London Police Force honour their past comrades
On Monday, 4 August the Metropolitan Police Service remembers 100 years since the First World War began.

            
            To mark the sacrifices of the Great War, the Commissioner of the   Metropolitan Police Service led tributes in a ceremony held in June at   the Memorial Garden, Peel Centre in Hendon. While across the   organisation today, borough officers will be holding their own services   to honour their fallen police comrades that took up duties to serve the   war effort.
            
            Our archived accounts show how the Met sprang into action and became the   first armed force in operation for the security of Londoners and the   wider country.

            
            In late 1913 the Met began making preparations for what was to become   one of the greatest conflicts in history. Few realised the consequences   of the preparations and many believed war was inconceivable. The first   archived entries held by the Met's Heritage Centre, describes officer   movements in preparation for a possible war occurring two weeks after   the shooting of Archduke Francis Ferdinand on 28 June 1914 in Sarajevo.
            
            The police records show that on 11 July 1914 an additional 35 officers   were moved to Scotland Yard, 16 officers to 'K' division (which today is   Limehouse, West Ham, Plaistow, Barking and Dagenham boroughs), 152   officers were moved to 'N' division (known today as Islington) and 128   to the Woolwich Dock Yard.
            
            At that time the Met was responsible for policing His Majesty, George   V's dockyards around the country. However as soon as war was declared   they were reinforced with over 1,000 extra officers from the divisions   in London which proved an enormous logistical operation. Aside from   normal police duty additional police responsibilities at the dockyards   included security, prevention of espionage, preventing loss from HM   stores, supplementing the fire service, and the control of diseases   amongst woman in the community around the dockyards.
            
            Other premises around London that required a police presence included   recruiting stations, factories making uniform and munitions factories.   Lloyd George and Winston Churchill, successive Ministers of Munitions,   requested uniformed women officers from the Women's Police Service to   supervise women munitions workers in 1915 which paved the way for women   in the police service to be given greater consideration.
            
            Special Branch was tasked from 1913 to monitor a number of foreign   agents across the country. The constant surveillance was never relaxed   even though many officers involved did not know the true purpose of   their observations. A dossier of suspected enemy agents was soon mapped   out uncovering the espionage network of the Kaiser.
            
            For two weeks prior to war being declared, Special Branch were put on   'constant standby', where no officer dared even to slip round to a café   without informing his immediate superior of the exact spot he could be   found. On the last stroke of Big Ben at midnight on 4 August 1914,   Special Branch were sent into action. Within 12 hours of war being   declared, officers had arrested 500 secret agents and irrevocably   shattered the German espionage system in Britain.
            
            Recorded on 5 August 1914, Police Orders describe how officers who had   previously served in the Royal Navy were then re-called for duty in   addition with further reservists who were called back into the army. In   total 1,019 officers on the Reserve List were re-called to the   'colours'. The Met began re-calling officers who had retired on their   pensions, back into active police service.
            
            To compensate for the loss of manpower 1,200 police pensioners were   recalled to duty in 1914 and 24,000 Specials were raised for the   protection of vulnerable locations and other duties. With these measures   as a necessity, officers were temporarily stopped from retiring from   the police. The last PC to retire on pension before the war broke out   retired on 1 August 1914 and was granted a pension of £60 30s 3d per   year. His retirement was short as he was re-called on 6 August. It was   not until 1919, when the regular Police Officers were returning from the   front line, that it was possible to dispense the services of the police   pensioners.
            
            350 sergeants and constables who were experienced in drill were sent to   the military as drill instructors to the new army. At the end of 1916,   19 were still on loan. In total 4,027 officers were either re-called or   volunteered for the military. There would have been many more willing   officer volunteers however a block on recruiting was enforced as   policing In London became stretched.
            
            Officers' families suffered financial hardship as military pay was less   than police pay. Police Orders of 14 August announced a weekly allowance   of 14/- paid to wives of officers recalled, plus 2/6d per child.
            A few months on from August 1914 saw the first 11 officers killed in   action recorded however soon the trickle of names became a flood,   leaving many police widows and their children in poverty. Colleagues   still working in London agreed to a hardship fund and paid a levy of 1d   per week to support widows and orphans, with the first grants made on 9   October 1914. Grants between £2 and £3 were awarded to each person. In   all, 360 police officers would be killed in action during the conflict.
            
            Between 10 January 1915 and 21 August 1918, as a result of hostile air   raids the Met took action on 65 occasions. The defence from aerial   attacks largely remained the responsibility of the police as they went   about their everyday business.
            
            Considered as a loyal force of over 18,000 officers the Met were would   be heavily relied upon to support the war effort through the many skills   and attributes the organisation had and continues to hold today.   Several officers could speak another language and were already used to,   the rank and disciplined life that the military provides. Many officers   had previously served in the military and were on reserve lists with   their spirit of endurance assisted through their level of fitness which   remains a standard today with 97 per cent of officers passing the annual   fitness test.
            
            The Distinguished Service Order (D.S.O.), the Military Cross (M.C.) and   the Distinguished Conduct Medal (D.C.M.) were among the 337 medals, some   with bars that were awarded to the Metropolitan Police Officers during   the war for their gallantry.
            
            Deputy Commissioner Craig Mackey, said: "The Metropolitan Police is   proud and honoured to remember all those who fell during the First World   War, including a number of police officers.
            
"Their sacrifice helped to shape the world we inherited from them and   the freedoms we so often take for granted. We are forever in their   debt."
              
              August 4, 2014