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Encyclopedia > Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police

The Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis (usually just referred to as the Metropolitan Police Commissioner) is the head of the Metropolitan Police Service in London.


The post was created by the Metropolitan Police Act 1839 and was, until 1855, held jointly by two men. The Commissioner is generally regarded as the most senior operational police officer in the United Kingdom (although since each police force is independent this is not technically accurate). He is always knighted on appointment if he has not already been (many of the Deputy Commissioners are also knighted). The insignia of rank, unique within the British police, is a crown above a Bath Star ("pip") above crossed tipstaves within a wreath, very similar to the insignia worn by a full general in the British Army.


At one time, the commissioners were either retired military officers or civil servants. Sir John Nott-Bower was the first career police officer to hold the post (although several previous commissioners had served in senior administrative positions in colonial forces and the Metropolitan Police itself) and Sir Joseph Simpson was the first commissioner to have started his career as a constable (although he was soon appointed to higher rank). However, Sir Robert Mark, appointed in 1972, was the first to have risen through all the ranks from the lowest to the highest, as all his successors have done.


Commissioners of Police of the Metropolis

  • Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Charles Rowan, 1829 - 1850
  • Sir Richard Mayne, 1829 - 1868
  • Captain William Hay, 1850 - 1855
  • Lieutenant-Colonel Douglas Labalmondière (acting), 1868 - 1869
  • Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Edmund Henderson, 1869 - 1886
  • Major-General Sir Charles Warren, 1886 - 1888
  • James Monro, 1888 - 1890
  • Colonel Sir Edward Bradford, 1890 - 1903
  • Sir Edward Henry, 1903 - 1918
  • General Sir Nevil Macready, 1918 - 1920
  • Brigadier-General Sir William Horwood, 1918 - 1928
  • General Viscount Byng of Vimy, 1928 - 1931
  • Marshal of the RAF Lord Trenchard, 1931 - 1935
  • Air Vice-Marshal Sir Philip Game, 1935 - 1945
  • Sir Harold Scott, 1945 - 1953
  • Sir John Nott-Bower, 1953 - 1958
  • Sir Joseph Simpson, 1958 - 1968
  • Sir John Waldron, 1968 - 1972
  • Sir Robert Mark, 1972 - 1977
  • Sir David McNee, 1977 - 1982
  • Sir Kenneth Newman, 1982 - 1987
  • Sir Peter Imbert, 1987 - 1993
  • Sir Paul Condon, 1993 - 2000
  • Sir John Stevens, 2000 - 2005
  • Sir Ian Blair, 2005 -

External link

  • Metropolitan Police Service timeline (http://www.met.police.uk/history/timeline1829-1849.htm)


 
 

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