medal code J3639

Full medal write up

link to medal write-up
back to previous page

THE IMPORTANT AND EXTREMELY RARE POSTHUMOUS K.P.M. FOR GALLANTRY AWARDED TO SERGEANT R. BENTLEY, CITY OF LONDON POLICE, LATE PRIVATE, 1ST (ROYAL) DRAGOONS, WHO WAS IN COMMAND OF THE POLICE UNIT WHICH WENT TO INVESTIGATE THE ARMED BURGLARS IN HOUNDSDITCH: HE WAS THE FIRST THROUGH THE DOOR AND WAS MORTALLY WOUNDED BY GUNFIRE - THIS TRAGEDY THEREAFTER RESULTED IN THE FAMOUS SIDNEY STREET SIEGE

POIGNANTLY, BENTLEY HAS BEEN KILLED ON HIS NINTH WEDDING ANNIVERSARY AND WAS LATTERLY BURIED WITH FULL HONOURS IN ILFORD, WITH HIS ULTIMATE SACRIFICE (AND THAT OF HIS COMRADES) BEING COMMEMORATED WITH A PUBLIC SERVICE OF MEMORIAL AT ST PAUL'S CATHEDRAL, THE FIRST SUCH OCCASION THAT THE GRAND VENUE HAD BEEN USED TO HONOUR THE LIFE OF MEMBERS IN THE RANKS OF THE POLICE.

KING’S POLICE MEDAL, WITH GALLANTRY RIBAND, G.V.R., 1ST ISSUE ‘ROBERT BENTLEY, SERGEANT.’, IN ITS CASE OF ISSUE; QUEEN'S SOUTH AFRICA 1899-1902, 2 CLASPS, TUGELA HEIGHTS, RELIEF OF LADYSMITH 3353. PTE. R. BENTLEY. 1/RL. DRGNS.’

K.P.M. London Gazette 2 January 1911:

‘The King has been graciously pleased to award the King’s Police Medal to the following Officers of the City of London Police Force who took part in the attempted capture of armed burglars at Houndsditch on 16 December 1910.’

The above citation appeared for the awards of Sub-Inspector Bryant & Sergeant Woodhams. The further citation was offered for the posthumous awards of Bryant, Tucker & Choat:

'His Majesty has also graciously consented to the King's Police Medal being handed to the nearest relative of the following Officers who lost their lives on the occasion in question and who would have received the decoration had they survived.'

Police Gallantry by J. Peter Farmery states:

‘As a result of information received from a member of the public who heard suspicious noises coming from the rear of H. W. Harris, the jewellers, in Houndsditch, London, late at night on 16th December 1910, police were called from the nearby station. A number of officers under the charge of Sergeant Bentley went into Exchange Buildings, at the rear of Houndsditch. Sergeant Bentley posted the others to keep watch, whilst he went to the door of No. 11, Exchange Buildings, where a man answered the knock, but did not speak English. The door was closed in the officer’s face. Sergeant Bentley opened the door and went inside. Suddenly several shots were heard, and Sergeant Bentley fell out of the door mortally wounded. Sergeant Bryant, who was standing close behind, was also struck in the chest and arm, and fell seriously wounded. As the other officers rushed up, an automatic pistol was fired from the doorway, and Sergeant Tucker was hit just above the heart. He died instantly. Constable Woodhams, who was on the opposite side of the street, was also struck by flying bullets in both legs, his left femur being shattered to such a degree that he was subsequently invalided out of the Force. Constable Choat, who had been posted to keep watch at the end of the street some thirty yards away, ran up on hearing the shooting, and grabbed one of the murderers, who was trying to make his escape. This man, named Gardstein, was the leader of the gang, and one of his compatriots, in trying to shoot Constable Choat, also shot Gardstein in the back. Constable Choat was shot eight times, and soon collapsed and died. Gardstein was later found in nearby Grove Street, having died from wounds. The search for the escaped murderers led to the infamous Sidney Street Siege, on 3 January 1911.’

Details of this famous event unsurprisingly survive in detail in the National Archives, accompanied by Winston Churchill’s covering letter to the King - Winston was then Home Secretary. The details of the award to Bryant:

‘Bryant also went to assist in the investigation of the noise and was a little distance behind Sergeant Bentley when the latter went to the door of No. 11 Exchange Buildings. On Bryant’s arrival at the door Bentley had stepped just inside and said “the man (whom Bryant had not seen) I have seen cannot speak English; he has gone to fetch somebody who can.” A few seconds elapsed when a man came from the back of the ground floor room and discharged a firearm four times. Bryant was struck in the chest and left arm, and fell heavily to the ground, and at the same time Bentley fell. Bryant says he scrambled to his feet, felt dazed, and his left arm was useless, and on recovering himself he saw Bentley, Choat and P.C. Woodhams lying on the ground, and their assailants had escaped. Bryant was removed to hospital and he is progressing satisfactorily.’

As the subsequent investigation proceeded, it transpired that the dead burglar, George Gardstein, was a hard line anarchist, known in St. Petersburg, Moscow, Warsaw, Vienna and Paris, but in the name of Oloski Morountzeff. It was his accomplices, Fritz Svaars and Josef “Yoshka” Solokoff, both of whom were present at the murder of Bentley, Choat and Tucker, who brought about the famous Sidney Street Siege, having made their way to that address after the shooting. They were probably accompanied by a third party, Peter Piakoff (a.k.a. “Peter the Painter”). And the rest, as they say, is history, the whole meeting a violent end, but not before exchanging further shots with the police and attracting the keen attention of Winston Churchill, the Home Secretary, whose top-hatted figure memorably appeared for the cameras at the height of the siege.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Siege_of_Sidney_Street

Robert Bentley was born at Poplar in January 1873 and was a clerk by trade when he enlisted in the Royal Dragoons on 7 May 1891, standing at 5 foot, 9 inches and tipping the scales at 126lbs. He served in the unit until May 1898, when he was transferred to the Army Reserve and joined the City of London Police. Recalled to the Colours in October 1899, he served with the unit in South Africa from 31 October 1899-8 June 1900 (Queen's Medal & 2 clasps). Returned home, he was married on 16 December 1901 and was advanced Corporal on 19 May 1903.

http://www.ploddinthesquaremile.co.uk/gallantry-awards/robert-bentley/

Discharged on 3 May 1903, Bentley returned to the ranks of the City of London Police and became one of the youngest Officers to make the rank of Police Sergeant. Little more need be said of the events which unfolded but a local Folkestone newspaper gives more detail…………………

SEE PDF FOR FULL WRITE-UP

Much can be found on the above both published and online but the following publication gives a very detailed description that adds much to the above:

https://www.google.co.uk/books/edition/Scenes_Of_Murder/SwxyEAAAQBAJ?hl=en&gbpv=1&dq=%22City+of+London+Police%22+bentley&pg=PA48&printsec=frontcover

And an extremely well put together description can also be found here:

https://gmic.co.uk/topic/79357-the-fateful-night-of-16th-december-1910-the-story-of-a-london-policeman-who-was-there/

An excellent website on Metropolitan Police Gallantry Awards can be found here:

https://www.historybytheyard.co.uk/gallantry.htm

Condition GVF. Sold together with an original portrait photograph of the recipient in Royal Dragoons uniform and some research. The KPM to Sub. Inspector William Bryant who was wounded during the incident was sold by DNW in July 2015.

An extremely rare and emotive posthumous King’s Police Medal gallantry group, 1 of just 31 posthumous awards to British Officers being made since 1909.

Code J3639        Price £   SOLD