The Metropolitan Police crime museum was founded in the mid-1870s,
the objects coming mainly from unclaimed items at the Prisoners’ Property Store.
Until now it has not been open to the general public. Predominantly for the
training of new officers, the visitors’ book reveals journalists and writers
such as Sir Arthur Conan Doyle have also mined its treasures. Bizarrely so have
a previous Australian cricket team.
The first few rooms set the tone of the exhibition – death masks
surround the room, nooses line one wall. Prepare yourself for a dark
exhibition. The rooms will likely be bustling with other visitors. The museum
seems to have pre-empted its popularity and have created a guide for the first
few rooms, making it unnecessary to have lengthy labels next to the objects.
Unfortunately, this fails to keep the traffic moving as people try and work out
what text relates to the item, or for those who didn’t pick up a guide
confusion ensues.
The penultimate room, largest of them all, has a long series of
tales recounting murders through the decades and the innovations in policing
that led to their resolution. Personally, I found it a bit much reading one
after another of these grisly tales. ‘Light’ relief comes in the form of
cabinets of murder weapons, both obvious and disguised and a discussion of
police procedure, including identification techniques – earprints as opposed
fingerprints was a new one to me! There is also consideration of how crime
itself has changed, how the major threat is now terrorism, and how policing
must continue to push forward if it is to stand a chance against the constant
evolution of crime.
Feeling thoroughly depressed and wondering why it is that people are
so fascinated by crime, the final room’s discussion of just such a question was
timely. A curator from the museum argues that just because it is uncomfortable
doesn’t mean it should be forgotten. Professor Leif Wenar claims the
fascination goes beyond mere desire for high drama but that it sets out the
rules we all have to live by. The final video was valuable in setting the
exhibition and its importance in a wider context.
An interesting exhibition, albeit not one for the faint of heart.
The focus is very much on murder and you’ll likely leave in gloomier spirits
than you arrived in. Worth a visit for those interested in criminal history –
seeing murder weapons up close is a disturbing and powerful experience.
The Crime Museum Uncovered runs at the Museum of London until 10th
April 2016. Advanced booking is recommended.
Sounds like fascinating exhibition. Were there any weapons from famous cases?
ReplyDeleteI admit I didn't read all the details of the murders as it got a bit much, and there were so many people there. They had some about the Krays, and I'm sure there was something about Jack the Ripper, otherwise I'm not particularly au fait with famous crimes.
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