Parks Regulation Act 1872


The Parks Regulation Act 1872 was an act of the Parliament of [the United Kingdom], covering policing and regulation of seventeen royal parks, consisting of fifteen in London and two in Scotland. It now has no outstanding effects.
Its section 2, 4 and 9 and schedule 1 were all repealed by the Parks Regulation (Amendment) Act 1926. It was modified by the Parks Regulation Act 1974, requiring park keepers to be Police oath#United [Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland|attested] before acting as constables and renaming most of them collectively as the Royal Parks Constabulary, though the Kew Constabulary remained independent. Sections 161-162 of the Serious [Organised Crime and Police Act 2005] abolished the Royal Parks Constabulary, placed the London parks under Section 2 of the 1926 Act and effectively removed any powers the Kew Constabulary had in other Royal Parks.

Schedules and sections

Its "First Schedule" listed offences within the Royal Parks for which people could be arrested by the park keepers and fined a maximum of £5, with the offence of giving a false address to the keeper set at the same rate by section 5 and that of assaulting a park keeper at £20 or a maximum of six or three months' imprisonment with or without hard labour by sections 6 and 15. Any new rule under that schedule had to be placed before both Houses of Parliament and removed if they disapproved it within a month. Regulations "to be observed in pursuance of this Act" were to be publicly displayed in the parks. The Act was not to affect, prejudice or derogate rights of way, any previous acts, any Crown rights or the Metropolitan Streets Act 1867.
Drawing on the common law concept of the hue and cry, section 5 granted a park keeper and "any persons whom he may call to his assistance" the right to arrest people for the offences in schedule 1 and sections 5, 6 and 15. Section 7 gave park keepers all the "powers, privileges,... immunities... duties and responsibilities" as police constables in the district in which their Park fell, and section 8 granted all the same "powers, privileges, and immunities" to police constables of the relevant district within the bounds of the Parks.

Parks listed in "Second Schedule"

Scotland