“The First Women of the Road” Traffic Policing in Sussex, 1967–1969
Hollie Whitehead Hollie Whitehead

“The First Women of the Road” Traffic Policing in Sussex, 1967–1969

In 1966, Sir George Terry introduced the first of many MG BGTs into the traffic fleet. With their arrival came another innovation, the now familiar “jam sandwich” livery, a high visibility design that would later spread across police vehicles nationwide.

But Sir George’s vision extended beyond vehicles. In 1967, he made the decision to deploy two Women Police Constables (WPCs) as a dedicated traffic crew, an unprecedented step at the time.

Read more about the first women to work in traffic policing in Sussex here.

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Acid Bath Murder
Hollie Whitehead Hollie Whitehead

Acid Bath Murder

In the aftermath of the Second World War, Britain faced a new breed of criminal: educated, methodical and confident in the limitations of forensic science. Few embodied this more than the man later dubbed the “Acid Bath Murderer.” Between 1944 and 1949 he killed at least six people, dissolving their bodies in sulphuric acid in the belief that without a body, murder could not be proved.

His crimes exposed weaknesses in mid-twentieth-century forensic practice and forced detectives to adapt, innovate and challenge long-held assumptions. Nowhere is this story more closely tied than Sussex, where the murders and investigations unfolded.

Read more about this case here

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