For nearly two hundred years, helmets, hats and caps offered head protection for police, be it from the climactic or criminal elements, enabling safer duty. In this Queensland Police Museum Treasures post, I will be looking at police headwear. Colonial policemen were helmets, hats, or high caps. Mounted men, ordinary duty police and bush police each had their own headgear.
Read MoreThis is the first entry in, hopefully, regular series showcasing the treasures held at the Queensland Police Museum, located in the Queensland Police Service Headquarters, Brisbane. The physical requirements for entry into the force were meant to compensate for the lack of armaments. An eligible applicant must have measured a clear 5’8 inches without their boots (which I do not), have been of strong constitution, and free from any bodily complaint.2 Apart from fulfilling the physical requirement, the applicants had to possess basic literacy skills. Candidates for the Force had to be under the age of 30, unless they had previously been engaged in Police duty, in which case they may be admitted up to the age of 35 years. Stout uniformed men standing at near or over six feet in height with their batons at the ready were judged to present an imposing enough sight to discourage potential depredators without the additional aid of a pistol. Prevention of crime was the primary objective of Brisbane City Police.
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