MJ Maccardini (trailerfullofpix)'s photos with the keyword: watch house

IMG 1484-001-No.9 Holly Place

28 May 2024 1 135
Info about the Watch House from the Heath & Hampstead Society's website (with their typos corrected by me): "On June 19 1829 the Metropolitan Police act was given Royal assent. This placed policing arrangements for the Capital under the control of Sir Robert Peel. Sir Robert organized the force on civilian lines rather than paramilitary. It became the third official non paramilitary police force in the world alongside the City of Glasgow Police and the Paris Police. A blue uniform was chosen rather than red (which was considered a military colour) to reflect the neutral status of the force. Until 1864 the officers wore top hats to maintain a civilian appearance. They were armed solely with a wooden truncheon and a rattle to attract assistance if required. Applicants had to be under the age of 35, in good health and be at least five foot seven inches in height. Metropolitan Police patrols first took to the streets on 29 September 1829. Some members of the community regarded them as a threat to civil liberties. The original force consisted of 2 Commissioners, 8 Superintendents, 20 Inspectors, 88 Sergeants and 895 Constables, patrolling the streets within a seven-mile radius of Charing Cross. Between 1829 and 1830, 17 local divisions, each with a central police station, were established with each division assigned a letter. Hampstead was division S, and from 1830 officers from the police station in the Watch House at 9 Holly Walk patrolled its streets maintaining public order and combatting crime. After this time prisoners were confined in the Watch House rather than the single cell Parish Lock Up, which was built into the garden wall of 11 Cannon Lane." Here's a photo of the Parish Lock Up:

IMG 1486-001-Door Knocker

28 May 2024 1 1 114
No. 9 Holly Walk, formerly the Watch House, now residential. Rings made of conkers are an autumn thing in this area.

IMG 1485-001-The Watch House

28 May 2024 124
Info about the Watch House from the Heath & Hampstead Society's website (with their typos corrected by me): "On June 19 1829 the Metropolitan Police act was given Royal assent. This placed policing arrangements for the Capital under the control of Sir Robert Peel. Sir Robert organized the force on civilian lines rather than paramilitary. It became the third official non paramilitary police force in the world alongside the City of Glasgow Police and the Paris Police. A blue uniform was chosen rather than red (which was considered a military colour) to reflect the neutral status of the force. Until 1864 the officers wore top hats to maintain a civilian appearance. They were armed solely with a wooden truncheon and a rattle to attract assistance if required. Applicants had to be under the age of 35, in good health and be at least five foot seven inches in height. Metropolitan Police patrols first took to the streets on 29 September 1829. Some members of the community regarded them as a threat to civil liberties. The original force consisted of 2 Commissioners, 8 Superintendents, 20 Inspectors, 88 Sergeants and 895 Constables, patrolling the streets within a seven-mile radius of Charing Cross. Between 1829 and 1830, 17 local divisions, each with a central police station, were established with each division assigned a letter. Hampstead was division S, and from 1830 officers from the police station in the Watch House at 9 Holly Walk patrolled its streets maintaining public order and combatting crime. After this time prisoners were confined in the Watch House rather than the single cell Parish Lock Up, which was built into the garden wall of 14 Cannon Lane." Here's a photo of the Parish Lock Up:

IMG 1326-001-Old Watch House

12 May 2024 100
Plaque on the side of the Vestry House Museum. The watch house was used for a period as the local lock-up.

Henry Sterry Drinking Fountain

17 Jan 2016 396
Public drinking fountain, gift of Henry Sterry Esq., on the side of the watch house, St Mary Magdalen churchyard. Abbey Street at the corner of Bermondsey Street.

Watch House

31 Oct 2010 261
Back in the days when body-snatching was a big problem, many churches employed night watchmen to be on the lookout for resurrection men creeping into the churchyard. The resurrection men would dig up fresh corpses and sell them to medical colleges. Prior to the Anatomy Act of 1832, medical colleges could only use the bodies of executed criminals for dissection. Executed criminals being in short supply, the body snatchers did a lucrative trade. See where this picture was taken.