Cops and Robbers. Ant Anstead

Cops and Robbers - Ant Anstead


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to Morris’s offerings, although Bean did produce new and larger models. They were rescued from bankruptcy in 1926 by Hadfields of Sheffield and eventually ceased making cars in 1929, their dream of being Britain’s biggest car maker shattered by Morris, Austin and Ford of America, although the firm lived on as a component supplier. Bean did build one last car in 1936, the enormous ‘Thunderbolt’, which was powered by two Rolls-Royce V12, 36.5-litre engines, each delivering 2,350bhp, and weighing 7 tons. Captain George Eyston used it to break the land speed record three times; his final record of 357.5mph was set in September 1938.

      Like most of the Midland’s motor industry, Bean eventually became part of British Leyland and began to cast engine blocks, axle cases, etc. In 1988 Beans Engineering became freshly privatised and bought Reliant … which went bust in 1995, taking Beans with them. The Tipton factory was purchased by the German engineering group Eisenwerk Brühl, who invested heavily and at their height made 40,000 tons of cylinder blocks yearly. However, the business suffered from financial problems because the German group had not managed to recoup the investment and left the company in debt. For a second time, the management team purchased the business, which then became Ferrotech. By then one of the most modern and efficient foundries in Europe, the new business became a large supplier of castings to MG Rover, but when they went into administration in 2005, Ferrotech failed to find replacement work and the factory closed its doors for the last time in August 2005. Thus ended the story of heavy industry on this site.

      The police both in and out of London benefited from those ex-war office commercials, too. In 1919, the Metropolitan Police was split up into four detective areas and each division was allocated two ex-Royal Flying Corps Crossley Tenders, a design that would now be called a pick-up. These are again significant because they were the first vehicles allocated to do real detection and arrest work, rather than just being used to transport people or equipment between different police facilities, although in my head Crossley Tender will always be the ‘Lesney Model of Yesteryear’ that I was fascinated by as a kid and is a model vehicle that I still own now.

       Crossley Tender – the first proper police cars were pick-up trucks!

      Crossley of Manchester are actually one of the oldest names in the British motor industry and were the first company to make a four-stroke internal combustion engine in the UK. Amazingly, they were making units under licence from Otto and Langen of Deutz in the early 1860s, some years before the ‘car’ was invented.

      Crossley came to car manufacture in a slightly circuitous way. Having become well known for the quality of their engines and other engineering products, early pioneer car dealers Charles Jarrott and William Letts asked them to make a high-quality British car to address a perceived gap in the market. Ironically, the first Crossley, which was announced in 1904, actually used mainly Belgian and French components which Crossley assembled. It was well received, however, and the firm expanded their car-making while Jarrott publicised the marque by making a record-breaking drive from London to Monte Carlo in 37.5 hours, a record that was broken by C.S. Rolls only a month later using one of his own 20hp Rolls-Royce Tourist Trophy models. Wonderfully, Jarrott complained that Rolls had done this by breaking speed limits that he had obeyed!

      The legendary 20hp series was launched in 1908 and remained in production until 1925, albeit gradually modified, rather in the way that Porsche evolved the design of the air-cooled 911, becoming the 20/25 in 1912 and the 25/30 in early 1919. Designed by A.W. Reeves, it was launched as a fully equipped short-chassis touring car for £495 (in an era when coachbuilding was still common on larger cars especially) and featured a side-valve 4-cylinder engine of 4531cc and a 4-speed gearbox.

      The War Office purchased a batch of six 20hp Tourers and were impressed enough to think about ordering more with differing body styles. By the time World War I broke out, the nascent RFC had around 60 (figures vary slightly), and by the time the war finished, 6000! Any childhood fans of Biggles’ Great War adventures will recognise this. In all, well over 10,000 Crossleys of all types were used by the military in World War I as staff cars, ambulances, RFC Tenders and vans. Most of these were sold off cheaply when hostilities ceased and, having contributed greatly to the war effort, then contributed to the commercial motorisation of Britain as traders abandoned horses for ex-War Office Crossleys of one sort or another. This of course meant that the examples used by the Met blended in, in a similar way to how a Ford Transit would today. So successful and highly regarded was the basic design that Crossley bought back a few, especially staff cars, and refurbished them to 25/30 specification. They continued this operation until 1925, alongside production of new examples which finished in the same year.

      Unfortunately, Crossley never built a car that captured either the government’s or the public’s imagination in the same way again and eventually ceased making cars altogether in 1937. They continued to make trucks, though, and were acquired by the Associated Commercial Vehicles Group, better known as AEC, in 1948, who acquired Maudslay at the same time. The Crossley name faded away in 1956 and eventually became part of the British Leyland melting pot. It was a sad end for the marque that had been the backbone of the British military’s move to motorisation during World War I and subsequently provided the UK’s earliest police patrol and response vehicles. Rest in peace, Crossley.

      The Crossley also played its part in the formation of the Flying Squad, formed in October 1919 after a post-war crime surge; it became known as ‘Sweeney Todd’ in rhyming slang quite quickly, then just Sweeney, and initially consisted of just 12 officers. Manchester City Police followed London’s lead in forming what was originally called a ‘Mobile Patrol Experiment’ and patrols were made using a horse-drawn carriage that had been borrowed from a railway company. However, it was soon re-organised and issued with Crossley Tenders, the first vehicles used in Britain for actual police work rather than just moving things and people between police facilities. The Crossleys were heavy and fairly simple beasts that were apparently quite easy to skid in wet weather, but they did provide a good basis for patient underworld observational work and were used successfully in this role. They were much loved by the officers who used them because they were reliable and capable workhorses. Most were fitted with van-type backs, or, at the very least, a canvas tilt. They were actually liveried at times with false trade names to appear as delivery vehicles or furniture removal vans to aid their undercover work, the first time this was ever done in the UK and probably even around the world. These disguises were easy to believe because, as discussed, war-surplus vehicles were very common in the early 1920s, although apparently it was quite some while before most criminals cottoned on to the fact that the police also owned some of these vehicles. However, by the mid-1920s these vehicles had become outmoded and had begun to be replaced.

      By May 1926, just as the TUC called a General Strike that plunged the country and the government into conflict with the unions, the Met’s fleet consisted of 202 cars:

      • 6 Austin saloons, used by the Commissioner and his assistants.

      • 2 Austin ambulances.

      • 6 Bean saloons, used by HQ personnel.

      • 5 Bean saloons, used by CID.

      • 4 Bean saloons, used by District Chief Constables.

      • 12 Bean saloons, used by Superintendents in outer areas of the Met’s jurisdiction.

      • 4 Bean saloons, used as spares by whoever needed them.

      • 18 Bean vans, used on inner and outer dispatch services.

      • 4 Bean vans, used for accumulator service.

      • 6 Bean vans, used as spares by whoever needed them.

      • 17 Tilling Stevens, used as prison vans.

      • 1 Dennis, used as a prison van.

      • 52 Crossley Tenders for many and varied uses from Flying Squad to radio testing and everything in between

      • 41 Triumph Solos and Combinations, used by sub-divisional and Detective Inspectors for patrolling.

      • 24 Chater-Lea Combinations, used by sub-divisional Inspectors and Inspectors for patrolling.


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