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About this book
The ten Scotland Yard detectives, featured in The Guvnors, are unique. Such a group of intrepid crime-busters will never exist again. They possessed only the most rudimentary education; none had a degree. Intuition and knowledge of their manor counted for more than DNA and databases. They worked tirelessly in the pursuit of criminals, used informants, worked on hunches and grabbed hold of investigations and shook them until every piece of evidence was unearthed. Criminals trembled when these detectives were after them because, once they were nicked, they stayed nicked.The Guvnors covers legends such as Fred Wensley, who nailed strips of bicycle tyres to the soles of his boots when on the look-out for Jack the Ripper. He later formed the Flying Squad and became chief constable of the CID. Fred Sharpe would single-handedly confront forty of the worst racetrack gangsters and tell them to clear off, anyone who refused would collect a punch on the jaw. Sharpe later became head of the Flying Squad, as did Bob Fabian, who was awarded the Kings Police Medal for dismantling an IRA bomb.Bert Wickstead, known as The Gangbuster, literally terrorised the gangs who attempted to fill the void in Londons East End, after the demise of the Kray bothers.This is a book which will delight those who want to know what life was like when The Guvnors and others like them were in charge of law and order and the streets were far safer than they are today.
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Yes, you can access The Guv'nors by Dick Kirby in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & Military & Maritime History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.
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CHAPTER 1
Fred Wensley â The Greatest of Them All
Mention the name of Horatio Nelson to an entrant into the Royal Navy and one would get (or at least, the examining board would anticipate receiving), instant recognition. Similarly, casually uttering the name of Guy Gibson VC, DSO, DFC to an applicant for the Royal Air Force would hopefully invoke the same familiarity.
It is a pity that the Metropolitan Police fail to give similar recognition to their detective heroes of days gone by. Consequently, the present-day youngsters in the CID can hardly be blamed for shaking their heads in bewilderment at the name of Fred Wensley. Nevertheless, it is unfortunate that that name should mean so little to them, because arguably, Wensley was the greatest detective of all time.
*
Frederick Porter Wensley was born on 28 March 1865 in Taunton, Somerset. He came from yeoman stock and after leaving school, he worked as a gardener. But ever since boyhood, he had nurtured the desire to be a detective; as to why, it is not clear. Certainly, none of his family were police officers; indeed, he did not even know a single police officer, but as 1887 drew to a close, Wensley travelled to London in order to join the Metropolitan Police. On a wet January morning the following year, he was one of forty-eight shivering applicants who were sworn in as police constables. Allocated warrant number 73224, Wensley was posted to Lambeth as Police Constable 60âLâ and almost immediately jumped into the deep end of policing. Attempting to stop a drunken fight, he was thrown through the plate glass window of a public house. Bloodied but unbowed, Wensley next tackled a gang of hooligans who had challenged his authority. He was badly injured, as was the off-duty police officer who came to his assistance. A few of the gang were arrested and received sentences of between four and six monthsâ imprisonment; Wensley spent a considerable ninety-four days off sick. On his next confrontation, he used his truncheon for the first and only time during his career. He was called to a public house where a man who had bountifully dispensed drinks to the clientele, refused to pay. As Wensley approached, he noticed that the man was carrying a cane; it was not as innocuous as it first appeared, since it concealed a swordstick. Having unsheathed the weapon, the man lunged at him and Wensley slipped underneath the blade, drew his truncheon and âstickedâ him. âYouâll be on report for thisâ, lugubriously muttered a colleague, of the type who can be relied upon to make such remarks, but he was wrong. After attempting to attack the magistrate who later dealt with his case, the swordsman was sent to a lunatic asylum.
During his first year of service, the series of what became known as the âJack the Ripperâ murders commenced across the river in Whitechapel, and Wensley was one of several hundred officers drafted in to patrol those mean streets of âHâ Division. He was appalled at the filth and squalor. At that time, the population of the area had swollen to enormous proportions as a result of the almost non-existent rules governing the torrent of immigrants from Russia, Lithuania and Latvia and would continue to grow, until the introduction of the Aliens Act, 1906. In consequence, the East End of London had become a huge melting pot of violent crime, courtesy of the home-grown criminals and their equally dangerous and unscrupulous immigrant cousins. Wensley, patrolling the grim Whitechapel streets, with strips of bicycle tyres nailed to the soles of his boots to provide a measure of silence, should the Ripper appear, could hardly wait to return to the green pastures of Lambeth.
Had he known that two-and-a-half years later, he would return to the East End, there to remain for the next twenty-five years of his service, he would have viewed the prospect with considerable dismay. And yet, in time, Wensley grew to love Whitechapel and the surrounding areas, and when through promotion he was given the opportunity of leaving the area, he strongly resisted it.
Back on âLâ Division, Wensley struck lucky when he overheard snatches of conversation between two girls and consequently arrested them. It transpired that they had broken into a girlsâ home in Hackney and stolen the occupantsâ money and the following day both were sentenced to three monthsâ hard labour. Wensley received a commendation from the magistrate and this was endorsed with an additional commendation from the commissioner and a monetary award of 5s 0d (25 pence), well worth having when one considers that at that time Wensleyâs weekly wage was 24s 0d (ÂŁ1.20). It was the first of many; Wensleyâs commendations spiralled into the hundreds and set a record which has never been broken.
*
In his autobiography, Detective Days, Wensley stated that early in 1891 he and several other officers were transferred into âEâ Division, following the dismissal of 39 police officers out of 130 men from Bow Street police station, who had staged an abortive strike over conditions and pay; and he was not there very long before being transferred to Whitechapel, on âHâ Division.
In fact, his posting to âEâ Division did not last very long at all; Police Orders dated 23 February 1891 records that PC 97âEâ Wensley was to be fined three daysâ pay (11s 9d) and transferred to another division. The next day, he was; as PC 402 âHâ, at a wage of 27s 0d per week. What Wensley had done to incur this punishment is not known. Police Orders does not reveal it and Wensley certainly never did. Perhaps the transfer resulted from his youthful impetuosity which precluded him from keeping his mouth shut when it would have been prudent to do so; as will be seen, Wensley did not believe in suffering in silence what he perceived to be injustice.
Although he initially resented his punishment posting, Wensley threw himself into the maelstrom of violence and villainy that was Whitechapel - certainly, there was enough for him to do. One of the most prevalent crimes was robbery with violence, and inebriated sailors, flush with large amounts of money after a long voyage, were considered easy marks. On one such occasion, Wensley arrested Francis Victor Mygren from the description of a victim who had been robbed five days previously. Mygren blamed his accomplice, Thomas Richford and vice versa; at the Old Bailey, Richford received eighteen monthsâ hard labour and Mygren, three.
Wensley was tireless in his efforts to identify and arrest criminals; going off duty, he changed from his uniform into plain clothes and went out, met informants, kept observations and carried out arrests. This was how he happened to be on the scene a few months later, when an iron merchant was robbed of his watch-chain. Wensley was patrolling his beat when the victim pointed out his assailants to him but the two robbers escaped. Furious at being cheated of his prey, Wensley went home, changed out of his uniform into plain clothes and five hours later, arrested William Schennick and James Hammerman. The value of the watch-chain was tuppence (1p) but robbery was viewed very seriously in 1893. At the Old Bailey, Schennick was sentenced to five yearsâ penal servitude and Hammerman to seven yearsâ penal servitude, and Wensley was again commended. It seems almost impossible that he found time to court and marry Laura Elizabeth, but the wedding took place at the Parish Church, Hadlow, Kent on 3 August 1893 and the small dark-haired, hazel-eyed girl who came from Eastbourne, Sussex and was four years his junior, became his wife; their marriage lasted for almost fifty years.
He had less luck with his desire to become a detective; although he was commended and rewarded time and again for catching thieves, he had fallen out of favour with Tom Divall, his divisional detective inspector upon whom entry into the CID depended. Wensley would later have cause to dislike him even more; following Divallâs retirement, he became a member of the racetrack police and was heard to compliment the gang leader Billy Kimber, the head of the Brummagem Boys, on being, âone of the bestâ. Wensley had almost eight yearsâ service under his belt as a uniformed constable, when his superintendent demanded to know why he had not applied to become a CID officer. Wensley told him; and the superintendent who was probably a freemason â Wensley certainly was â told him to put his application in. Within days, a police officer named Payne was pensioned off and on 4 October 1895, Wensley took his place as a permanent patrol â the rank would later become detective constable â in the CID.
*
Wensley was now thirty years of age. At five feet nine-and-a-half inches, he was not excessively tall, but he was powerfully built. His Roman nose gave him a hawkish look, his blue eyes were deeply penetrating and as he rubbed the bowl of his pipe, he would murmur, âYâknow, the truth is all that matters. The single object is to get at the truth.â He had his work cut out.
At the time of Wensleyâs appointment to the CID, fingerprint evidence for use in the courts was still ten years away. Identification of criminals relied upon their photograph being in the Roguesâ Gallery at the Yard, with the added confirmation of a prison warder who had seen them during their incarceration. Mechanised transport had appeared at the Yard just two years previously; two 10hp Wolseleys had been acquired for the use of the commissioner and the receiver only. Therefore, the detectives relied upon buses, trams, bicycles and shoe-leather to get around. And as for the gathering of forensic evidence - ⌠well, it was almost thirty years in the future that the eminent pathologist, Sir Bernard Spilsbury would castigate Chief Inspector Percy Savage for picking up the rotting, putrefying flesh of a murder victim in his bare hands, with Savage rather gormlessly replying that nobody had seen fit to issue rubber gloves to the murder bag. It took another ten years after that to form the Forensic Science Laboratory.
The Jewish community knew Wensley well, and their nickname for him was âVensalâ or âMr. Vensleyâ, Many of them provided information for him. Information, surveillance and pure detective ability were what Wensley and his associates had to rely on, to catch criminals â there was nothing else. Providentially, Wensley possessed all three attributes in abundance.
With the streets full of the most desperate criminals, Wensley knew that the slightest indication of laxness in dealing with them would be disastrous; not that this only applied to the violent characters. On one occasion, he spotted a man stealing a womanâs purse. Immediately, he grabbed hold of the suspectâs wrist and arrested him, ensuring that the purse was put safely in his own pocket. The suspect impudently accused Wensley of being the thief; the victim and several bystanders had seen Wensley pocket the purse and an ugly scene followed. Only with the greatest difficulty did Wensley get both suspect and victim to the police station but Wensleyâs troubles did not end there â the man repeated the allegation, as he did at the police court and called witnesses to inform the court that he was a man of good character. The man was committed for trial at the North London Sessions but Wensley was now very worried, indeed. He was certain that the man had previous convictions but this was before the days of fingerprint identification, so how could he prove it? Eventually, after days spent looking through the Roguesâ Gallery at Scotland Yard, he identified his prisoner as a convicted thief. But in addition, his criminal record revealed that more than once, the prisoner had previously played the same trick that he had played on Wensley, which had resulted in acquittals and police officers being criticised for giving untrue evidence. He confronted the man in court, who admitted both his previous convictions and the offence, and in giving the Judge the manâs criminal convictions, Wensley also informed him of what the prisoner had done to him, as well as other officers in the past. The thief was sentenced to eighteen monthsâ hard labour. The prosecuting counsel decided that Wensleyâs remarks had been vindictive and criticised him, but of course it was not the barrister who had been slandered and whose job and liberty had been put on the line. Wensley turned on the barrister and told him what he thought of him. The Judge intervened and asked what had caused the confrontation: upon being told, he sided with Wensley, saying that the court had every right to know the full circumstances of the case.
Six months after joining the CID, Wensleyâs reputation was enhanced after he arrested a murderer, whilst he was off duty. William Seaman, who had served a total of twenty-eight yearsâ penal servitude made a highly detailed confession but at his trial at the Central Criminal Court, he denied everything and when his statement was read out in court, he told Wensley, âThe whole of your evidence is a fabrication. Either Iâm a madman to make such a statement or youâre a rogue. Youâve been sworn on the Bible, but they ought to have sworn you on a pack of cards.â It did him no good; he was later hanged with two other murderers, an occasion which marked the last triple execution to take place in London. On the same day that sentence of death was pronounced on Seaman, Wensley was again commended at the Old Bailey. He had witnessed an enameller being robbed of his watch-chain by three men; Wensley dashed forwards and chased the men, catching Thomas Marshall single-handedly in a dark passageway. He handed Marshall over to a patrolling constable before searching for the robberâs two accomplices, but without success; Marshall was sentenced to three yearsâ penal servitude.
More violent thieves were caught by Wensley: when he arrested Michael Callaghan and Charles Hutchins for robbing a shipâs fireman of ÂŁ2, they were sentenced at the Old Bailey to hard labour. Callaghan to twelve months, Hutchins to fifteen. Surveillance was also an important part of detectivesâ duties; the unfortunately named Shena Suck and her accomplice, Rose Greenbaum were followed by Wensley and other officers right across London, on trams and omnibuses as they visited one shop after another without making purchases, over a period of four hours. They were stopped in possession of two sealskin capes which Suck dropped, saying âNot mineâ. And they werenât, although later at the Old Bailey, both women stated that the capes were indeed their property, alleging that the police had destroyed their receipts. It probably contributed to Suck being sentenced to fifteen monthsâ hard labour and Greenbaum, to nine. âI hope you will act fair and not put me away,â said Robert Crundle plaintively, after Wensley arrested him in a pub for stealing a hundredweight of tea, four days previously. Wensley didnât, but a judge at the Old Bailey did: three yearsâ penal servitude.
Three years went by and Wensley complained that he had not been promoted to sergeant but to be fair, very few officers were with only that length of service in the rank. His detective inspector was unsympathetic; he had not trained Wensley to be transferred on promotion after teaching him everything he knew, he said. So Wensley complained to his superintendent â a different one from his predecessor, who had championed Wensleyâs cause â who sided with the detective inspector; whereupon Wensley stated that he would appeal to Scotland Yard. The superintendent was aghast. âItâs a daring thing to do,â he retorted and in normal circumstances, he would have been quite right. But Wensley was friendly with Sir Melville Macnaughten CB, who was then chief constable of the CID, who promoted Wensley to the rank of detective sergeant and allowed him to remain on âHâ Division, one man over strength. It was a wise choice, for Wensley was about to enhance his already considerable reputation.
In 1901, Mr. Cox, a seventy-one-year-old jeweller was attacked, tied up and gagged at his premises by three men, who relieved him of his entire stock. After being tied up for fourteen hours, he was extremely lucky to have survived the ordeal. Wensley heard that one of Coxâs employees had provided the information to the gang and, at the same time, information was received concerning the spending habits of a gang of criminals. One gang member was seen with his son in Clapham Park Road, south London; as the son waited outside a house in that thoroughfare, so the father entered the premises. As he left, a short time later, the two were stopped some distance away and after it was discovered that the son was in possession of housebreaking implements, both were arrested. Meanwhile, the house which the suspect had just left was raided and the occupant, obviously in a state of shock, immediately (and erroneously) named and blamed Coxâs venal employee for implicating him. âIt looks bad for me, as I have a lot of the stuff,â he said, adding virtuously, âIt was not me who gagged Mr. Cox.â
The rest of the gang was then rounded up. Wensley sent a telegram to Coxâs employee, asking for a meeting and specifying a date and time â this, he signed in the name of one of the arrested robbers. He, too was arrested but because he could only be charged with conspiracy, the maximum sentence he could receive, much to the annoyance of the Trial Judge, Mr. Justice Jelf, was one of two yearsâ imprisonment. The robbers fared less well; they were sentenced to penal servitude â one to twelve years, the other two to ten years, each.
Apart from displaying some clever detective work, this case was a landmark in criminal investigation. At a time when it was almost impossible to pursue a criminal who lived on one division and committed offences on another, without the express permission of the neighbouring divisionâs superintendent â it was not always given â Wensley broke the mould. Here was a case where an offence had been committed on one division, the persons responsible located in a second division and arrested in yet a third.
Wensley utilized this strategy on his next case where offences had not even been committed on his division â but that was where the perpetrators lived. A series of burglaries had been carried out in the wealthy suburbs by this gang; on the few occasions when they had been challenged by patrolling police constables, the officers had been attacked by the gang, who escaped. No clues were left by them at the scene of the burglaries, no description of them was available and nobody had a clue as to their identities.
But Wensleyâs attention was drawn to a group of men he saw in Shadwell. Some of them he had seen before but that all of them he realized had a considerable amount of free time on their hands and plenty of money to squander. He employed his surveillance skills to discover where they lived and as the days grew into weeks, and the weeks into months, Wensley, in a variety of disguises managed to track each of the gang. Their main meeting place was a house in Albert Street, Shadwell and the visitors to that premises were followed home and identified. A frequent visitor, Bertha Weiner, who, like the rest of the gang was a German immigrant, had visited the house with her brother Ludwig and his two sons, who referred to themselves as auctioneers. Although Bertha lived a mile away, she nevertheless paid the rent for the house in Albert Street. Now, Wensley used his considerable talents to obtain information as to precisely what the gang was up to, from a top-class informer. The leader of the gang was Bertha Weiner, he discovered. She financed the operations, the gang who resided in Albert Street went out in groups of four or five and the stolen goods were disposed of through Berthaâs brother and nephews.
The arrests were carried out, simultaneously, with tremendous results. The eight men who were arrested at Albert Street were so shocked that two of them hurriedly dressed in items stolen in two of the burglaries. Bertha Weiner and her lover were arrested at her address in Ship Alley and the officers arrived at Ludwig Weinerâs house, just in time to stop a pantechnican driving off, which was found to contain an enormous amount of stolen property. At the police station, the eight burglars excitedly discussed their predicament in German; foreseeing such a possibility, Wensley had thoughtfully ensured that an officer who spoke fluent German was in the vicinity. Their overheard conversations quickly linked them to a total of thirty-six burglaries and at the Old Bailey eleven of the men were each sentenced to five yearsâ penal servitude. One of the Weiner nephews was fortunate to receive just twelve monthsâ imprisonment, but the heftiest sentence was reserved for Bertha Weiner, who had orchestrated the whole business: seven yearsâ penal servitude. A riot broke out in the dock as the prisoners tried unsuccessfully to attack Wensley, whilst roundly cursing him. Fortunately, the native of Somerset was unable to understand a word they said.
At this time a protection gang had been terrorizing the East End; anybody who failed to pay up or crossed them in any way stood the risk of being shot, stabbed or having their premises burned down. A bookmaker, Myer Edgar, who refused to pay and who had enlisted the services of a bodyguard, was attacked in a billiard hall by four members of the gang wielding a cue, a knife and a chopper, who knocked him unconscious. The absent bodyguard was found in a near-by pub by the gang who attacked him too; fortunately, the licensee called the police. Two of the ga...
Table of contents
- Cover
- Title
- Copyright
- Contents
- Foreward
- Acknowledgements
- Prologue
- 1 â Fred Wensley â The Greatest of Them All
- 2 â âNuttyâ Sharpe
- 3 â Peter Beveridge
- 4 â Greeno â Master Detective
- 5 â Fabian of the Yard
- 6 â âCharlie Artfulâ
- 7 â âHooterâ Millenâ
- 8 â Tommy Butler â Mr. Flying Squad
- 9 â Ian Forbes â The Tarland Ploughman
- 10 â Bert Wickstead â The Gangbuster
- Bibliography
- Index