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Beatrice Russell
Beatrice Russell, 21, was charged with "keeping a brothel" and sentenced to 4 months in prison in 1914.SWNS
Agnes Halker
Agnes Halker "The Old Hag," 52, was charged with "keeping a brothel" and sentenced to 3 months in prison in 1912. SWNS
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28-year-old Annie Laurie
Annie Laurie, 28, was charged with "keeping a brothel" and fined 5 pounds in 1911. SWNS
50-year-old Anne Yates
Anne Yates, 50, was charged with "keeping a brothel" and fined 5 pounds in 1912. SWNS
Constance Williams
Constance Williams, 21, was charged with "soliciting" and was fined in 1909. SWNS
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Edith Bird
Edith Bird, 15, was charged with "soliciting" and was fined in 1908.SWNS.com
Edith Bird
Edith Bird, 15, was charged with "soliciting."SWNS
Florence Thackwell
Florence Thackwell, 16, was charged with "soliciting" and was fined in 1908.SWNS
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Gertrude Myers
Gertrude Myers, 29, was charged with "soliciting" and was fined in 1908. SWNS
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The harrowing stories behind Britain’s earliest convicted sex workers have been revealed in a collection of police mugshots taken more than 100 years ago.

The black-and-white shots were unearthed in the West Midlands Police archives.

The images were taken between 1908 and 1911 and were accompanied with scrawled notes about their crimes.

Police in Birmingham were the first force in the world to routinely catalog mugshots with the first snapped crook in 1853.

Most of the sex workers wore ratty clothes and suffered skin problems in their police pictures.

One of the youngest prostitutes arrested was Edith Bird, 15, who was charged with “soliciting” in 1908 and fined.

Another woman, Agnes Halker, 52, also known as the “The Old Hag,” was charged with “keeping a brothel” and was sentenced to three months in prison in 1912.

Beatrice Russell, 21, was given the longest sentence of four months in prison after being charged with “keeping a brothel” in 1914.

Annie Laurie, 28, was charged also with “keeping a brothel” and fined 5 pounds in 1911.

Prisoners would be dressed in nice clothing and marched down the street to the photography studio where their mugshots were taken.

The photography studio would be used by members of the public too as it would be the only opportunity to get a lasting portrait of themselves or family.

Corinne Brazier, who is in charge of the police’s collection, said: “Victorian life in Birmingham was really hard.”

“A lot of women turned to drink as a form of escapism.

“Then turned to prostitution as a way to feed that habit.

“An awful lot of areas of Birmingham back in those times were deprived and working opportunities were scarce.

“You’ve also got to think that this was before modern medicine and before the National Health Service.

“So the life expectancy of these women would’ve been a lot less than today.

“Some of the young women might have thought this is the only way for survival or earn a living.

“While the older ladies may have been in this line of work for their whole life.

“People back then would have been living from paycheck to paycheck.

“There was no government handouts.

“Women might have had a husband who left or died and have a child – so they needed a way to pay bills and provide food.”

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