A day in the life of the Police Department
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A LOOK BACK
A couple of weeks ago, I overheard an older gentleman and two
police officers discussing how easy peace officers have it today.
That conversation got me to thinking about how a typical day for our
police department was spent in the past.
We will look at a 24-hour period and see if that gentleman was
correct.
For our 24-hour period, we’ll look back to a Tuesday, a day most
people think as dull and uninteresting. The action day begins for our
police department a couple hours past midnight on March 23, 1943. Its
2:20 a.m. at the police station when Geraldine Talbert of Alabama
Street calls to ask if they could deliver a draft notice that was
sent to Darwin Underwood’s mother’s home to inform her son that he
was to report for a blood test for induction into the army
immediately.
Officers Gene Belshe and George Mitchell were dispatched to
deliver the message to Underwood.
Later, while Mitchell and Gayle Bergey were driving around town at
4 a.m., they noticed water coming out from under the door of Fred
Pickering’s City Cleaners at 218 5th St.
The officers went to Pickering’s home and brought the sleepy store
owner back to his business, where Pickering found that he had
neglected to turn off the water to the boiler.
It was daylight when the station received a call from Surf Theatre
manager Joe Hamann that a car had been parked in the theater’s
parking lot for a week and he wanted it removed.
The officer could only find the name Carson, on a lubrication
slip. The car was removed.
Officer Belshe was next sent to arrest a local man wanted by the
L.A. office of the FBI.
Later that morning, Officer Johnny Seltzer was sent out to bring
in a sailor with a $25 reward on his head to the naval headquarters
in San Pedro. When they arrived at naval headquarters Seltzer found
out that the Navy man had turned himself in earlier that day and was
now a free man.
It was now 12:40 p.m., and Collins Terry, who owned the Buick car
dealership on 5th Street, was driving his brand new sedan by the
police station when it skidded 27 feet before hitting Bill Lively’s
car.
No one was hurt in the accident, but both cars were damaged.
Ed Tinsley brought a little puppy into the station to be given a
good home. He gave it to the desk sergeant, Jack Tinsly.
By now the day was getting along and at 4 p.m. H.M. Gelvin called
to report that he saw a strange object fall in the ocean about three
miles offshore while he was driving home from work.
Huntington Beach police called the 10th Street Army Post here and
were told that what Gelvin saw was a barrage balloon and that the
Coast Guard was sent to pick it up and bring it back to Long Beach.
Huntington Beach resident Fred Williams called the station at 5:30
p.m. to report that his car had been stolen on Main Street while he
was sitting in the dentist’s chair. Now, who would steal someone’s
car in Huntington Beach -- especially while its owner was enduring
the pain of having his teeth worked on?
Two hours later, the station received a call from Williams’ wife
that her husband had found his parked car on 14th Street while he was
walking home from the dentist’s office. There was no damage to
Williams car, nor had anything been taken. Williams found a nice
leather jacket on the front seat.
As the 24-hour period was coming to a close, a Huntington Beach
lady phoned the station from Buena Park to ask if an officer would go
over to her Beach Court apartment at 6th Street and Orange Avenue and
see if she remembered to turn off her hot water tank. The station
sent Officer Howard Robidoux out to investigate. He found that the
lady had left the tank on and he promptly turned it off.
With this last incident, we close our 24 hours of police action in
Huntington Beach. I’ll let you be the judge if that gentleman who
started all this was right about our police having it too easy today.
For me, there is no question that the officers in blue today have
a harder time of it in any 24-hour period.
But I think the police had a lot more fun back then, when they
knew most of the people in town because they had grown up with them.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington
Beach resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at
P.O. Box 7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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