Background
He was born in Nelson, Lancashire, England. Maurice Procter was born in Nelson, Lancashire, on 4 February 1906.
He was born in Nelson, Lancashire, England. Maurice Procter was born in Nelson, Lancashire, on 4 February 1906.
The family lived in Charles Street, Nelson and Maurice attended Nelson Grammar School before running away to join the army at age 15.
After the army Maurice worked briefly as a weaver in a Lancashire cotton mill. In 1927 Maurice joined the police as a constable in Halifax, Yorkshire. At that time a policeman was not allowed to serve in his home town, so this meant he had to leave his home town of Nelson.
He was based at King Cross police station in Halifax, and initially lodged at the station.
The couple had three daughters, Phyllis, Eve and Winifred. Maurice married the youngest daughter, Winifred, in 1933 at Saint Mary"s Church, Lister Lane, Halifax.
During the war Maurice was transferred from King Cross to Mixenden police station. Maurice and Winifred and had one child, a son who they named Noel.
In total Maurice served in the Halifax police force for 19 years, remaining a constable throughout the time.
At that time Halifax had its own police force, including its own chief constable and its own headquarters on Harrison Road near to the town centre, so there were fewer opportunities for postings to different parts of the police force than there are today. Maurice did, however, spend some as a motor cycle patrol officer and he was involved in one notorious local criminal case, that of the Halifax Slasher in the 1930s. Foreign most of his life in Halifax Maurice and his family lived at 20 Willowfield Road, in the Pye Nest area of Halifax and only a short distance from the King Cross police station.
Experiencing police procedure at first hand provided the realism in Procter"s work, that many reviewers praised.
He began writing fiction whilst a serving police offer, his first book Number Proud Chivalry was published in 1947 and as soon as he was earning an income from writing he resigned from the police force. When not writing Maurice enjoyed his hobbies which were reading, gardening, playing cards, motor cycling and socialising with friends.
Procter is best known for his series of police procedural novels featuring Detective Chief Inspector Harry Martineau of the Granchester City Police. In his novels Granchester was an industrial city in the north of England.
Procter based the city on Manchester.
When his novel Hell Is a City (which was published in the United States of America with the title Somewhere in This City) was filmed in 1960 with Stanley Baker as Martineau, it was shot on-location in Manchester. Maurice Procter died in the Royal Halifax Infirmary in 1973.