Hindmarsh created the South Australian Police Force (since renamed
South Australia Police) on 28 April 1838, appointing 21-year-old Henry Inman as sole commander, with the rank of
Inspector. In effect, if not by title, Inman was its first
Police Commissioner. Inman then recruited “twenty active young men” and commenced founding the police, purchasing necessary horses and equipment. It was the first centrally controlled police force in Australia, and the first with
jurisdiction over an entire
colony. In accordance with instructions from Hindmarsh, Inman organised the force into two distinct divisions; foot police for the town of Adelaide and a para-military
mounted police. The latter, with
cavalry standards, were fully armed and prepared for mobile operations at the frontiers of settlement. At the time there was no exact parallel for such a police force, either in England or the other Australian colonies. When sub-inspectors Stuart and Ashton arrived in November 1838 they found the police already formed and operating. Both then served under Inman. Over the following two years Inman made a decisive contribution to the growth of the police force, opening a
barracks in Adelaide and police stations at several country locations. In August 1838 Inman led a police party in pursuit of two allegedly escaped convicts near
Encounter Bay, arresting one in an unnamed river valley that, by association, have both since borne his name:
Inman Valley and Inman River. In September 1838 Inman led the police party that accompanied
Charles Sturt on an exploration to the Murray Mouth. After the recall of Hindmarsh, Inman worked closely with his replacement, Governor
Gawler, who arrived in October 1838. Gawler promoted Inman to
Superintendent of Police, effective 17 October 1838. Among other things, the pair designed the first police uniforms. In December 1838, Inman accompanied Gawler on an exploration of the Encounter Bay region. Tall and lanky, the strong and courageous Inman was an active and effective field commander, personally leading many investigations in the pursuit of
bushrangers and other offenders. He set a strong Christian moral tone, such that none of the police were indolent or corrupt. However, he was such a disappointment as an administrator and financial manager that Gawler appointed a four-man Board of Police Commissioners in December 1839 to ensure oversight of the force. That same month, Inman accompanied Gawler and Sturt on a
Murray River expedition, during which they discovered
Mount Bryan, naming it after Henry Bryan, a fellow expeditioner who became lost and then perished. On 19 January 1839 Henry Inman married Mary Fooks Lipson (1820–1898) at
Holy Trinity Church, Adelaide. Mary was the daughter of Captain
Thomas Lipson RN (1783–1863) and Elizabeth Emma Fooks (1790–1880), and was born at Rennes, Ille-et-Vilaine, Bretagne (Brittany), France, on 27 March 1820, while her father was on half-pay from the British Royal Navy. Her father had previously been commander of the Revenue cutter HMS
Lapwing stationed at Mill Bay, Plymouth, Devon. In South Australia Thomas Lipson was prominently associated with the foundation of the marine affairs as first
Harbourmaster and Collector of Customs. Through the marriage of other Lipson sisters, Inman later became brother in law to John Allan,
George Strickland Kingston, and
James Collins Hawker, though he had close association with Allan and Hawker only. Allan was brother in law to
John Baker (Australian politician). ==Dismissal==