

Season 6 • Episode 1
LatestSergeant Cork is a British detective television series which first aired between 1963 and 1968 on ITV. It was a police procedural show that followed the efforts of two police officers and their battle against crime in Victorian London. In all 66 hour-long episodes were aired during the five-year run, although the last episode was not broadcast until January 1968, 16 months after the others. Journalist Tom Sutcliffe has credited it as a first example of the use of the Victorian-era policeman in a television crime series. A 1969 review in The Age opined that rather than suspense, the strengths of the series were its "excellent period settings and wonderfully thick pea-soupers" which "add up to splendid evocative stuff", as well as the performance of star John Barrie. At no time during the whole series is Sergeant Cork's first name given.
Production
Those pea-souper fogs deserve their own credit.
Acting
John Barrie's unnamed sergeant carries mystique for 66 episodes.
Writing
Ted Willis basically created the Victorian cop show template.
Creator
Ted Willis
Trivia, insights & behind the scenes
This show literally invented the televisual Victorian detective—Sherlock, Ripper Street, even Peaky Blinders' coppers all descend from Cork's foggy beat.
The mysterious 16-month gap before the final episode aired in January 1968 remains unexplained—network politics or time travel cover-up? You decide.