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Richard Pennefather (civil servant)

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Sir Alfred Richard Pennefather CB JP (16 March 1845[1] – 15 August 1918[1]) was a British civil servant and from 1883 to 1909 the third holder of the post of Receiver for the Metropolitan Police District, a period marked by tensions with Commissioner Charles Warren and the construction of a new headquarters for the Metropolitan Police.[2]

Born in Dublin and privately educated, he was a son of John, a barrister of King's Inn and a Queen's Counsel, making Alfred Richard's paternal grandfather Richard Pennefather.[2] Alfred Richard become a clerk at the Home Office in 1868, rising to clerk in charge of accounts before his 1883 appointment.[2] He also later became a visiting justice of the peace to Chelmsford Prison, a member of the House of Laymen of the Province of Canterbury and a member of the Church of England's Central Board of Finance.[2] On 9 May 1867 at the parish church in Ridge, Hertfordshire he married Thomasina Cox Savory (1845–1920), daughter of a goldsmith and silversmith - they had no children.[1]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c "Suffolk Artists - PENNEFATHER, Thomasina Cox".
  2. ^ a b c d Norman Fairfax, From Quills to Computers - The History of the Metropolitan Police Civil Staff 1829-1979 (unpublished, 1979), pages 38-46 and 99
Police appointments
Preceded by Receiver of the Metropolitan Police
1883–1909
Succeeded by