Sofia Anne Stanley (28 January 1873 – 24 September 1953) was the first female police officer and the first commander of the Metropolitan Police's Women Patrols from 1919 to 1922.

Stanley wearing the armband and hat-badge of the Women's Patrols (Imperial War Museums, Q 108496).

Biography

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Early life

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Stanley was born Sofia Dalgairns in Palermo to the Scottish civil and mechanical engineer, David Croll Dalgairns (1839–1885) and his wife Annie Marie Christine Waygood (1852–1891). Stanley was raised a Presbyterian, although converted to High Church Anglicanism as an adolescent. Whilst very young she worked as the headmistress of St Mary's School in Poona and married Henry Johnson Stanley, an engineer for the Madras Railway, at St Mary's Church in Osterley in November 1899.[1] They had one daughter, Theodora Christine (1902–1986), who became an architect, and later moved to Switzerland by the time of her mother's death.[citation needed]

Policing

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Stanley became interested in police work in 1914 when she was visited by a former police officer in the Indian Civil Service. Then living in Southsea, she became a Women's Patrol Leader in Portsmouth for the National Union of Women Workers (since 1918 known as the National Council of Women of Great Britain).[2] In March 1917 the Union appointed her as a Supervisor of its Women's Patrols in London where she raised the number of women patrolling full-time from 37 to 80.[3] She regularly reported the Patrols' activities to Sir Edward Henry, Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis, comparing it favourably with the work of the Women's Police Service (WPS).[citation needed]

The Metropolitan Women Police Patrols were officially launched on 17 February 1919. Its officers were not given the power to arrest and operated based on the style of Stanley's patrols rather than the WPS, which the Commissioner believed had links to the Suffragette Nina Boyle. Stanley was put in control of the patrols with the specially-created rank of Supervisor.[4] By February 1919 fifty women had been recruited, rising to 112 by 1922. The Geddes Axe recommended their complete abolition but Stanley worked with the first woman MP to take her seat, Nancy Astor, to force the Home Secretary Edward Shortt to leave a cadre of 20 women. However, one of the Patrols' early officers Lilian Wyles complained against Stanley's tactics, leading to a disciplinary enquiry which found Stanley guilty of intriguing against Shortt and then attempting to cover this up. As a result she was dismissed[5] and her role as the head of women in the Met given instead to Bertha Clayden.[citation needed]

Later life

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In later years, Stanley moved to Calcutta where she took up a role with the Royal Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals. She also assisted the local police in opposing child prostitution and brothels. In 1939 she returned to the England, where she died at 27 Queen Anne's Grove in Bedford Park from injuries sustained in a traffic accident. She was cremated at Mortlake Crematorium[6]

References

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  1. ^ Martin Fido and Keith Skinner, The Official Encyclopedia of Scotland Yard (Virgin Books; London, 1999), pages 253-254
  2. ^ "Photograph of Stanley in the Women's Patrols". Imperial War Museums.
  3. ^ "Women Police Wanted - A Successful Bristol School", Western Daily Press, 23 July 1917, p. 3.
  4. ^ Lock, Joan (30 April 2015). Joan Lock, The British Policewoman (London: Robert Hale, 2015), chapter 7. ISBN 9780719818103.
  5. ^ "Period 1921-1939". Metropolitan Women Police Association.
  6. ^ Andrews Newspaper Index Cards, 1790-1976, S
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