Philip Knights, Baron Knights


Philip Douglas Knights, Baron Knights, was an English police constable and the head of West Midlands Police as Chief Constable. Lord Knights was the successor to West Midlands Police's first Chief Constable, Sir Derrick Capper.

Career

Knights joined Lincolnshire Police as a Cadet in 1938, becoming a Constable in 1940 and completed training at the Police Staff College in Grantham, Lincolnshire. During World War II, he served in the Royal Air Force between 1943 until 1945. Knights returned to Lincolnshire Police, reaching the rank of Chief Superintendent in 1957. He moved to the Birmingham City Police in 1959 as an Assistant Chief Constable and rose to the rank of Deputy Chief Constable in 1970. In 1972 he moved to Sheffield and Rotherham Constabulary as Chief Constable. In 1974, Sheffield and Rotherham Constabulary amalgamated with parts of West Yorkshire Constabulary to become South Yorkshire Police. Knights returned to West Midlands Police where he was appointed Chief Constable. He was described as a 'true architect' of the new force, bringing together six separate forces into one.

Controversy

In 1983 the Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament activist Madeline Haigh criticised Lord Knights for not disciplining West Midlands Special Branch who investigated her after she wrote to a local newspaper complaining about the cancellation of a peace march. Lord Knights defended the case by saying it "fell within the terms of reference of the Special Branch."

Honours and awards

Knights was awarded the Queen's Police Medal in 1964 and then appointed an Officer of the Order of the British Empire in 1971. Knights was promoted to a Commander in 1976 and knighted in 1980. He was Deputy Lieutenant of the West Midlands in 1985 and was created a life peer on 22 July 1987 as Baron Knights, of Edgbaston in the County of West Midlands. He sat as a crossbencher in the House of Lords until his death in 2014.
Knight Bachelor1980
Order of the British Empire1971
Queens Police Medal1964
Defence Medal1945
War Medal 1939–19451945
Queen Elizabeth II Silver Jubilee Medal1977
Police Long Service and Good Conduct Medal1972

Personal life

Lord Knights was vice-president of the Warwickshire County Cricket Club, the Birmingham County Scout Council and the Birmingham Federation of Clubs for Young People. and patron of the Police History Society. He had a considerable interest in classical music and became the patron of the British Police Symphony Orchestra from 1997 until his death. The orchestra had been formed in 1989 by Police Constable Alexander Roe of West Midlands Police.