The 1923 Victorian police strike occurred in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia. In November 1923, on the eve of the Melbourne Spring Racing Carnival, half the police force in Melbourne went on strike[1] over the operation of a supervisory system using labour spies, nicknamed "spooks". Riots and looting followed as crowds poured out of the main Flinders Street railway station on the Friday and Saturday nights and made their way up Elizabeth and Swanston streets, smashing shop windows, looting, and overturning a tram.[2][3]

Reasons for the strike

The strike started late in the evening of 31 October 1923 – the eve of Melbourne's Spring Racing Carnival – when a squad of 29[lower-alpha 1] constables at Russell Street Police Headquarters refused to go on duty,[4][5][6] citing the continued use of spies by management. The Victoria Police force at the time was understaffed, lowly paid in comparison with other state police forces, and had no industry pension, with the government continually deferring promises to introduce a pension program.

The Police Association had made repeated attempts to improve the pay and conditions of the force, but the immediate cause of the conflict was the decision by the relatively new chief commissioner of police, Alexander Nicholson, to set up a system of four "special supervisors" to secretly monitor beat cops as they went about their duties. Drawn from police ranks, those men were given the derogatory nickname "spooks". The strike was led by Constable William Thomas Brooks who, along with 16 colleagues, had been dismissed from the licensing squad earlier that year, without explanation, and returned to the beat. That might have been connected with the fact that, two years earlier, Brooks had circulated a petition among his fellow officers calling for better conditions. Headed Comrades and Fellow Workers, it was signed by almost 700 men.

The strike was not a Police Association initiative, although the organisation negotiated with the Nationalist government of Victoria, led by the Premier, Harry Lawson, on behalf of the strikers. Most of the strikers were constables, many of them returned servicemen. Detectives and senior officers did not participate.

After 24 hours, the Premier demanded a return to work and promised no victimisation, although there was no promise to meet the strikers' demands. After 48 hours, the Premier again demanded a return to work but with no guarantees regarding victimisation.

The Victorian Trades Hall Council, surprised by the wildcat strike, volunteered to negotiate on behalf of the strikers but was rebuffed by the government. Subsequently, 634 policemen were discharged and two were dismissed, about a third of the Victorian Police Force,[7] most of them never to be re-employed as members of the force.[8]

Rioting and looting in Melbourne city centre

On Friday and Saturday nights, riots and looting occurred in the city, resulting in three deaths, a tram being turned over,[9] plate glass windows being smashed, and merchandise looted from stores. Large crowds gathered to witness what was going on. Constables on point duty were jeered at and harassed by people until they retreated to the Town Hall, where the crowd taunted them to come out.[10] Tramways staff and uniformed sailors helped to direct traffic in the absence of police.

A request by the Premier to the Federal Government for troops to prevent and put down trouble was refused, but Sir Harry Chauvel, and other army chiefs, appointed guards at defence establishments. Over the weekend, five thousand volunteer "special constables" were sworn in to help restore order. They were under the direction of Sir John Monash at the Melbourne Town Hall and led by AIF veterans and CMF officers. The special constables were identified by badges and armbands.

All of Melbourne's newspapers quickly attributed the rioting and looting to Melbourne's criminal element, but subsequent court records show that most of the offenders who were apprehended were young men and boys without criminal histories. After the strike, its origins and effects were investigated by Monash Royal Commission. The government subsequently improved pay and conditions for police, and legislated to establish a police pension scheme before the end of 1923.

Notes

  1. 30 initial strikers, according to Hugh Buggy

Footnotes

  1. "Protest and Politics". Archived from the original on 13 April 2008. Retrieved 8 November 2007.
  2. The Australasian 1923.
  3. Adams, Michael (16 December 2018). "When an Australian city went mad: The unprecedented chaos that engulfed Melbourne for three days". News.com.au. Retrieved 4 October 2022.
  4. Western Mail 1923, par. "Continued negotiations resulted in a promise ...".
  5. Haldane 1982, par. "Thus, it was that at ten o'clock on the night ...".
  6. Buggy 1949, p. 28, sec. 1.
  7. "The Errors of Retributivism". Retrieved 8 November 2007.
  8. Police Who Stood Fast: 634 Discharges from Force, The Argus (Saturday, 15 December 1923), p.36.
  9. Portland Guardian 1923, line 5.
  10. Western Mail 1923, par. "At a meeting of the disaffected police ...".

References

  • Haldane, Sergeant R.K. (April 1982). "The Victoria Police Strike – 1923". Robert Haldane, APM, PhD, BA (Hon). The Australian Police Journal, Vol. 36. No. 2. Retrieved 15 April 2015.
  • Buggy, Hugh (17 December 1949). "When Anarchy Ruled in Melbourne". The Argus. Melbourne, Vic.: National Library of Australia. pp. 28, 29, 31. Retrieved 15 April 2015.
  • "Police Strike". Western Mail. Perth, WA: National Library of Australia. 8 November 1923. p. 14. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  • "Riots in Melbourne. – Disgraceful Lawlessness". The Australasian. Melbourne, Vic.: National Library of Australia. 10 November 1923. p. 36. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  • "Latest News. – Disgraceful Lawlessness". Portland Guardian. Vic.: National Library of Australia. 5 November 1923. p. 3 Edition: EVENING. Retrieved 16 April 2015.
  • Days of Violence: : The 1923 Police strike in Melbourne (1998) Gavin Brown and Robert Haldane ISBN 1-876462-01-9
  • Rebel Guardians by Jacqueline Templeton in Strikes: Studies in Twentieth Century Australian Social History (1973) ISBN 0-207-12698-4

Further reading

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.