Get all your news in one place.
100’s of premium titles.
One app.
Start reading
Manchester Evening News
Manchester Evening News
National
Neal Keeling

It's been 70 years and a lot has changed - but these Cheshire cops are letting history repeat itself

Cheshire police have shown their allegiance to the Crown - exactly like they did 70 years ago. In 1953 officers lined up outside the then Warrington Borough Police Station bedecked in the Union Jack to mark the Coronation of Queen Elizabeth.

Now they have replicated the gathering for the Coronation of her son, King Charles III and Queen Camilla. And like the original, the new photograph is in black and white.

Both images were taken outside the premises on Arpley Street which was a police station in he 1950s and is now home to the Museum of Policing in Cheshire.

READ MORE: Join the FREE Manchester Evening News WhatsApp community

At the time the original photograph was taken, there were 142 officers in the force - 137 men and only 5 women. Seventy years later, around 100 officers and staff posed in the same spot to commemorate the coronation of the King and Queen on Saturday May 6th 2023.

Speaking about the photograph, Chief Constable Mark Roberts said: “It is important for us to capture this moment in time and mark the Coronation of the King and Queen. We are the county’s Constabulary and I think that’s what makes us different to other forces in some regards – as we are the local force for local people and this image underlines this.

“Policing has changed in many ways since 1953 and this photo shows all the different units that we now have. However despite some of things in policing changing, in many ways it is still the same. The public still rely on officers going out and dealing with people – you can’t make an arrest virtually.

“It’s all about looking after people, engaging with them, and targeting criminals. These core elements have all stayed the same – we just had a bit of added complexity that is reflected in this picture.”

Volunteers from the Museum of Policing arranged the photograph after researching the original image that sits proudly on the walls in the museum. Warrington Borough Police merged with Lancashire Constabulary in 1969 before Warrington became part of Cheshire under boundary changes in April 1974.

Retired Cheshire Constabulary police officer and volunteer Manager of the Museum of Policing, Peter Hampson said: “I am pretty sure that there are not many police forces in the country that could do what we have been able to do – taking a photograph outside the same police station 70 years later.

“The differences between the new image and the old is that the original was Warrington Borough Police and now we’re a county force - we’re showing how we’ve developed over the years.

“We have all sorts of diverse departments now with Crime Scene Investigators (CSIs), dog handlers and traffic officers which we didn’t have back in 1953.

“I think recreating this photograph is good for posterity and we’ll record it in the museum so in 20 to 40 years’ time when we get people asking about their grandparents serving in Cheshire Police and we can look back in the archives and produce this photograph. It is history in the making.”

The Museum of Policing in Cheshire is located on Arpley Street, Warrington and visits must be made by appointment only, to do this call 01606 365803 for more information please visit www.museumofpolicingincheshire.org.uk

Read more of today's top stories here

READ NEXT:

Sign up to read this article
Read news from 100’s of titles, curated specifically for you.
Already a member? Sign in here
Related Stories
Top stories on inkl right now
One subscription that gives you access to news from hundreds of sites
Already a member? Sign in here
Our Picks
Fourteen days free
Download the app
One app. One membership.
100+ trusted global sources.