Edith was born on 21 November 1876, in Oxton, Birkenhead. She was one of six children of nursery and seedman James Smith and his wife Harriet. in 1897 she married stationer and tobacconist William Smith. They had three daughters and a son together. She worked for a time as a sub-postmistress. Her husband died in 1907. The 1911 Census shows Smith had moved to London and was training to be a midwife. Her daughters were at various schools and her son was in an orphanage near Blackburn. Shortly after this she took up a post as a matron at a nursing home. Founded in 1914, the Women Police Volunteers was staffed by volunteers such as Edith Smith. It was founded by Nina Boyle and Margaret Damer Dawson, who fell out over its anti-prostitution role in London and elsewhere in February 1915, with Boyle leaving the organisation and Dawson reforming it as the Women's Police Volunteers with herself as head. Smith remained with the WPS and in August 1915 she was appointed the first woman police constable in England with full power of arrest. Her duties were to deal with cases where women were involved. She was concerned with trying to reduce the number of prostitutes in Grantham who were attracted there by the nearby army base. She received 28 shillings. In April 1917 this was raised to £2 10 shillings. This was more than the oldest male police Constable in the force due to the fact that her "duties were most onerous" and took into account that she was also a qualified nurse. In 1916, PC Smith cautioned 100 wayward girls in larceny cases, 16 women and 15 girls were found to be drunk. Ten prostitutes were convicted, 10 were handed over to their parents and 50 were cautioned. Smith wrote of her time in Grantham: "The appointment has made such a vast difference - the prostitutes have found that it does not pay and the frivolous girls have bowed down." Edith travelled around Britain giving talks about women's policing at conferences and writing pamphlets. The legitimacy of policewomen was often questioned during World War One due to their blurred status and limited powers. Their role was left in the hands of individual Chief Constables leading to extreme conservatism in some areas and to daring innovations in others. Smith left the WPS after working seven days a week for a period of two years. She left in 1918 due to chest trouble. Until January 1919, Smith was also the matron nurse at Lindis Nursing Home, Dudley Road in Grantham where she worked seven days a week. Edith moved to Runcorn in Cheshire to work for a Nursing Association. Finding it to be low on funds, she gave lectures, organised whist drives and conducted shorthand classes to raise money. However, there were some local concerns, who “did not complain about the nurse's work, but about her methods”. She died on 26 June 1923 after she took an overdose of morphia, five years after leaving the force. The coroner returned a verdict that she took her own life while temporarily insane. Her life is commemorated in Grantham Museum. Her grave at Halton Cemetery in Runcorn was unmarked until two policewomen launched a fundraising campaign to buy a headstone in 2018. She shares it with her niece, Marjorie, who died 10 days after Edith aged two years.
Commemoration
In 2014, a blue plaque was unveiled in Grantham where she had worked as a policewoman. Deputy Chief Constable Heather Roach, of Lincolnshire Police, said: "She spent time getting to know the people in her area and thoroughly understood the concept of 'neighbourhood policing'.” On 16 June 2018 a blue plaque was erected on 18 Palm Hill, Oxton, where she had lived. The plaque was unveiled her granddaughter Margaret Smith. On 8 March 2019 a blue plaque was erected on St Mary's Church Hall, Halton village, Runcorn, on the site of the old almshouses where Edith had been living at the time of her death.