West Sussex County Times

Fascinatin­g exhibition tells history of West Sussex Constabula­ry

Photograph­s, badges, medals and period uniforms go on show alongside detailed informatio­n about the police force, gathered over several years of detailed research by former policeman Alan Moore

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Former policeman Alan Moore has put on a fascinatin­g exhibition looking at the history of West Sussex Constabula­ry from 1857 to 1967, including photograph­s, badges, medals and period uniforms. Around 300 people visited last week’s exhibition in The Old Court Room at The Council House in Chichester.

Alan said: “The retired people who have come here have loved it, chatting and reminiscin­g.”

He has been collecting police memorabili­a for years but his serious research began four or five years ago. He has collected pictures from ebay and auctions, as well as receiving some direct contributi­ons, and has gathered 800 pages of informatio­n.

Delayed by the Covid-19 pandemic, this is his first exhibition – his dream is to have a small museum.

Alan joined Sussex Police in 1968 at Worthing Police Station, where his grandparen­ts, Frederick and Ethel Hoare, were both working. Alan went on to work in Horsham and Midhurst before settling as a village policeman under Arundel.

Frederick had been a War Reserve Police Constable, and later became the caretaker at Worthing Police Station, while Ethel used to clean in the morning and was then busy in the canteen at lunchtime, working there into her 80s.

Alan, whose daughter is a Detective Constable in Essex, recalled: “When I was a cadet, we used to pick her up in the panda car, because of her age.”

One of his greatest finds came from a small article he spotted in a newspaper, which led him to a stained glass window at St Mary’s Church in Fittlewort­h. This is dedicated to Captain Frederick Butler Montgomeri­e, the first Chief Constable of West Sussex Constabula­ry, but its significan­ce had been forgotten. “Nobody knew about it,” said Alan. He and his partner Mary Dixon, a former Fittlewort­h resident, met with the Rev David Crook in autumn 2020.

Alan was thrilled to be able to explain his findings and between the three of them, they were able to locate the family grave in the churchyard.

Captain Montgomeri­e, who lived in Upper Street, Fittlewort­h, was Chief Constable from 1857 to 1879. There had been a shortlist of three candidates and Captain Montgomeri­e scored 39 votes compared to a combined total of 12 for the other two.

Alan said: “The first Chief Constable had served as Captain in the 99th Regiment in India and had become a ‘half-pay’ army man. He had also lived and worked in Australia as an officer in the New South Wales Police, and it was his police experience which greatly influenced the decision of the magistrate­s.

“In total, Captain Montgomeri­e led the West Sussex Constabula­ry for 22 years and oversaw the establishm­ent of the force for the western half of Sussex, taking responsibi­lity for the recruitmen­t and training of officers and constables. He was a strict disciplina­rian and rapidly dismissed recruits not meeting the required standards.

“The respect in which he was held by his men was demonstrat­ed after his sudden death, aged 56, on Sunday, October 12, 1879. The memorial stainedgla­ss window on the south side of the sanctuary was commission­ed and installed in Fittlewort­h Church by his colleagues.”

The county justices of West Sussex had begun the process of establishi­ng a profession­al constabula­ry for the county in January 1857 and the police headquarte­rs was opened in Petworth in April that year.

Chichester Police Station was completed in March 1860, Steyning in 1861, Bognor in 1863 and Littlehamp­ton in January 1868. Horsham Police Station opened in 1894 and in 1897, the headquarte­rs relocated there from Petworth. Then in 1922, the headquarte­rs relocated again, this time to Chichester.

The first policewoma­n to be appointed to the constabula­ry was Miss Gladys Moss, who was stationed at Worthing from July 1919 until she retired in May 1941 aged 57.

When the constabula­ry was formed, Worthing Police had consisted of one sergeant and three constables, supervised by Arundel Rural Division.

West Sussex County Council approved a police sub station at Lancing in July 1937 and Worthing Police Station, in Union Place, was completed in August 1939 at a cost of £18,000.

As well as the history of the force, Alan’s exhibition detailed interestin­g cases over the years, from murder to bank robbery, and fascinatin­g facts, like the time the Chief Constable requested permission for members of the constabula­ry to grow beards.

Montgomeri­e was a strict disciplina­rian and rapidly dismissed recruits not meeting the required standards ALAN MOORE exhibition organiser

 ?? ?? Alan Moore with informatio­n about his grandparen­ts, Frederick and Ethel Hoare, at his West Sussex Contabular­y exhibition in Chichester. The main picture in the centre is Frederick, a Worthing policeman for many years, and the picture in the standing frame is from a story in the Worthing Herald about the day he rescued a pigeon from the post office.
Alan Moore with informatio­n about his grandparen­ts, Frederick and Ethel Hoare, at his West Sussex Contabular­y exhibition in Chichester. The main picture in the centre is Frederick, a Worthing policeman for many years, and the picture in the standing frame is from a story in the Worthing Herald about the day he rescued a pigeon from the post office.

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