John Littlechild

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John Littlechild
Detective Chief Inspector John Littlechild in 1893
Born
John George Littlechild

(1848-12-21)December 21, 1848
DiedJanuary 2, 1923(1923-01-02) (aged 74)
London, England
Known forFirst commander of the London Metropolitan Police Special Irish Branch

Detective Chief Inspector John George Littlechild (21 December 1848 – 2 January 1923) was the first commander of the London Metropolitan Police Special Irish Branch, renamed Special Branch in 1888.[1]

Littlechild was born in Royston, Hertfordshire. By 1871, he was a Detective Sergeant. He was promoted to Detective Inspector in 1878.[2]

The Special Irish Branch was formed in 1883. It was technically under the command of Detective

Chief Inspector Adolphus Williamson, but since he was also responsible for the whole Criminal Investigation Department (CID), Littlechild, as his deputy, was always in effective control. Although he is not thought to have had any direct involvement in the Jack the Ripper investigation,[3] in September 1913 he wrote a letter to journalist G. R. Sims, in which he identified a "Doctor T" (whom he described as "an American quack named Tumblety") as a likely suspect.[4]

Littlechild was promoted to Detective Chief Inspector in 1891. He resigned from the Met in 1893 and worked as a private investigator.[5] He worked for the prosecution in the Oscar Wilde case.[6] In November 1902 he served divorce papers on Arthur Reginald Baker, who days later was murdered by his lover Kitty Byron.[7]

Police appointments
Preceded by
First incumbent
Head of Special Branch, Metropolitan Police
1883–1893
Succeeded by

References

Notes