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The East End shoot-out that turned Churchill against Jews

The Siege of Sidney Street, 100 years ago next month, nearly spelt disaster for Jewish refugees.

December 22, 2010 11:41
An image of detectives shooting at the gang of thieves in the house in Sidney Street during the siege in January 1911

ByGeoffrey Alderman, Geoffrey Alderman

4 min read

On December 16 1910 a gang of robbers attempted to dig their way into the premises of a jewellers' shop at Houndsditch, in the City of London. Armed, it turned out, with an assortment of pistols and large quantities of ammunition, the gang was disturbed, the police (who were unarmed, of course) were called, and in the ensuing confrontation three officers were killed and a further two severely disabled.

Two weeks later, following a tip-off, the Metropolitan Police surrounded a house in Sidney Street, Stepney, where two of the gang were believed to be hiding. Winston Churchill, then Home Secretary, took personal charge and called in a detachment of the Scots Guards.

There was a sensational gun battle. A bullet went straight through Churchill's top hat. Somehow the house caught fire, but on Churchill's orders the fire brigade stayed away. When the fire eventually burnt itself out, the charred remains of two of the robbers were found inside.

In due course seven other of the supposed robbers and their alleged accomplices were brought to trial, but all were acquitted or had the charges against them dropped. Churchill himself was heavily criticised for his intervention. But he seems to have revelled in the publicity, which strengthened his image as a tough devotee of "law and order".