Judy Middleton 2003 (revised 2015)
copyright © J.Middleton Portslade Police Station is situated in a handsome civic structure built in 1908 for East Sussex County Council |
First Police Station
The Police Station at St Andrew’s Road was not the first
Police Station at Portslade. That honour goes to a house in North Street, which
for many years was called Buchanan House. It was in use by 1862 and at first
was numbered at 44 North Street but was later renumbered to 108. It is
interesting to note that East Sussex County Council still owned the property in
1938 when it was vacant, and with war clouds looming, it was thought it might
serve as an Air Raid Precaution headquarters. There were cells beneath the
building and until the new sewer was installed in the 1990s, they were
susceptible to flooding.
A New Police Station
copyright © G.Osborne With thanks to Mr G. Osborne for granting permission for the reproduction of the above photograph from his private collection. The 'new' Portslade Police Station in c1910 |
In Edwardian times and for many
years afterwards, policing in Portslade was the responsibility of East Sussex
Constabulary and court cases were heard at Steyning. In 1908 a new Police
Station was built at 67 St Andrew’s Road and was in operation the same year.
In January 1910 Portslade Council
applied to the Chief Constable of East Sussex to increase the police force by a
least two constables. At that time there was one sergeant and three constables,
which was considered quite inadequate. During the previous ten years some 425
new houses had been built and the population was estimated to be 7,500. By
contrast the parish of Patcham had one superintendent and three constables for
a population of only 1,000 people.
It seems the request was
successful because by 1917 at Portslade there were Superintendent William Suter
and six constables. However, this number might have had something to do with
coping with wartime conditions because by 1924 Inspector A, Taylor had to make
do with five constables.
copyright © J.Middleton The cartouche above the doorway displays ESCC in elaborate lettering (standing for East Sussex County Council). The word ‘Police’ below, is still visible, but weather worn. |
Police Constable Harry Peters
Harry Peters, who was aged 98 in
1990, first started his beat around Portslade in 1921.
copyright © D. Sharp Police Officer's helmet badge of East Sussex Constabulary, which in 1967 became East Sussex Police, before being amalgamated into Sussex Police in 1968. |
On 13 November 1933 at 10 p.m. P.C. Peters discovered 80-year old Joseph Bedford in a collapsed state in his little second-hand shop on the corner of Clarence Street and North Street. Bedford was taken to Hove Hospital but he died the next day. At first it was assumed the old man had stumbled and injured himself although P.C. Peters did not go along with this theory. Then came a call from Worthing Police to say they were holding two men who had been acting suspiciously and one had admitted to hitting an old man in Portslade. The men were Frederick William Parker, a 21-year old labourer, and Albert Probert, a 26-year old fitter, and they had been lodging with Mrs Payne at 76 St Andrew’s Road, Portslade, in fact quite close to the Police Station. On 17 December 1933 the celebrated pathologist Sir Bernard Spilsbury arrived to examine the body and stated the old man had been hit about the head several times. Parker and Probert were found guilty at Lewes Assizes and were hanged at Wandsworth Prison on 4 May 1934.
P.C. Peters also remembered
looking after a prisoner called Patrick Mahon who murdered a woman in 1924.
Patrick Mahon was a good-looking charmer who committed a gruesome murder in a
bungalow at the Crumbles, Pevensey Bay, which both fascinated and repelled the
public. His unfortunate victim was Emily Kaye and she was dismembered. Mahon
tried to dispose of her body parts in various ways and almost succeeded in
getting away with his crime. Sir Bernard Spilsbury was involved in this case
too.
On another occasion P.C. Peters
helped to arrest two men wanted for murdering a man at Brighton. The men were
later hanged for their crime.
Inspector William Hunt
Inspector William Hunt arrived at
Portslade in 1937. He had seen service with the Hertfordshire Regiment from
1914 to 1919 before joining the police force. He was stationed at Bexhill and
Winchelsea before moving to Portslade.
During the Second World War, Mrs
Hunt and their daughter Avril used to take shelter during air-raids in the
white-tiled cells situated in the basement of the Police Station and they took
their knitting with them to help pass the time.
An extension was built at the
back of the Police Station because of fears of a possible gas attack and was to
be used as a decontamination chamber in such an event. Instead, the children of
police officers were treated now and again to their own film-shows in the
extension with the Keystone Cops being particular favourites. Some of the children
were not allowed to attend the cinema in North Street because the juvenile
audience was considered to be somewhat rough.
At the back of the Police Station
there were also stables for the inspector’s horse and carriage, which he used
to go about his rounds. There was a large drinking trough but during the war,
it was no longer in use for that purpose and Inspector Hunt used it to grow his
marrows.
There was a hayloft above the
stables with a hoist and legend has it that a boat was built in the loft and
when completed, lowered to the ground courtesy of the hoist.
Inspector Hunt retired on 30
November 1947 after completing 27 years with East Sussex Constabulary. He had
been in charge of Portslade Police Station for the previous eleven years until
the re-organisation of the Sussex police forces in May 1946.
The 1960s
In the 1960s there was still an
enclave of police families living in police-owned accommodation on both sides
of Portslade Police Station and at 71 and 73 St Andrew’s Road.
copyright © J.Middleton 71 and 73 St Andrew’s Road were once police-owned properties reserved for serving police officers. |
Those were the days when a policeman pounded a regular beat and got to know the people who lived there. The uniform issued then still included a black cloak made of heavy-duty cloth that fastened at the neck with a chain between two black lion heads. This garment weighed a ton, especially after a downpour of rain because it absorbed water like a sponge and took days to dry off. Later on, the issue of a waterproof garment called a Gannex came as something of a relief.
Full dress uniform included the
wearing of a pair of white gloves. Such an occasion occurred on 16 July 1962
when the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh visited Hove to reopen a refurbished
George Street and open the new Hangleton Library. Police leave was cancelled
because they were needed for crowd control. There were such dense crowds in
George Street that the royal couple were late for their next appointment. But
it was all good humoured and the police linked arms to keep the crowd back.
Full details of the royal visit were published in the Press beforehand so that
people knew where to go and at what time – how different it is today.
As for the police housing in St
Andrew’s Road, this was all sold off during the 1970s although police who had
once occupied the properties were given first option to buy their former house
if they could afford to do so.
Will the Police Station be Saved?
In 2013 there were plans to redevelop the Police Station
into a residential unit, which were passed by Brighton & Hove City Council.
But Portslade residents were unhappy at the decision and soon a campaign to
save this unique piece of local history was gathering strength. A petition in
favour of preserving the Police Station gained 172 signatures and was used to
press Portslade’s case to the Council.
In March 2014 Amanda Jane Scales,
who spearheaded the campaign, was pleased when at last a meeting was arranged
between her and Jason Kitcat, Council Leader and member of the Green Party. But
Mr Kitkat loftily dismissed her arguments in a matter of seconds and left her
furious. She said ‘I’m outraged and broken-hearted to be dismissed like that.’
It seemed like the end of the
road but then Brighton & Hove Heritage Commission took an interest in the
old Police Station. In February 2015 the Commission commented that the 2013
decision was ‘flawed’ because it would benefit just one person whereas if a
community centre could be established in the premises, it would benefit many
people.
Although the building was in a
poor state, many original features remained such as the white-tiled cells for
prisoners, fireplaces and cupboards and windows fitted with bars.
Roger Amerena, Heritage
Commissioner, said ‘The Police Station is unusual. There are only half a dozen
1940s wartime decontamination units in the country so it would be good if this
one is used rather than demolished.’ He also remarked that while the community
was well served with museums from Rottingdean to Hove, such cultural
institutions stopped short at the Portslade border.
Conservative Group Leader,
Councillor Geoffrey Theobald, said ‘I have always supported this project, and
when I was asked to put it to the Policy & Resources Committee … I didn’t
hesitate. There is no similar heritage building or museum to showcase
Portslade, parts of which are centuries old, and if this opportunity is lost I
can’t see anything similar coming up again.’ He wants the Council to give the
Commission six months grace to produce a proper business plan.
The Police Station was the
subject of more debate at a council meeting held on 14 February 2015. Jason
Kitcat and Bill Randall (housing committee chairman) were keen for conversion
work to housing use to start as soon as possible, especially since it had taken
all of two years to obtain planning permission. But Councillor Theobald,
supported by Portslade councillors Alan Robins, Les Hamilton and Penny Gilbey,
wanted a six-month delay in order for a full business plan to be produced for
the heritage site.
However, under committee rules,
only council officers could provide a new report, which must be submitted
within a month. Councillor Kitkat commented there was no council funding
available for the project, either for refurbishment or for annual running
costs. Councillor Randall said, ‘If it is a choice between heritage and
housing, I have to come down on the side of housing.’
It remains to be seen what will
happen. Unfortunately, the timing could not be worse with severe cuts
threatened in Council spending and forthcoming elections in May. But many
Portslade residents complain that while the Council is efficient in making sure
rates are paid on time, hardly any revenue seems to come back to
Portslade.
The campaign to save the old Police Station was given a
new lease of life in March 2015 when Brighton and Hove City councillors agreed
to delay by six months their £127,000 development plan to convert the building
into four-bedroom wheelchair accessible accommodation. It was hoped this would
give Brighton and Hove Heritage Commission time to come up with a business plan
to establish a heritage centre there instead.
Perversely, English Heritage was
not sympathetic towards the effort to preserve the old Police Station and
instead backed the Council’s plans to turn it into housing. Council Leader
Jason Kitkat also criticised the delay in implementation while other
councillors lamented the loss of possible rental income.
But Les Hamilton, Labour Councillor
for South Portslade, said many residents had not been made aware of the threat
to the building because the original planning application had identified the
site as the store between 67 and 67A St Andrew’s Road.
Sources
Argus 22/3/2014 28/3/2014
11/2/2015 16/2/2015
Briffett, David Sussex Murders (1990)
Brighton & Hove Gazette
Directories
Encyclopaedia of Hove and Portslade
Recollections of the late Avril
Hunt
The Keep – DO/A35/6 Portslade Urban
District Council Minutes
Copyright © J.Middleton 2015