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The Big Men

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The Northern Division used to be the name given to the police force which operated within the Glasgow City boundaries until the creation of the Strathclyde Police Force. Its recruits were largely drawn from ex-servicemen who were demobbed after the Second World War and, as a result, they became known as 'The Big Men'. Their name was well-deserved as they set about clearing Glasgow's streets on the gangland 'neds' who had overrun the city during the war. They did not 'take prisoners' and they gained a fearsome reputation for no-nonsense street policing. This biography is written by a man who was close to them. Joe Pieri's caf, the Savoy in Cowcaddens, used to be a haunt for policemen on the beat with a blue police box situated just outside. The back shop of the Savoy often had a policeman in it, keeping an eye on the blue light atop the box as he made out his beat journal or drank a welcome coffee. The Cowcaddens beat was the toughest in the city, one which helped form the reputation of Glasgow as 'no mean city'. But from the friendships which Joe made with the policemen on this beat, he has been able to maintain a living record of what those days were really like. The 'hard' image which Glasgow was tagged with for years has finally been laid to rest and it is now very similar to many other cities of similar size in the UK. The fact that it is regarded as a city of culture now has a great deal to do with the way in which crime was kept in check after the Second World War by the 'Big Men.' This is a revealing insight into the men on the beat who are now part of police folklore. Numerous interviews with retired bobbies give a unique portrait of the old Glasgow.

184 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 2001

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About the author

Joe Pieri

7 books1 follower
Joe, born Giuseppe, Pieri was a Scots Italian who owned The Savoy Café in Cowcaddens, Glasgow. He arrived in Glasgow from Tuscany with his parents in 1919.

During World War II, Pieri was interned on Île Sainte-Hélène in Montreal, Canada. After the war, he became one of the most prominent figures in Glasgow's Scottish-Italian community, running ran several city-centre fish and chip shops.

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Profile Image for Ian Galloway.
26 reviews17 followers
January 10, 2008
This is an all our yesterdays on the birth and hey day of the Glasgow Police force - for all us readers over 40 it's depressing how things have changed and perhaps some of the modern PC brigade (no pun) should read this and look at the crime figures from that era to figure out where were going wrong now! ooh bit of politics there!
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