sequence. The duty Police Sergeant would then meet up with him from time to time, to check that the he was doing his duty.

Iris and Mark Bailey

Policemen walked alone rather than in pairs. At signs of trouble they could call for help either by blowing their whistle or by using a police box. They did not have personal radios at that time.

These policemen were well-known in the local community. They knew the families and the families knew and trusted them.

Even when I was a child, much later in the 1940s, if I was travelling with my mother and we were uncertain of directions, there was always a policeman to ask.

Guest contribution

Discipline on the beat

When I was a constable in a Welsh borough in the 1950s, we walked the beat on our own, and it was a disciplinary offence to gossip with another officer. I was fined 2s.6d* for talking to another officer at 4.30am across the street in an empty town centre.

Charles Nunn, as reported in Letters in The Daily Telegraph

*Although 2s.6d formally converts to only 12½p, in real terms it was a significant amount of money.


Guest contribution

A true story of no lavatory on the beat

On night patrol, a policeman needed to relieve himself, and so went off beat down an alleyway, and while so engaged noticed a man breaking into a local property. He then waited for the man to come out, and promptly nicked (arrested) him. The policeman was of course praised for this arrest. However the sergeant wanted to know why the arrest took place off of the policeman's beat. The reply was that having seen the man acting suspiciously the policeman had followed him to the scene of the crime.

as told by the policeman to Iris and Mark Bailey


The policeman's whistle

If a policeman on the beat needed help from other policemen, one thing he could do was to blow his whistle. That other policemen were likely to be near enough to hear the whistle bears witness to how many policeman there were on the streets and how little road traffic!

Policeman blowing his police whistle to bring assistance from nearby policemen, mid-1900s

Policeman blowing his whistle to bring help.

Police whistle, UK 1040s

The policeman's whistle.

The following information about policemen's whistles comes from people who knew older policemen, but there is not much agreement about the sound of police whistles or how policemen used them. I suspect that practices differed in different parts of the country and over time. This is supported in the last contribution which states explicitly that the police whistle concerned is the Acme.

The sound of a police whistle

Guest contributions

Police whistles were twin-toned, like two whistles in one - which was what gave them their distinctive sound. It was illegal for the public to own them. (Before the police had whistles, the 'peelers', as they were called, would whack their truncheons on the pavement to summon back up.)

Steve Sleap


Police whistles had a particularly deep tone which was quite unlike any other kind of whistle. Although it was illegal for members of the public to them, similar whistles, albeit with a slightly different tone were available, and were acquired by more than one old lady just in case! (A sort of fore runner of the modern personal alarm.)

Iris and Mark Bailey


Officers could attract each other by one long and three short blasts on their Acme police whistle.

On the end of their whistle chain was the key to a police box.

extract from a letter by Frank Brittain
in The Daily Telegraph 3rd February 2021


The police box

A common sight on the streets of England while I was growing up in the 1940s and 1950s were phones specifically for the use of police. They were in blue boxes, known as 'police boxes'. I understand that there were other types of police box, but the only ones that I ever saw were the blue ones and they are what this section is about.

Old police box, Tardis style

Old police box, Tardis style, photographed at Chatham dockyard.

Police phone box, common on the streets of the UK in the 1940s and 50s, looking like Dr Who's Tardis

Policeman about to enter a police box, detail of a screen shot from an old film.

door to public phone in police box

The small door to the public phone in police box

One of several types of police phone box, 
  common on the streets of the UK in the 1940s and 1950s

A similar phone door, open, in another style of police box, detail of a screen shot from an old film.

Why Dr Who's Tardis looks like a police box

In the beginning of the Dr Who series in the early 1960s, it made a great deal of sense for Dr Who's Tardis to look like a police box.

Police boxes were common on the streets so never attracted attention, and everyone knew that they were locked so they wouldn't be able to get inside even if they tried.

Although police boxes are long gone on the streets, the shape of the Tardis has become a tradition. So the Tardis continues to look like an old police box.

Inside a police box

Guest contribution

Each box was equipped with a small desk, stool, first-aid kit and telephone. There was no heating, but the box was sturdy enough to withstand all weather and minor bomb blasts. it could be used to write reports, shelter, eat refreshments and detain a prisoner.

extract from a letter by Dr Michael A Fopp
in The Daily Telegraph 3rd February 2021


How the police used police boxes

Guest contributions

When police officers walked the beat, they were often many miles from their station. Twice during their shift they were required to 'make a ring' by calling a predetermined box.

extract from a letter by Dr Michael A Fopp
in The Daily Telegraph 3rd February 2021


If a subject was to be detained, he could be shut in the box until transport was summoned.

extract from a letter by Frank Brittain
in The Daily Telegraph 3rd February 2021


The white light on top of the box would be set to flash if the station needed to contact the officer on that beat or any passing police vehicle.

extract from a letter by Dr Michael A Fopp
in The Daily Telegraph 3rd February 2021


Before the days or personal radios, the only way to contact the on-duty policeman was to ring a box and hope that he was nearby.

extract from a letter by Frank Brittain
in The Daily Telegraph 3rd February 2021

How the public could use police boxes

Members of the public could use the phone iin a police box by opening a small door in the main door which was unlocked. This got straight through to the police or an emergency service. The public could not use the phone for other purposes or get into a box itself.

The end of police boxes

Personal radios for the police heralded the end of police boxes.

The last police box to be removed was in the 1970s at Cockfoster, the most northerly of the London suburbs.

extract from a letter by Dr Michael A Fopp
in The Daily Telegraph 3rd February 2021


If you can add anything to this page or provide a photo, I would be pleased if you would contact me.

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