Page 23 - Insight edition 1 2017
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“i    Army tanks were seen on                         On its journey back to the UK, sailing unescorted close to Sierra
 An Old Tale
                                                              Leone, the Umona was struck by a torpedo launched by the
 The Police Federation was formed in 1919 following the Police Strikes   Lime St, and a Navy battleship   German U-boat U-124. Of the crew of 101, only 5 survived. Ex-
 of 1918 and 1919. Paul Kinsella, our manager at Green Lane tells a   was seen on the River Mersey.   Constable John Deering was not one of the survivors.
 Police related family story going back over 100 years, about a family   U-124 was  later  sunk in 1943 by two British warships, HMS
 member who went on strike, and paid the ultimate consequences.  Paul Kinsella -   ”  Stonecrop and Black Swan. All crew were lost.
 Finance & Business Manager                                   The home in Chevin Road soon after the Umona was sunk was
 Merseyside Police Federation
        This was compounded by large numbers of police officers having   totally destroyed in an air raid. When my Great Grandmother
        been enlisted into the army, placing a greater strain on those left   went along to view her destroyed home, she was greeted with a
 As part of my role, I pull together and produce this   farm fire in Speke. His career highlight appeared to be receiving a   at home. They  ended up working a 96-hour  week, with leave   messenger with a telegram informing her of her husband’s death.
 Insight Magazine. In this edition, I find myself with a   commendation for stopping a runaway horse and carriage.  restricted to one day a fortnight.   There endeth this old tale.
 two page gap, so I thought I would share an old tale.    The census in 1911 showed at the age of 34 years he now had   And so, three months before the end of the war, police officers   The  eventual  outcome  of  the  strike  benefited  police  workers.
 As I enter my 62nd year I have become fascinated   four young sons between 3 and 10 years.  went on strike for the first time. Ex Constable Deering was left   They received a pay increase that doubled their wages, and the
 with family history, and started looking into genealogy   with a young family and no home or job.  government was forced to take notice of their issues, establishing
 and my family tree.   His Police Career came to an abrupt halt on the 1st of August   the Police Federation in the process. The strikes also increased
 1919 when he was dismissed from the service after partaking in   the government’s awareness of the importance of the police in
 I was aware my great Grandfather was killed during World War   the Police Strike in Liverpool. He was 42 years of age. He lost his   terms of the government’s own stability. After 1919, the police
 II whilst serving in the Merchant Navy, but my research revealed   job, his Police house, and all pension entitlements. Of the 1874    were never again taken quite as for granted, as they had been in
 some fascinating  facts  of which we were unaware. From the   members of Liverpool City Police, 954 went on strike. The streets   the years before. Maybe not until recent times?
 census of 1901, I was able to see that my Great Grandfather, at   of Liverpool were in total anarchy. Army tanks were seen on Lime   Neither myself nor my brother, soon to retire from
 22 years of age was Constable 114 F John Deering of Liverpool   St, and a Navy battleship was seen on the River Mersey.   Gloucestershire Constabulary, had any knowledge we had a close
 City Police, living in Alexandra Drive, Aigburth. He was married   family member who was a police officer in Liverpool, particularly
 with a 4 year old son.  Back  then,  Police  Officer’s  pay  was  comparable  to  that  of  an   one with such a story to tell.
 agricultural worker or unskilled labourer. The cost of living had
 He clearly was not afraid of getting his hands dirty as old Liverpool   more than doubled during the First World War, but police had   My own career path took me to into the Police Federation where
 City Police records show him being assaulted in Window lane,   received a pay rise of only 3 shillings since 1914.   I have served as a Representative and employee for 21 years.
 Garston in 1907 and in 1913; he was burned when attending a   Ironically as  previously mentioned the Police Federation  was
                                                              formed in August 1919 immediately after the Police Strike.

                                                              I write quite proudly of my Great  Grandfather’s story in our
                                                              member magazine and the sacrifice he made in standing up to
                                                              what he felt was right, but the truth of the matter  is that his
                                                              actions cost him everything.
        He then joined the merchant Navy. He served on a variety of
        liners on the Liverpool to Quebec route, and now resided in   He doesn’t appear in many official records, but he certainly did
        Chevin Road in Walton.                                his bit for his country, and his actions maybe made conditions
                                                              better for colleagues 100 years ago, but at a massive cost to
        At the start of World War 2, he was a Baggage Master on the   his family.
        Duchess of Richmond, normally a passenger liner, but now a troop
        ship. On his final trip, he took ill on board and was transferred to the
        SS Umona to be taken back home. He was after all 64 years of age.





























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