0043-Edinburgh Block Polic Box and Coffee Bar Opposit Omni Center
NO.0043
net size 270x180mm £70 origenal(with mount)/£20 for copy(with mount)
History of police boxes
The first police telephone was installed in Albany, New York in 1877, one year after Alexander Graham Bell invented the device.[5] Call boxes for use by both police and members of the public were first installed in Washington, D.C. in 1883; Chicago and Detroit installed police call boxes in 1884, and in 1885 Boston followed suit.[5] These were direct line telephones placed on a post which could often be accessed by a key or breaking a glass. In Chicago, the telephones were restricted to police use, but the boxes also contained a dial mechanism which members of the public could use to signal different types of alarms: there were eleven signals, including "Police Wagon Required", "Thieves", "Forgers", "Murder", "Accident", "Fire" and "Drunkard".[6]
The first public police telephones in Britain were introduced in Glasgow in 1891.[7] These tall, hexagonal cast-iron boxes were painted red and had large gas lanterns fixed to the roof, and a mechanism which enabled the central police station to light the lantern as a signal to policemen in the vicinity to call the station for instructions.[7]
Rectangular, wooden police boxes were introduced in Sunderland in 1923, and Newcastle in 1925.[8] The Metropolitan Police introduced police boxes throughout London between 1928 and 1937;[9]; the design that later became most well-known was created for the Met by Gilbert Mackenzie Trench in 1929.[10] The earliest boxes were made of wood, and later ones of concrete; officers complained that the concrete boxes were extremely cold. The interiors of these boxes normally contained, for the use of officers: a stool, a table, brushes and dusters, a fire extinguisher and a small electric heater.[9] Like the 19th century Glaswegian boxes, the London police boxes contained a light at the top, which would flash as a signal to police officers on the beat that they should contact the station, but the light was now electric.[9]

