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puzzled

19th February 2011, 19:23
An expression to describe a small group with pretence to a much greater authority than they have in reality arose from a trio of 19th century Londoners associated with a particular street. What was their employ?
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pipesmoker

19th February 2011, 23:17
Just a guess, but could it be Bow Street Runners?
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cyril

20th February 2011, 10:10
Could it be "barrow boy"?
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ab

20th February 2011, 10:15
I think the Bow Street Runners were founded in the 18th Century.
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film fan

20th February 2011, 10:21
Baker Street Irregulars - the kids who gathered information for Sherlock Holmes.
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anthony

20th February 2011, 10:50
This is a hard question. I don't think any of the answers given is correct but "Baker Street Irregulars" was a good try but it is linked more to fiction. I think it must be an expression still used in real life today!
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julia

20th February 2011, 16:54
I am also intrigued to get an answer to this. I have trawled the internet for such an expression but cannot find one. An expression to describe a (self aggrandizing) group originated from a trio of 19th century Londoners associated with a particular street!
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kemlo

20th February 2011, 17:54
Could it be Pearly Kings and Queens originated from Costermongers
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emf

20th February 2011, 19:57
Bow st runners were too early, mid 17th century
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ab

20th February 2011, 20:08
emf, you made me think as I'd said in post 4 that I thought the Bow Street Runners were 18th century. Just looked them up- founded 1749, so 18th century.
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