Greg Callander. For your information and others that may be - TopicsExpress



          

Greg Callander. For your information and others that may be interested. Would like to submit some details and information about a relative of mine (by marriage) Lillian May ARMFIELD. Born Mittagong 3/12/1984, Died Lewisham Hospital 26/08/1971. Was a descendant of James Ruse. She along with Maude RHODES were appointed as the first female Special Constables on 01/07/1915. She was cremated at Northern Suburbs Crematorium following a large Police funeral service. It is not known if her ashes were collected. She gets a short mention in the NSW Police museum but as far as I can find she does not get a mention on any remembrance wall. One only has to do a google search on her full name to find out about her history. What a wonderful woman. Her short story is as follows and perhaps she could be remembered permanently somewhere. Please notice her awards in the last paragraph. Lillian May Armfield (1884-1971), policewoman, was born on 3 December 1884 at Mittagong, New South Wales, daughter of George Armfield, labourer, and his wife Elizabeth, née Wright. Educated locally, she wrote a clear hand, could spell and cope with arithmetical problems. About 1907 she became a nurse at the Hospital for the Insane, Callan Park, Sydney, where she looked after female inmates. She left in 1915, favourably recommended by the medical superintendent for her competence and kindness to patients, to apply for a newly established post in the police force. When recruited as probationary special constable on 1 July 1915, she was 5 ft 7¾ ins (172 cm) tall, weighed 12 st. 10 lbs. (81 kg), and had light brown eyes, brown hair and a fair complexion. She was described by her interviewing-officer as very intelligent, tactful, shrewd, capable … Character undoubtedly good and a very suitable candidate. Lillian Armfield was paid 7s. 6d. a day, no uniforms were provided and no overtime or expenses were allowed. After a years probation she was enrolled as a special constable and was obliged to sign an agreement with James Mitchell, inspector-general of police, binding her to the same discipline as her male colleagues, but she was deprived of any right to compensation for injuries received in carrying out her duties and had to renounce all superannuation rights. The experiment of Lillian Armfields appointment was watched with interest overseas, for she was one of the first plain-clothes female detectives, exercising the same powers of arrest as male colleagues and working side by side with them. Although her work primarily concerned women and girls; it often led her into cases involving murder, rape, theft, drug-running, the white slave traffic—indeed the whole catalogue of crime. Often it led her into danger as when she disguised herself to gain admittance to suspected houses and, having done so, remained inside to open the door to the raiding police. Although brave she was also sensible and recognized that discretion could be the better part, as when she picked up her skirts and ran for her life from Botany Mary (a cocaine-runner caught in the act), who came after her with a red hot flat-iron. Lillian Armfield was much concerned with the social aspects of her work. Much of it was preventative, such as tracing runaway girls and inducing them to return to their homes before they came to serious harm, or warning young women of the dangers of a bullet-wound or razor-slash through associating with known criminals. Although the value of her work was officially recognized, promotion was slow. By 1 November 1923 Lillian Armfield had become a special sergeant, 3rd class, and by 1 January 1943 had risen to 1st class. In 1947 she was awarded the Kings Police and Fire Service Medal for outstanding service and, after her retirement on 2 December 1949, aged 65, the Imperial Service Medal. She was presented with an illuminated address and £200 by the lord mayor of Sydney; the Police Department allowed her £455 6s. 5d. in lieu of extended leave of absence, but she received no superannuation. In 1965 she was granted a special allowance of £3 10s. a week by the government of New South Wales, and relinquished her 10s. a week old-age pension. During her latter years she lived at the Methodist Hostel, Leichhardt; she died on 26 August 1971 at Lewisham Hospital, and was cremated with Church of England rites.
Posted on: Fri, 28 Nov 2014 09:15:12 +0000

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