Douglas Labalmondière


Lieutenant-Colonel Douglas William Parish Labalmondière CB was the first Assistant Commissioner of the London Metropolitan Police and acted as Commissioner for three months in 1868-1869.
Labalmondière was descended from an aristocratic French family who had established sugarcane plantations in the West Indies. He was educated at Eton College and the Royal Military College, Sandhurst, where he passed out at the head of the list with exceptional honours, and was commissioned an ensign into the 83rd Regiment of Foot. He served in the Canadas, 1837-1838, carried :wikt:dispatch|dispatches during Mackenzie's Rebellion and Papineau's Rebellion, and was promoted lieutenant. He was promoted captain in 1844. In 1846-1849, he served in Ireland during the Irish Potato Famine, as temporary inspector with special duties under the Poor Law Commissioners. Following closure of the local relief committees in 1847, public testimonials of his endeavours were sent by committees in Castlegregory, Castleisland, Ventry, Tralee and Ballincuslane.
Following his order to rejoin his regiment in 1849 in India, he gave evidence to the Select Committee on Poor Laws on 20 March 1849 and on 23 March 1849. Whilst in India with his regiment, he was appointed to the Metropolitan Police and was permitted to return overland.
In 1850, he retired on half pay as a lieutenant-colonel and joined the Metropolitan Police as its second inspecting superintendent, effectively functioning as deputy to the two Joint Commissioners, Sir Richard Mayne and Captain William Hay. He was appointed Companion of the Order of the Bath for his services in policing the Great Exhibition in 1851 and in 1855 was selected to attend Queen Victoria in Paris.
In 1856, after Hay's death and the reorganisation of the police, Labalmondière was appointed Assistant Commissioner. He was responsible for administration and discipline, with the Assistant Commissioner, Captain W. C. Harris, being responsible for supplies, buildings and other such business. Mayne was now the sole Commissioner. One of Labalmondière's duties was to make quarterly inspections of every police station and station house, with every tour of inspection taking nineteen days.
After Mayne's death on 26 December 1868, Labalmondière acted as Commissioner until the appointment of Colonel Edmund Henderson three months later. He continued to serve Henderson and his successor, Sir Charles Warren, as Assistant Commissioner until his retirement in 1888.

Footnotes