Glasgow Police Museum
History
The museum as created by the Glasgow Police Heritage Society, a group of retired police officers from the former City of Glasgow Police. The Society had helped establish the Strathclyde Police Museum, but as this collection was not open to the public, it decided to open a museum that was free for the public in 2002 so that it could share the history of the city and country's first police force. In 2008, after the closing of the Central Police office where the museum was housed, the museum was moved to a repurposed office building on Bell Street.
Collection
The Glasgow Police Historical Exhibition
The museum describes the city's history with crime and the creation of the City of Glasgow Police in 1800 following the Glasgow Police Act, until it was merged into the Strathclyde Police in 1975. This history is shared via various artifacts that detail the people and events that contributed to the creation and development of the police force, such as official government documentation, newspaper articles, images, photographs and fictional texts, as well as police related objects such as uniforms, weapons and other objects.
The International Police Exhibition
The museum also contains a large collection of over 2000 items of police insignia, headgear and uniform from around the world. Part of this collection was donated to the museum by one of its curators, Alastair Dinsmor, who is currently the chairman of the Glasgow Police Heritage Society. His personal collection contains over 6400 items every country in the world, for which he was made an M.B.E. by Queen Elizabeth II in 2016 for his services to Police Heritage. Other elements in the collection were gifted to the museum by visitors, or are on loan from other museums.
Gallery
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Unknown, Glasgow Police, 1800
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Unknown, City of Glasgow Constable, 1846
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Unknown, Glasgow Police Sergeant, 1854
See also
References
- ^ Campbell, Craig (23 August 2019). "Why Glasgow Police Museum is worth inspecting for insights into the force's beginnings". The Sunday Post. Retrieved 27 July 2024.
- ^ Mullen, Stacey (30 June 2017). "Glasgow Police Museum is a must for city tourists and Glaswegians". Glasgow Times. Retrieved 27 July 2024.
- ^ Bunyard, R. S. (1978). Police, organisation and command. Plymouth: Macdonald and Evans. ISBN 9780712116718. Retrieved 26 July 2024.
- ^ Newlands, Rebecca (27 July 2022). "The office building-turned-museum that houses Glasgow's criminal past". Glasgow Times. Retrieved 27 July 2024.
- ^ "Visit the Museum – Glasgow Police Museum". Retrieved 27 July 2024.
- ^ "The Glasgow Police Museum, Glasgow – Museums". www.visitscotland.com. Retrieved 27 July 2024.
- ^ "Alastair DINSMOR | Order of the British Empire | The Gazette". www.thegazette.co.uk. Retrieved 27 July 2024.