After many complaints over a number of years over the crime ridden state of Lancashire, it was decided in 1839 that a combined county police force was required to police the county. In the same year the force was founded and Captain John Woodford was made chief constable with two assistant chief constables, 14 superintendents and 660 constables.[citation needed]
Over the next 50 years, the police force saw many changes including the introduction of the police helmet and, during the 1860s, the force lost its first officer, PC Jump, who died after being shot by a group of men that he and a colleague were searching. By the end of the century the force had developed a detective department who were allowed to wear plain clothes. The first detective appointed was John Wallbank.[citation needed]
In 1917, the force first allowed female officers although it was only in the 1950s that they were allowed uniforms, and not until the 1970s were they paid at the same rate as their male counterparts. In 1948 the force's dog section was established with many differing breeds being used, but by the 1950s it was established that the German shepherd was the most suitable.[citation needed]
In 1965, the force had an establishment of 3,784 officers and an actual strength of 3,454, making it the second largest police force (after the Metropolitan Police) and the largest county force in Great Britain.[2][full citation needed]
On 10 October 2007, the Home Office announced that Lancashire Constabulary had ranked joint first, with Surrey, out of 43 forces by Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabularies. All 43 police forces were assessed on seven areas - tackling crime, serious crime, protecting vulnerable people, satisfaction, neighbourhood policing, local priorities and resources and efficiency.[citation needed]
Proposed merger
Under proposals made by the home secretary on 6 February 2006, it was to be merged with Cumbria Constabulary. These were accepted by both forces on 26 February, and the merger would have taken place on 1 April 2007.[3] However, in July 2006, both Cumbria and Lancashire constabularies decided not to proceed with the merger because the government failed to remedy issues with the council tax precept which left both forces unable to proceed.[citation needed]
The Police Roll of Honour Trust and Police Memorial Trust list and commemorate all British police officers killed in the line of duty. Since its establishment in 1984, the Police Memorial Trust has erected 50 memorials nationally to some of those officers.
The following officers of Lancashire Constabulary are listed by the trust as having died attempting to prevent, stop or solve a crime:[5]
PC Peter Burnett, 1990 (collapsed and died attempting to disperse rioters)
PC Ian Wain Woodward, 1987 (shot dead)
Acting Sgt Walter Lacey, 1978 (collapsed and died attempting to arrest a suspect)
Supt Gerry Richardson, 1971 (shot dead attempting to arrest a gunman who had shot a fellow officer; posthumously awarded the George Cross)
PC Ernest Southern, 1962 (collapsed and died attending a street affray)
DI James O'Donnell, 1958 (shot dead attempting to arrest a gunman who had shot two others; posthumously awarded the Queen's Police Medal)
PC Sydney Arthur Tysoe, 1949 (died from injuries sustained during an arrest in 1940)
War Reserve Constable John Towers, 1943 (died from injuries sustained in an assault)
PC Stewart Mungo Whillis, 1907 (died from injuries sustained in an assault in 1901)
PC Nicholas Cock, 1876 (fatally shot arresting armed burglars)
PC William Jump, 1862 (shot dead attempting to arrest an armed gang)
Lancashire Police Museum
Located in Lancaster Castle, in the former site of HMP Lancaster, Lancashire Police Museum is free to enter with sixteen galleries, each in former prison cells. Exhibits include police uniforms, radios, handcuffs, saddles and other evocative objects.[6]
Divisions and collaborations
The force is split into three geographical divisions, and a number of specialist units are based within force HQ at Hutton. The split is approximate, and divisions are deliberately vague, giving a seamless approach to policing in the Lancashire area. The geographical divisions and their headquarters are as follows:
West – The divisional headquarters is located in Blackpool, it was opened in 2018 after £24 million was invested in the new building.[7]Fylde officers are based in Kirkham with support from Blackpool. The northern parts of the division are Lancaster, Morecambe, Heysham and the Wyre area. Officers covering the Wyre are based in Fleetwood.
South –The divisional headquarters are in Preston, with a secondary base at Chorley next to the Magistrates' Court. South division polices the Preston, South Ribble, Chorley and West Lancashire areas. The ageing station at Chorley is due to be replaced, after the acquisition of a former Runshaw College site.[8]
Calls and digital engagement are handled by Contact Management based at Headquarters.
A number of other operationally significant departments are based at the Constabulary Headquarters in Hutton, including Force Intelligence Bureau, Vehicle Maintenance, and Scientific Support.
The Hutton site also houses the Training School, where new recruits undergo their initial classroom training, and serving officers and staff attend development courses and annual refreshment courses, like First Aid and Officer Safety.
Specialist Ops
At the end of 2017 Lancashire Constabulary formed the Tactical Operations Team (TacOps for short) which is composed of the Roads Policing Unit, Dog Unit, Mounted Branch and Armed Response Unit.
TacOps was renamed in 2023 to Specialist Operations Team, or Specialist Ops.
Following a review in 2015, British police forces changed their approach to counter terrorism, and eleven regional Counter Terrorism units were formed.
Lancashire is covered by the Counter Terrorism Policing North West’s unit,[9] which also covers Cheshire, Cumbria, Greater Manchester, the Isle of Man and Merseyside.
Police stations
Although the Constabulary Headquarters is in Hutton, there is not normally public access to this site.
Each of the three geographic divisions has a Divisional Headquarters, West- Blackpool, South- Preston, and East- Greenbank Blackburn.
Across the county, seventeen Police Stations / satellite offices have retained front counter services, for the public to walk up and speak to someone face to face.[10]
Six stations have operational custody suites, namely Blackpool, Lancaster, Blackburn, Burnley, and Preston, with a total capacity of 138 cells.[11]
Equipment
The routine police officer is not armed but does carry a baton, PAVA spray, limb restraints (leg restraints), a first aid kit, a torch and rigid handcuffs.
All police officers, special constables, PCSOs and civilian members of staff are required to wear a stab vest when on duty and "not in an office environment"; most choose to wear their vest at all times. Lancashire Constabulary issues stab vests made by German manufacturer "Mehler Vario Systems".
Although officers are not routinely armed, all officers, who are out of their probationary period, can be trained in the use of taser guns should they choose and they routinely carry them whilst on patrol.
Lancashire also has several Armed Response teams with Authorised Firearms Officers carrying assault rifles, pistols and taser guns.[12] Armed Response Vehicles also carry specialist equipment to gain entry to buildings and vehicles.[13]
After successful trials in 2014, the force issued body-mounted cameras to all officers in forward-facing roles.[14] All officers are now trained to use them and many choose to use them on every shift, although their use is not mandatory. In 2020, Lancashire Police upgraded to cameras with the ability to integrate with the digital policing app Pronto, which has replaced traditional paper pocket note books.[15]
All officers and some civilian staff (PCSOs, CSIs) also carry two-way radios registered to Airwave Solutions, a nationwide radio network in the UK on which police and other emergency rely. Based on the TETRA standard, the radio network is secure and fully protected against eavesdropping on transmissions, as well as allowing interoperability with other police services, fire brigades, as well as ambulance services.
Motorway unit
BMW 3 Series Tourer (Estate) pictured in 2011BMW K1200 pictured in 2011Discovery 3 pictured in 2011Mercedes Sprinter Van pictured in 2012
The force's motorway policing unit has headquarters at Samlesbury near Preston. The unit is led by a single inspector who in turn is responsible for seven sergeants and 43 police constables. The unit also operates a vehicle checking station at Cuerden between Chorley and Preston on the M65, this is done in co-operation with VOSA.[citation needed]
This now-defunct unit operated an EC135 helicopter based at BAE Warton. The force had an ASU since 1994 when it fielded a Eurocopter Squirrel,[17] but this was retired in the early 2000s as it was replaced by the newer EC135.
Firearms unit
Due to police officers in the county not being routinely armed the force has its own specialised firearms unit based at locations around the county. The force has at any one time nine armed officers on patrol. As well being trained in firearms, AFOs are also trained in other skills such as method of entry and advanced pursuit tactics.