Smith of the Yard

""I'm Chief Superintendent Lookout...Lookout of the Yard."

"Why, what would we see?"

"I'm sorry?"

"What would we see if we look out of the yard?"

"I'm afraid I don't follow that at all.""

- Monty Python's Flying Circus

Most detectives in fiction barely get recognition. Gil Grissom, Jack Malone and Sam Spade could happily walk into a bookshop in their respective cities, seduce the owner and leave without being recognized.

Not so for Smiths of the Yard. They are very well-known. The newspapers follow their activities. When there is a major crime and they are involved, the papers will say, "Smith of the Yard is on the case". If they're not and the crimes are particularly diabolical, the papers will call for their involvement. In Real Life, the Yard is Scotland Yard, headquarters for the Metropolitan Police of Greater London. The Yard has become synonymous with police to the extent that any police version of the Nations of the World Montage will feature a shot of the New Scotland Yard sign.

Truth in Television in the United Kingdom in the 1920s and 1930s, but not today. The trope has largely died (outside period pieces) with it.

Anime

 * Although his real identity is unknown to the vast majority of people, L in Death Note is considered the world's best detective and his tackling of the Kira case is covered world-wide. In fact, L uses his status as a Smith of the Yard to

Literature

 * Hercule Poirot
 * Sherlock Holmes
 * Lampshaded in one story, as Holmes's need for disguises was explained to be a result of criminals recognizing him from all the coverage he was getting... including that from his good friend, Dr. Watson.
 * It really doesn't help that Holmes has very striking features and is described as being very tall.
 * Also in the patische, The Seven-Per-Cent-Solution, Holmes is in Germany for detoxification with Sigmund Freud, but finds a mystery to investigate to really get his spirits up. When the local police prefect learns that Holmes is on the case, he immediately sends a platoon of constables for the detective to use as he sees fit, apparently on the simple assumption that if Holmes on the case, then it must be important.
 * A notable subversion in the film starring Robert Downey Jr. Holmes is universally known by many of the important people in the city, but is less known in the down low of things. While he is known for his eccentricities, he does not let his picture get taken and thus he is hard to describe in detail. This makes it easy for him to adopt a disguise whenever he needs one, and he is VERY good at it.
 * Paul Temple
 * The alternate history novel SS-GB has Douglas Archer. And he hates it when the newspapers call him, "Archer of the Yard".
 * Not least because he lives in a history where the Nazis invaded Britain, and every mention of him in the newspapers further cements him in people's minds as a collaborator, meaning that there's many people who'd like to see him dead.
 * In the Discworld books, everyone in Anhk-Morpork knows Captain Carrot. If you ask Vimes about his second-in-command's acquaintances, you'll conclude that everyone in the world knows Carrot. Once Ankh-Morpork gets a newspaper, Vimes himself is a regular feature in it as well.

Live Action TV
""Lemming, Lemming, Lemming of the BDA! Lemming of the BD, Lemming of the BD, BD BD BDA-A-A!""
 * Adrian Monk
 * Parodied frequently with the oddly named detectives on Monty Python's Flying Circus, who would always be impressively announced as "____ of the Yard!"
 * Lampshaded and parodied in the "Flying Fox of the Yard" sketch when Inspector Thompson's Gazelle of the Yard arrests the entire show for, amongst other things, "always saying it's 'so-and-so of the yard' whenever the fuzz arrives."
 * And, in one instance, Arthur Lemming...of the British Dental Association!


 * Hustle plays this one relatively straight in the 3rd season finale, with a detective famous for making big busts as the villain. He's not a nice man...
 * Spike Milligan wrote a serial for The Two Ronnies entitled the Phantom Raspberry-Blower of Old London Town. The investigating officer was Corner of the Yard.
 * Becomes a major plot point in the second season finale of Sherlock. Sherlock had established a reputation prior to that, but found himself genuinely famous after solving several high profile cases.

Theater

 * In Tom Stoppard's After Magritte, Police Inspector Foot is always referred to as Foot of the Yard. This appears to irritate him considerably, although so do many other things.

Real Life

 * The Trope Namer is Fabian Of The Yard, the real-life Inspector Robert Fabian, whose autobiography was called Fabian Of The Yard, and who appeared in a TV show based on his life work.
 * A post 1930s example: Detective Sergeant Norman Pilcher of the Drug Squad, who gained a certain level of fame and notoriety in the 1960s by being the police officer at the centre of a number of high-profile celebrity drug busts, including Mick Jagger, Donovan, John Lennon and George Harrison. Given that it was nearly always the same man present, this led to accusations that he was either only going after them to increase his profile in the tabloids and / or actively planting drugs on them to secure a conviction (not that they weren't already actively using drugs for the most part, but still). The fact that he was later convicted of perjury and obstructing the course of justice didn't help his credibility when it came to these accusations.
 * Eugène-François Vidocq was one of these in France for a while, before he was slandered and eventually fired for being a former convict and using informers effectively. However, he started the first private detective agency shortly after and was able to coast on his name-recognition until the police arrested him on trumped-up charges and took all his files.

""Ha ha ha! 'Look out of the yard' - very good!""