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Most nineteenth-century policemen in England received such training as they got on the job. London Metropolitan Police was probably the most advanced in the instruction of recruits. But the instruction in that time lasted for only two weeks, largely concentrated on drill and sword exercise with two afternoon lectures by a superintendent, and a considerable amount of legal material to learn by rote.
Following this, the new constable patrolled with an experienced man for about a week. He was then moved to his division and sent out on his own. A section house reserved for candidates to the force was opened in 1886 with an assistant chief constable appointed as instructor.
The training lasted from three to five weeks beginning each morning with two hours drill. It was not until May 1907 that a proper training school was established for the Metropolitan Police with the opening the Peel House. By the 1920s recruits studied at Peel House for ten weeks. There continued to be drill and route learning, but there were regular lectures, instruction on first aid, self-defense, how to draft reports, and even mock accidents were staged.
After this initial training the new constable was again introduced to patrolling in his division by going out with an experienced man. On-the-job-training was much the same in provincial forces of England. Some borough forces employed local schoolmasters to give instructions on reading, writing and arithmetic.
In February 1895 the Chief Constable set an examination for those men wishing promotion to Constable of First Class. Correspondent colleges, notably the Bennet College in Sheffield and the institution established by Thomas Walton also in Sheffield, developed courses specially for policemen. The first styled itself "The Policeman’s University", the second – "The policeman’s College".
The development of half a dozen more training schools lead to a greater uniformity in training, especially when the smaller forces began to take advantage of them.
However, it was not until the Second World War that police training was fully systematized across the whole country, and not until 1960s that the formal system of police cadets was established.
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