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Fingerprint identification archive documenting the institutional consolidation of forensic policing in the United States and Britain during the interwar and World War II period. The grouping centers on the expansion of fingerprint classification systems under J. Edgar Hoover's Division of Investigation and parallel efforts by police instructors and forensic specialists to standardize latent print analysis, courtroom admissibility, and criminal identification procedures. Federal publications including The Work and Functions of the Division of Investigation (1934) and the Division's instructional pamphlet Fingerprints establish how fingerprint records were integrated into national policing networks, while J. H. Duncan's An Introduction to Fingerprints and T. G. Cooke's Finger Prints Secret Service Crime Detection trace the spread of fingerprint instruction into British constabulary training and private forensic education. The archive documents fingerprinting not as an abstract forensic science but as a coordinated administrative system linking police departments, centralized identification bureaus, crime laboratories, and courts through standardized classification and evidentiary procedures. Archive of 4 printed works published between 1934 and 1942, consisting of two United States Department of Justice Division of Investigation publications, one Constabulary instructional manual, and one privately issued American forensic training text. [1] Cooke, T. G. Finger Prints Secret Service Crime Detection. Chicago: Finger Print Publishing Association, 1930. Second edition. Blue cloth binding. Cooke identifies himself on the title page as former Director and Official Editor of the International Association for Identification, situating the work within the principal professional organization for fingerprint examiners in the United States. The preface rejects the popular "master sleuth" mythology of detective fiction and instead argues that secret service methods depend upon "facts which are easily mastered by any normal person of average intelligence, once you know the ropes." A frontispiece portrait captioned "T. G. Cooke, Finger Print Expert" precedes a discussion of latent print work, criminal identification, and practical investigative method. [2]Hoover, John Edgar, Director. The Work and Functions of the Division of Investigation, U.S. Department of Justice. Washington, D.C.: Published for the Information of Law-Enforcement Officials and Agencies, May 1, 1934. Stapled blue wrappers. The introductory statement declares that "all Special Agents in the field must work in close cooperation with police officials in their respective jurisdictions" and notes that "The Identification Unit is at your service every day of the year." The pamphlet outlines investigative, fingerprint identification, and technical laboratory operations within the Division of Investigation during the early Hoover period, immediately preceding the agency's formal renaming as the Federal Bureau of Investigation in 1935. A small typed label reading "Federal Building" appears at the head of the front wrapper. [3] United States Department of Justice, Division of Investigation. Fingerprints: Fingerprinting Living and Deceased Individuals + Latent Fingerprints + Court Decisions. Washington: United States Government Printing Office, 1934. Printed wrappers. Issued the same year as the broader Division of Investigation administrative manual, this publication formalizes fingerprint collection and evidentiary procedure for police use. The title page explicitly links latent fingerprint analysis with "Court Decisions," documenting the increasing legal codification of fingerprint evidence in American criminal prosecutions during the 1930s. Sections address fingerprinting of living and deceased persons, latent print recovery, and evidentiary standards required for courtroom acceptance. [4] Duncan, J. H. An Introduction to Fingerprints. London: Butterworth & Co. (Publishers), Ltd.
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