Examines the formation of state surveillance and the emergence of institutionalized political policing in late Victorian and Edwardian Britain. This book deals with the formation of state surveillance and the emergence of institutionalized political policing in late Victorian and Edwardian Britain. Little has been written on this early formative period for the British security state, which began in earnest as a response to the Fenian dynamite campaign of the 1880s. Based on newly declassified documents, Solomon weaves together separate narrative threads which converge to paint a complex picture of the institutional innovations and personal rivalries that produced Britain's first national political police. The interactions between high-ranking bureaucrats, policemen and politicians reveal how often conflicting ideas on controlling organized radicalism coalesced into a unified counter-subversive strategy. Stressing the distinctness of the early British model of political policing, the narrative goes past the confines of a scholarly account by using source material to flesh out multidimensional characters, ranging from choleric Home Secretaries to remorseful anarchist double agents embroiled in a high-stakes and often unscrupulous combination of espionage, collusion and betrayal.
Author(s): Vlad Solomon
Series: History Of British Intelligence
Edition: 1
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer | Boydell Press
Year: 2021
Language: English
Commentary: TruePDF | TOC
Pages: 360
Tags: Intelligence Service: Great Britain: History: 19th Century; Intelligence Service: Great Britain: History: 20th Century; Terrorism: Great Britain: Prevention: History: 19th Century
Cover
HalfTitle
Series Title
Title
Copyright
Dedication
Epigraph
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgements
List of abbreviations
Principal Characters
Introduction
Prologue
Part 1 | 1881–91
1 | ‘A Spider’s Web of Police Communication’
2 | ‘Panic and Indifference’
3 | Mr Jenkinson Goes to London
4 | ‘The New Detective Army’
5 | ‘Waiting Games’
6 | ‘A Long and Complicated Inquiry’
7 | The Battle of Trafalgar Square
8 | Scandal Averted
Part 2 | 1892–1903
9 | ‘A Bomb has Burst
10 | ‘Men of Bad Character’
11 | ‘Surtout Pas Trop de Zèle’
12 | ‘We do not Prosecute Opinions’
Part 3 | 1904–14
13 | Dangerous Aliens
14 | ‘A Doctrine of Lawlessness’
15 | ‘Suffrage Forces in the Field’
16 | The Waning of Militancy and the Rise of Counter-Espionage
Conclusion
Notes
Bibliography
Index