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Lilian Wyles
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Lilian Wyles : ウィキペディア英語版
Lilian Wyles
Lilian Mary Elizabeth Wyles (31 August 1885 – 13 May 1975), a police detective chief inspector, was the daughter of a brewer in Bourne, Lincolnshire, Joseph Wyles. She was among the first police officers to take statements from female and juvenile assault victims.〔Louise A. Jackson: "Wyles, Lilian Mary Elizabeth (1885–1975)", ''Oxford Dictionary of National Biography'' (Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press, September 2010) (Retrieved 31 August 2015. )〕〔Adrian Bingham et al.: "A Hidden History". ''History Today'', October 2015, Vol. 65, No. 10, caption p. 45. (Retrieved 25 October 2015 )〕
==Career==
After her education at Thanet Hall, Margate, and a Paris finishing school, Wyles broke off the legal studies she had begun at her father's instigation, to serve as a hospital nurse in the First World War.
Wyles started her police career in February 1919 as one of three sergeants in the temporary women patrols, covering Central London and the East End. The patrols met with scorn from male policemen and from members of the public,〔Louise A. Jackson: ''Women Police. Gender, Welfare and Surveillance in the Twentieth Century'' (Manchester, UK: Manchester UP, 2006), pp. 87 (Retrieved 25 October 2015 )〕 "Daunted at first, Wyles became accustomed to her visibility as another London sight, 'along with the Tower and Westminster Abbey'. People stopped and commented within earshot: 'How queer.' 'How unwomanly.' 'Not quite nice, do you think?'" but were given tasks such as escorting lost children.〔Joan Lock: ''The British Policewoman'' (London: Robert Hale, 2015) (Retrieved 25 October 2015 )〕 When the women's patrols were disbanded, she became a pioneer in the establishment of women as officers in the Metropolitan Police in 1922. As the first woman in such a position, her relations with male colleagues were uneasy, although she enjoyed the confidence of the chief constable of the CID, Frederick Porter Wensley, until his retirement in 1929.
Wyles was instrumental in making it a task for women policemen, not of outside "assistants" to take statements from women in cases of sexual assault, as "detailed knowledge of the rules of evidence was required for a statement to be both useful and admissible. In 1922 Wyles was given responsibility for the taking of statements in all cases involving children and young girls that arose north of the Thames..."(pp. 186–87)〔
Greater respect came in 1928, after the part she took in the Savidge case involving sexual misconduct by an Italian-born member of Parliament, Leo Chiozza Money, despite being initially spurned by Chief Inspector Alfred Collins, in charge of the case.〔Biography of Wyles on the Rhode Island College site (Russell A. Potter) (Retrieved 25 October 2015. )〕
Wyles was promoted to chief inspector in 1932〔 and retired to Cornwall in 1949. There she wrote her memoirs, ''A Woman at Scotland Yard'' (London: Faber, 1952). She died unmarried in Penzance on 13 May 1975.〔

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