Catalogue description INNER LONDON JUVENILE COURTS

This record is held by London Metropolitan Archives: City of London

Details of PS/IJ
Reference: PS/IJ
Title: INNER LONDON JUVENILE COURTS
Description:

The court registers are the only surviving records of the juvenile courts to be transferred to the Greater London Record Office. For a short period after 1909 two sets of registers were kept by each court, Part is and Part 2s. This mirrors the practice of the adult courts. Part is were cases mainly arising from arrests and charges by the police. Part 2s were normally cases brought by means of summonses. From the early 1920s most juvenile courts began to keep one series only containing both types of cases.

 

The information contained in registers includes: date of hearing, name of informant/complainant (often the police), name and age of the defendant, nature of the offence, the adjudication by the magistrate and the latter's name.

 

These registers are not indexed. No other supporting papers have survived

Held by: London Metropolitan Archives: City of London, not available at The National Archives
Language: English
Creator:

Metropolitan Juvenile Courts

Inner London Juvenile Courts

Subjects:
  • London
  • London, Greater
  • Administration of justice
Administrative / biographical background:

Before the 1840s children received the same treatment in the courts as adults.

 

Changes began tentatively in 1847 when the Juvenile Offenders Act permitted children, not over the age of 14, and charged with simple larceny, to be tried and sentenced by two lay justices of the peace or one stipendiary magistrate. This was an alternative to the usual full court hearing by indictment before a jury. See MSJ/CY series in the Middlesex Sessions records.

 

The Summary Jurisdiction Act 1879 enlarged the provisions of the 1847 Act. Offenders under the age of 16 could be tried summarily for nearly all indictable offences. This reduced the number of juveniles in prison and simplified the trial process. Juveniles still had to mix with adult defendants and prisoners.

 

The 1908 Children Act at last established separate juvenile courts. Cases concerning persons under 16 were to be heard in a separate room or building and at separate times from adult cases. The Act authorised the establishment by Order-in-Council, of separate juvenile courts for the Metropolitan Police District.

 

An Order-in-Council, 2 December 1909, established six juvenile courts to cover the then 14 police court districts. These courts were: Bow Street, Clerkenwell, Tower Bridge, Westminster, Old Street and Greenwich.

 

These courts were presided over by a Metropolitan stipendiary magistrate sitting alone. From 1920 under the Juvenile Courts (Metropolis) Act, the Metropolitan Magistrate was to be joined by two lay justices (one to be a woman) drawn from a panel nominated by the Home Secretary. From the mid-1980s the juvenile courts became largely the preserve of the lay justices.

 

In the early 1930s all the Metropolitan juvenile courts were administered from Bow Street. A Chief Clerk was subsequently appointed to deal solely with juvenile courts and was given full-time staff. This centralised administration still continues.

 

The original six courts, after 1909, changed names and locations several times and were gradually increased. These changes can be traced in the Post Office Directories in the History Library.

 

Under the Administration of Justice Act 1964 and the London Government Act 1963 a unified system of magistrates' courts for Inner London was established of which the juvenile courts formed part. At least one juvenile court was established for each of the new London Boroughs.

Link to NRA Record:

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