Showing posts with label Henry Fielding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Henry Fielding. Show all posts

Thursday, July 02, 2026

Metropolitan Police

Scotland Yard 10 Broadway, Victoria

Rise of the Redbreasts and Bobbies: The Men Who Built London’s Police

Long before Sir Robert Peel’s "Bobbies" took to the streets in 1829, London was an incredibly dangerous place. Policing was left to corrupt "thief-takers", bounty hunters working strictly for reward money, and elderly parish watchmen who were easily outrun by criminals. If you were robbed in eighteenth-century London, you were largely on your own, until the Bow Street Runners changed everything.

Formed in 1749, the Runners were London’s very first professional, state-funded law enforcement body. By operating as a cohesive unit, they fundamentally shifted how society viewed the responsibility of public safety.

The Blind Magistrate and the Novelist

Surprisingly, the force wasn't created by a politician, but by a famous author: Henry Fielding, who wrote the classic novel 'Tom Jones'. After being appointed as the Chief Magistrate at Bow Street Magistrates’ Court near Covent Garden, Fielding was horrified by the lawlessness of the city. He recruited six trustworthy, energetic constables, providing them with proper training and a small government stipend.

When Henry passed away in 1754, his blind half-brother, Sir John Fielding, took over as Magistrate. Known affectionately as the "Blind Beak," John famously developed an uncanny ability to identify over 3,000 thieves simply by the sound of their voices. Under his visionary leadership, the Bow Street Runners grew into an official, highly organised force.