- Source: Architect and Surveyor to the Metropolitan Police
The post of Architect and Surveyor to the Metropolitan Police was created in London, England in 1842 and renamed Chief Architect and Surveyor to the Metropolitan Police in 1949. It was held by only nine people, five of whom served for over twenty years each. The force's first purpose-built station had been built at Bow Street in 1831, only two years after Sir Robert Peel's Metropolitan Police Act of 1829.
List
1842 - Richard Fletcher
1843–1866 - Charles Reeves
1867–1868 - Thomas Charles Sorby
1868–1885 - Frederick Henry Caiger
1885–1920 - John Dixon Butler
1921–1947 - Gilbert Mackenzie Trench
1947–1974 - John Innes Elliott
1974–1988 - Michael Louis Belchamber
1988–? - T. Lawrence
Notes
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Architect and Surveyor to the Metropolitan Police
- John Dixon Butler
- Charles Reeves (architect)
- Frederick Henry Caiger
- Horace Jones (architect)
- Gilbert Mackenzie Trench
- John Innes Elliott
- New Scotland Yard (building)
- Dixon Hotel, Tooley Street
- Hendon Police College