In the 1940s, Marie Storey was part of the third intake of women to join the police force in New Zealand. She speaks to Sonia Yee about being used as a decoy to catch a pervert; segregated training and why women were working as plain clothed officers.
In 1943, while many New Zealanders were away fighting in the war, 18-year-old Marie Storey (nee Nixon) made the decision to join the police force and she was part of the third intake of women to do so.
But the police force was nothing new to Storey. Her father was a Senior Sergeant and editor of the Police Gazette. He had witnessed the very first intake of women to join the force.
"He came home one evening in 1941 and said he'd seen history made in New Zealand - the first ten police women sworn into the police force," Storey recalls.
Listen to The First Female Police Recruits
Her father remarked, "They were a fine bunch of young women."
In that very moment, Storey also made her mind up - she wanted to join the force.
A year later, she saw an advertisement in the paper calling for new recruits. She had no real expectations of what the job would entail, only, she knew she wanted an outdoor job where she also had the opportunity to contribute to the community.
Her application was accepted, and she was placed in a three-month female-only training programme which was held over the summer.
Storey was posted to Wellington and she says back then, roles for women in the force weren't the same as they are today.
Much of her time was spent patrolling parks and community areas where groups of people congregated, and also on jobs that concerned women and children.
Female officers were also used as decoys to catch male predators.
One evening Storey was sent out to Mount Victoria in Wellington where she had to confront one of her biggest fears - she was scared of the dark - an obstacle she would have to quickly overcome.
"There had been women living nearby complaining of a male molesting them," she says.
This particular night was pitch black and deadly quiet. And Storey says all she could see was the city lights below.
The lack of visibility was one obstacle. The second obstacle was that she was alone on the job. A detective had been assigned to accompany her, but on this occasion he was nowhere to be seen.
So Storey set off up an uneven, dirt track in total darkness, making her way back-and-forth at least half a dozen times. What's more, she had to do it clambering in a skirt, blouse, hat, gloves and a handbag - appropriate attire for women in the day.
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