The mugshots of the 1920s in Australia capture a fascinating moment in the country’s criminal history. These images provide a glimpse into the lives of the men and women who found themselves on the wrong side of the law during this decade.
The 1920s was a time of great social and cultural change in Australia, marked by the aftermath of World War I, the rise of the Jazz Age, and the beginning of the Great Depression. With this change came an increase in crime and an expansion of the police force, leading to many mugshots being taken and recorded.
The mugshots from the 1920s are a unique form of portraiture, capturing the subject’s likeness in an unguarded and unadorned way. They were taken for official purposes, such as for identification or for use in court, but they also serve as historical documents that provide insight into the appearance, demeanor, and expressions of the individuals captured in the images.
They also reveal a diverse range of people, including both men and women, who were arrested for a variety of crimes. Some of the most common offenses during this period were theft, robbery, and disorderly conduct, but there were also cases of murder, assault, and prostitution.
One interesting aspect of the mugshots of the 1920s is the fashion choices of the subjects. Despite being arrested and facing criminal charges, many of the individuals in these photos took pride in their appearance and dressed in a stylish and fashionable manner. Women often wore elaborate hairstyles and makeup, while men sported well-groomed mustaches and clean-shaven faces.
While the mugshots of the 1920s may seem like a distant and far-removed moment in history, they offer a compelling glimpse into the lives of the men and women who lived in Australia during this time. Whether viewed as historical documents or as works of art, these images offer a fascinating window into a bygone era.
#1 Ruth Young (1923. Aged: 43).
#2 Ruth Carruthers (1926. Aged: 28).
#3 Philomena Mary Best (1927. Aged: 33).
#4 Pearl McFadden (1928. Aged: 18).
#5 Myrtle Lee (1927. Aged: 35).
#6 May Smith (1929. Aged: 49).
#7 May Ethel Foster (1928. Aged: 27).
#8 Matilda Devine (1925. Aged: 25).
#9 Mary Rubina Brownlee (1923. Aged: 64).
#10 Tasmanian Lillian Sproule (1928. Aged: 50).
#11 Kathleen Ward (1925. Aged: 21).
#12 Jessie Longford (1926. Aged: 30).
#13 Janet Wright (1922. Aged: 68).
Convicted of using an instrument to procure a miscarriage. Janet Wright was a former nurse who performed illegal abortions from her house in Kippax Street, Surry Hills. One of her teenage patients almost died after a procedure and Wright was prosecuted and sentenced to 12 months hard labor.
#14 Evelyn Courtney (1920. Aged: 19).
#15 Eugenia Falleni (1920. Aged: 43).
Eugenia Falleni spent most of her life masquerading as a man (Harry Crawford). In 1913 Falleni married a widow, Annie Birkett, whom she later murdered. Convicted of murder in 1928, the case whipped the public into a frenzy as they clamored for details of the 'man-woman' murderer.
#16 Ettie Sultana (1922. Aged: 37).
#17 mily Gertrude Hemsworth (1925. Aged: 24).
#18 Elizabeth Singleton (1927. Aged: 22).
#19 Edith Florence Ashton (1929. Aged: 37).
#20 Dorothy Mort (1921. Aged: 32).
#21 Doris Winifred Poole (1924. Aged: 21).
#22 Annie Gunderson (1922. Aged: 19).
#23 Alice Adeline Cooke (1922. Aged: 24).
#24 Marjorie Day (alias Elma Walton) (1925. Aged: 20).
#25 Doris Winifred Poole, criminal record number 639LB, 31 July 1924.
#26 Emily Gertrude Hemsworth, criminal record number 657LB, 14 May 1925.
#27 Jean Wilson, criminal record number 644LB, 25 September 1924.
#28 Kathleen Ward, criminal record number 658LB, 14 May 1925.
State Reformatory for Women, Long Bay. Kathleen Ward had convictions for drunkenness, indecent language and theft. She obviously enjoyed thumbing her nose at the authorities, as can be seen in this image where she appears to have deliberately fluttered her eyes in order to ruin the long-exposure photograph.
#29 Matilda Devine, criminal record number 659LB, 27 May 1925.
#30 Nellie Cameron, criminal record number 792LB, 29 July 1930.
#31 Phyllis Carmier, alias Hume, criminal record number 515LB, 1 April 1921.
British-born Carmier was known as “Yankee” Phyllis because of her peculiar accent. She stabbed her “bludger”, or pimp, to death during a violent altercation in Crazy Cottage, a sly-grog shop in Surry Hills. Carmier attracted much sympathy in the media, who labelled her crime a justifiable homicide. Aged 32.
#32 Eddie McMillan, John Frederick “Chow” Hayes, Thomas Esmond Bollard, Special Photograph number 2057, 6 November 1930, Central Police Station, Sydney.
#33 Mug shot of William Cahill, 30 July 1923, Central Police Station, Sydney.
#34 Mug shot of Hampton Hirscham, Cornellius Joseph Keevil, William Thomas O’Brien and James O’Brien, 20 July 1921, Central Police Station, Sydney.
#35 Mug shot of Harold Price, 13 August 1923, Central Police Station, Sydney.
#36 Mug shot of Harris Hunter, 17 September 1924, Central Police Station, Sydney.
#37 Mug shot of John Walter Ford and Oswald Clive Nash, June 1921, possibly North Sydney Police Station, Sydney.
#38 Mug shot of Sidney Kelly, 25 June 1924, Central Police Station, Sydney.
Details surrounding this particular photograph are unknown, but Sidney Kelly was arrested many times and much written about in newspapers during the 1920s, 30s and 40s. He was charged with numerous offences including shooting, and assault, and in the 1940s was a pioneer of illegal baccarat gaming in Sydney.
#39 Mug shot of Thomas Sutherland Jones and William Smith, 15 July 1921, Central Police Station, Sydney.
Smith and Jones are listed in the NSW Police Gazette as charged with stealing seven packages of twine (value 14 pounds). Jones was further charged with stealing thirty horse rugs (value 15 pounds) and two bales of kapok (value 20 pounds). Smith was fined 20 pounds; Jones was sentenced to 18 months hard labour, suspended.
#40 Mug shot of William Stanley Moore, 1 May 1925, Central Police Station, Sydney.
#41 Mug shot of Alfred John (or Francis) West, 7 April 1922, Central Police Station, Sydney.
#42 Mug shot of B. Moody, Newtown Court, around 1919.
#43 Mug shot of Ellen Kreigher, 13 July 1923, Central Police Station, Sydney.
Ellen (“Nellie”) Kreigher was one of four people arrested and charged over the murder of Gertrude Mabel Heaydon. In October the previous year Gertrude Heaydon had been taken to the Coogee flat of a woman known as “Nurse Taylor” to procure an illegal abortion. She died there in the flat. Police later claimed she was murdered by Nurse Taylor, at the behest of Heaydon's husband, Alfred. A team of low-lifes was eventaully assembled by Taylor's husband Frank to remove the putrefying remains in a horse and cart, and their somewhat farcical progress across Sydney was later recounted by numerous witnesses. Police became involved the following year after Gertrude Heaydon's relatives in England became suspicious. The case became known in the press as the “Coogee Trunk Mystery” (referring to the trunk in which the corpse was allegedly removed from the flat).
#44 Mug shot of Ernest Joseph Coffey, 2 June 1922, location unknown.
#45 Mug shot of Francis Flood, Central Police Station, May 1920.
#46 Mug shot of Frank Murray alias Harry Williams, 4 February 1929, Central Police Station, Sydney.
Harry Williams was sentenced to 12 months hard labour on March 1929 for breaking, entering and stealing. Murray/Williams' entry in the NSW Criminal Register, April 30 1930 describes him as a housebreaker and thief, whose MO includes “[breaking] leadlighted door or windows or [forcing] the fanlights of dwelling houses during the absence of tenants“. He “disposes of stolen property to patrons of hotel bars or to persons in the street ... professing to be a second-hand dealer”. Although he “consorts with prostitutes” and “frequents hotels and wine bars in the vicinity of the Haymarket”, he is described as being of “quiet disposition”.
#47 Emily Gertrude Hemsworth, 14 May 1925.
#48 Sidney Kelly – June 25, 1924. New South Wales Police Department.
#49 Frederick Edward Davies, July 14, 1921.
The handwritten inscription on this unnumbered Special Photograph reads ‘Frederick Edward Davies stealing in picture shows and theatres Dets Surridge Clark and Breen Central 14-7-21.’ Police held sneak thieves in particularly low regard, which may account for the decision to photograph Davies in front of the police station’s toilet stalls.”
#50 George Whitehall – February 24, 1922.
George Whitehall, carpenter, handed himself into Newtown police after hacking to death his common-law wife, Ida Parker on Thursday afternoon 21 February 1922, at their home in Pleasant Avenue, Erskineville. This photo was apparently taken the following morning at Newtown Police Station.”