THE area around Oxford Castle is no stranger to guests. The site now houses the Malmaison Hotel, as well as a heritage centre attracting tourists from around the world.
But Philip Haynes knows it for some very different guests – the historic castle buildings served as a jail from 1071 before it was turned into a leisure complex in 1996.
Mr Haynes joined the Oxfordshire police force as a cadet in 1950 and only retired as a police constable in 1981.
For 21 of those years he was a police dog handler.
In that time he became a fanatical collector of memorabilia, always ready to sniff out photographs, uniforms and equipment, throwing light on the history of the police in Oxfordshire.
- Mr Haynes with his handcuffs and whistle and other memorabilia
Last month, he handed over his carefully-assembled collection to Oxford Castle Unlocked, the heritage centre created on the castle site.
In Mr Haynes’s view he could hardly have found a more fitting place to keep his collection safe and secure.
Mr Haynes, who lives in Witney, knew the buildings well before the prison complex became a place of leisure and entertainment.
“Yes, I delivered quite a few ‘guests’ when it was a prison,” said Mr Haynes. “I would drive in and the doors would close behind me. But I had never been back since it closed as a prison.”
The 79-year-old added: “Before Thames Valley Police headquarters was created in Kidlington, Oxfordshire Police Headquarters were next door to the castle in the building on the corner of New Road and as Tidmarsh Lane.
“That is where much of the memorabilia came from – no more than 50 yards away.
- Photofits of suspects from days gone by
“During the process of moving headquarters, some of the items like oil lamps, candle lamps, uniforms and old belts came out of the store rooms, which were being cleared out. Rather than putting them in the skip, a few of the items were given to me. And that was it. Somehow it became an obsession.”
He has collected badges, batons, handcuffs, forensic kits and documents, including handwritten orders from chief constables dating from 1857 to 1927. He would regularly take his collection to local schools and shows, giving talks about the development of the police service in Oxfordshire from the time of its creation on April 1, 1857.
The former police constable also ended up spending hundreds of pounds buying rare items such as a 200-year-old tipstaff, the metal-tipped staff which once denoted the authority of a constable or sheriff’s officers.
Its top can be unscrewed to reveal a chamber where paperwork is concealed – the equivalent of today’s warrant card.
The uniforms will attract most interest, particularly the closed neck ones, dating from before 1950.
- Philip Haynes’s collection of hats and helmets
In the 1950s, Mr Haynes briefly served in the RAF police, for his national service, but rejoined the Oxford constabulary in 1955, going on to be stationed in Banbury, Nettlebed, Weston-on-the-Green and Witney.
“I would bring offenders to Oxford Prison from Banbury and Witney. I never wanted promotion because I enjoyed working with the dogs,” he said.
“I never wanted to spend time in the office or filling out forms.”
It meant he was involved in some of the county’s most infamous murder hunts, including the so-called Mini Murder in Henley and the murder of Agnes Sheffield, daughter of ICI chairman Lord McGovan, who was battered to death at Ramsden House, near Witney, in 1976.
- Some of the police badges now on display
A special reception to mark his collection going on permanent display at Oxford Castle Unlocked was attended by more than 40 ex-police officers, many – like Mr Haynes – with vivid memories of its recent penal past.
Mr Haynes’s priority had always been to ensure that his collection was handed to a place where it could be viewed by the public. As things turned out, it seems that many of the police items have returned home.
Among those to greet Mr Haynes at the castle was Paul Kyberd, a former detective who worked in the drug squad and left Thames Valley Police force in 1997 after 30 years.
He now works at Oxford Castle Unlocked as a guide, usually dressed as the notorious murderer, Giles Covington, a 23-year-old seaman convicted of killing a Scottish pedlar and hanged at Oxford on March 7, 1791.
- Pc Haynes with his dog Jason
Mr Kyberd now delights in telling visitors how Covington’s body was given to Oxford anatomy students for dissection more than 200 years ago, having been cut down from the gibbet and taken by a ‘Dr Pegge’ to be carved up at a public lecture in the Anatomy School at Christ Church, Oxford.
Mr Kyberd said: “I used to do a lot of work here, coming to lecture about drugs. It was quite a strange feeling coming back to a place that held so many memories. People would be banged up with three to a cell with a bucket – sometimes, in the 1990s, for up to 23 hours a day because of the overcrowding.
- Police with their first cars, BSA three-wheelers, in 1931
“I belong to the Oxford City Police Association, so when I heard the story of how Philip had collected all this stuff, I contacted members to invite them along. “ Conversation moved from the far distant days when prisoners would arrive at the New Road prison in leg irons, to the highlights of current tours and level of tourism.
But there could be no escaping the fact that when it comes to crime and punishment, Oxford Castle has unlocked a real treasure trove.
- Do you want alerts delivered straight to your phone via our WhatsApp service? Text NEWS or SPORT or NEWS AND SPORT, depending on which services you want, and your full name to 07767 417704. Save our number into your phone’s contacts as Oxford Mail WhatsApp and ensure you have WhatsApp installed.
Comments: Our rules
We want our comments to be a lively and valuable part of our community - a place where readers can debate and engage with the most important local issues. The ability to comment on our stories is a privilege, not a right, however, and that privilege may be withdrawn if it is abused or misused.
Please report any comments that break our rules.
Read the rules here