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Governor Stuyvesant was the ruling
power of Bergen Township among other sections of New
Jersey, in the year 1661. Bergen Township included that
territory between the present Journal Square and the
Kill Van Kull, which separates Bayonne from Staten
Island. It was the Governors duty to appoint a
Justice of the Peace who was assisted by three
constables. The Justice of the Peace affected the
operations of the law. The constable was a high officer
of state in medieval courts. He was the policeman in
the days of Stuyvesant and operated, as did the English
constable. The Justice of the Peace heard matters
brought to his attention by the constables. Basically,
the spirit of these police functions is being carried
out today though they have been modernized to fit the
times.
Bayonne,
as such, was born on April 8, 1861. Prior to that date,
the area was known as Bergen Neck, whose appointed
Justice of the Peace was a man named Francis Miller.
When Bayonne first became independent, part of the
governmental plan was to elect a Justice of the Peace.
Francis Miller ran for that office and was elected. His
duties as director of the three constables continued
much the same as prior to his election.
The Bayonne Police Department was
born in 1869 in Twomey’s Hall, a two-story frame
building, which stood at 9 Dodge Street. The police
force was created by ordinance on September 6, 1869.
Originally appointments consisted of one patrolman from
each ward. The first three patrolmen were Thomas
Connelly, Jack Van Pelt and Hartman Vreeland. One year
later, on September 6, 1870, George B. Whitney was named
as Chief of Police of the already formed police
department. Four additional patrolmen were named at
that time. They were Arthur Cavanaugh, Cornelius Van
Horn, Michael Connelly and Michael McNamara.
Several years after its inception
the police department abandoned the Dodge Street
structure and moved into a two story framed building at
Twenty Second Street and Broadway, which was then city
hall. Between 1869 and the late 1890s the department
acquired room in three fire houses in the city for
police sub-stations where patrolman locked up their
prisoners until they could be taken to the jail. These
stations were located at 50th. Street and Broadway, 7th.
Street and Broadway and 22nd. Street and Maiden Lane
near the Hook. In 1893 a new city hall was constructed
at 30th. Street and Avenue “E”. The police headquarters
and jail were shifted into that building and the former
headquarters at 22nd. Street and Broadway was made a
precinct station. Centralization of the department was
realized in 1905 when the municipal building at 26th.
Street was erected and the police force moved in.
On March 18, 1892 an ordinance was
passed which provided for assignment of a member of the
police force to detective duty. Patrolman Edward M.
Griffin was the first detective of the Bayonne Police
Department. He was promoted to Sergeant in 1903. The
Detective Bureau, under the immediate supervision of the
Detective Sergeant, was created by an amendment on
October 4, 1910. The same amending order established a
branch of the Detective Bureau known as the Bureau of
Identification, also under the Detective Sergeant. This
arm was charged with keeping records of criminals
through utilization of the Bertillion system,
fingerprinting methods and photography. In 1917 eight
patrolmen were assigned to the Detective Bureau as
acting Detectives. As time passed on additional
personnel and supervisors were assigned to detective
duties as investigative responsibilities increased.
The regulation uniform of the
original department included a British style helmet,
blue trousers and a blue coat, which extended to
slightly below the knees. The officers were also armed
and regimented to a schedule. They were assigned to all
public functions and their primary duties concerned
peace preservation. Whether it was in the days of the
Roman warrior, the Indian brave, the English constable
or the American policeman, the citizens of all
communities relied upon these select groups for
protection from wrong-doers. Foot power was the only
means of transportation used by the police until the
1890s, when mounted patrolmen and a horse drawn paddy
wagon was introduced to the force. Policemen use to
walk to the jail, which was also housed in Twomey’s
Hall. They were often forced to solicit the aid of a
passerby in persuading a recalcitrant lawbreaker.
The early days of Bayonne were not
free from crime or ordinance infractions. The sworn
duty of a policeman was to protect life and property,
both public and private, and to uphold laws and
ordinances. He was also expected to render certain
services. Thefts of barter goods such as corn, wheat
and flour and certain farm animals were common.
Policemen of this era attempted to prevent such acts
whenever possible. Traffic consisted of horses and
horse drawn vehicles. Cattle movements through town
were also a problem. In this era, Bayonne was
sectionalized into Bergen Point, which was the
waterfront along First Street; Centerville which was
the business section along Avenue C; Pamrapo, the
section nearest Jersey City and finally the business
section on Cottage Street. Each of these sections
created different problems for the police.
With the population on the rise, it
became necessary for the police force to grow. The
first Chief of Police, resigned after seven years in
office and was succeeded by the 43 year old, Hiram Van
Buskirk. During this period, one patrolman resigned and
six more were appointed. The first ten years of police
organization saw eleven Patrolmen and one Chief assigned
to the department.
In 1886, John Yore resigned from
the police force after serving seven months as a
Patrolman. However, he was reappointed in March of
1887, promoted to Sergeant in 1898 and continued as a
Sergeant until 1906 at which time he was appointed Chief
of Police.
Around 1887, the rank of Roundsman
was created in the police department. A Roundsman
performed similar duties as the present day police
sergeant. His uniform displayed a United States
Infantry chevron of two stripes above the point of each
elbow. On April 19, 1887 William Hurley was appointed
the first Roundsman. It was the roundsman’s charge to
set good examples of sobriety, discretion, skill and
promptness, to the patrolmen under his supervision. He
also performed routine patrol duties, which consisted of
patrolling the posts in his district and also
supervising the patrolmen on their posts in order to
insure the faithful performance of duty by these men.
Approximately, one year later, the rank of Sergeant was
adopted. The first Sergeant was Patrolman Cornelius Van
Horn. The Sergeant was then placed in charge of the
station house and performed desk duties. The position
of Roundsman was discontinued around 1908.
Early in the 1900s, the Gamewell
Police Telephone System (police callboxes) was
introduced, resulting in the abandonment of the
substations, since patrolmen could call the van as soon
as they caught a law breaker. These callboxes served
the police department until the 1970s. In 1907 the
department kept up with the transportation of the times
by assigning policemen to bicycle duty to apprehend
speeding cyclists. An ordinance on December 21, 1907
also set forth rules for the government and control of
the force. Patrolman Martin Kavanaugh was Bayonne’s
first bicycle policeman.
The first manual containing the
rules for the government of the police department was
adopted on April 1, 1902. The Chief at that time was
John B. McNeil. The police department during that
period, consisted of the following ranks: Chief of
Police, Captains of Police, Sergeants, Roundsmen and
Patrolmen. Original plans called for the city to be
divided into two precincts. The Second Precinct
included the area from Newark Bay to Avenue D (now
Broadway) along the center line of West 21st. Street,
south along the center line of Avenue D to the Kill Van
Kull, then west along the Kill Van Kull continuing along
the shore line of Newark Bay back to the starting point
on West 21st. Street. The First Precinct included the
remaining territory of Bayonne above West 21st. Street
and east of Avenue D.
The police manual set forth
qualifications of new appointees to the police
department, such as height, age, character and health.
Rules of discipline and uniforms were also prescribed.
The 1902 manual also designated the procedure for
mounted policemen. They were not permitted to ride
their horses faster than a walk unless absolutely
necessary to do so. They had to dismount frequently to
see that the saddle blanket was not wrinkled. The
mounted policeman also had to train and care for his
horse. The mounted division of the police department
was started in the 1890s and discontinued in 1929.
Patrolman Dwight Lord was the first mounted Bayonne
Police Officer. The motorcycle has been used by the
Bayonne Police Department since 1917, when they were
first purchased along with the first motorized paddy
wagon.
In 1869, the population of Bayonne
was 4,000. As mentioned previously, the population
increase spurred the need for more policemen since the
crime rate and variations of crime increased with the
town’s growth. With the growing police force came the
need for specialization and increased supervision. The
original supervisor ranks consisted of a Chief of Police
and Sergeants to manage the police force. As the
department grew in size and responsibilities, a more
formal rank structure was developed.
On January 8, 1908 an ordinance
establishing the title of Inspector of Police, then
second in command of the department, was instituted.
The first Police Inspector was Edward M. Griffin. On
July 3, 1912 seven Sergeant positions were created by
municipal ordinance. The office of Captain of
Detectives and the appointment of seven Lieutenants of
Police were created by an amendment on December 3,
1913. The duties of the Detective Captain were
designated as those previously performed the Detective
Sergeant. While the Lieutenants took over the jobs
therefore done by Sergeants. Additional Sergeants were
created in 1926. On January 22, 1915 two Lieutenants
were elevated to Police Captains. On September 28, 1916
the office of Police Surgeon, with the rank and salary
of a Police Lieutenant, was created. The first Police
Surgeon was John T. Connelly. On August 28, 1917 six
additional Police Lieutenants positions were
established. On September 4, 1917 the newly created
Director of Public Safety was made the official head of
the police force. The first Commissioner or Director of
Public Safety was Henry Wilson. On April 19, 1918 a
Superintendent of the Bureau of Criminal Investigation
was established. This position replaced the Detective
Sergeant. The first Superintendent was John J. Rigney.
On April 28, 1925 the office of Deputy Chief of Police,
designated as second in command of the department was
created. The first Deputy Police Chief was Daniel
Kilduff. The office of Police Inspector became third in
command. This position was abolished in the mid 1970s.
By 1919, the police force consisted
of one Chief, one Inspector, two Captains, thirteen
Lieutenants, six Detectives and one hundred and ten
Patrolmen. Prior to this time, the automobile had
replaced the bicycle for mobile patrol. The population
by this time was 77,000 and in six years, 1925, the
population increased another 14,000 so that by 1926, the
city had 91,000 inhabitants. The demands on the police
department and necessary services increased very
rapidly.
In 1927, another police manual was
adopted. The new table of organization included one
Chief, one Deputy Chief, one Inspector, Captains,
Captain of Detectives, Superintendent of Criminal
Identification, Lieutenants, a Detective Sergeant,
Sergeants, Detectives, Patrolmen, Police Women and such
other officers and employees as may from time to time be
appointed. The force now numbered over two hundred men
and two policewomen. On January 8, 1924Lillian Hanon
was the first female appointed to the department. This
position was an investigative duty and the officer did
not carry a gun. On April 15, 1925 Margaret Doyle was
appointed as a second policewoman. On September 21,
1926 Emily Hassmiller was appointed to replace Officer
Hannon, who resigned. In 1933 one female position was
discontinued. This left Officer Hassmiller who served
with the department until her demise in 1949. Peggy Burt
was the last female investigator appointed. She served
from 1949 until her retirement in 1976.
In the 1930s more and more motor
vehicles were appearing on the public highways. City
streets were being improved and it was necessary to
enlarge the police mobile force so that it had increased
from a mere two patrol car system to a five patrol car
system and the Bayonne Police Department now had twenty
five motorized vehicles both marked and unmarked.
Communications developed through the use of the
telephone and radio. Bayonne in 1933 gained prominence
by being the first city to use a two-way radio system in
police cars. Other municipalities had receiving sets
installed in their patrol cars but at that time only
Bayonne had patrol cars that could receive and transmit
messages. This system had, of course, greatly improved
police services and was detrimental to violators of the
law. The department received national attention and
praise for this significant improvement in police
communications.
In 1945 the department had grown to
a total strength of 219 personnel. Its motorized
equipment consisted of ten radio cars, seventeen
motorcycles, two patrol vans, a police ambulance and
several unmarked cars for special assignments. It was
also in 1945 that the Juvenile Bureau was established
within the department. In 1947 the Police Athletic
League headquarters was formed in the Corwin building,
located at Twenty Fourth Street and Avenue “A”. This
building was use for teenage sporting activities until
the 1990s. The objective of the PAL was to combat
juvenile delinquency through a program of sound
recreational activities to develop good character and a
sense of responsibility.
In 1962 the authorized strength of
the police department was 189 sworn members, Which
included one Chief, one Deputy Chief, one Inspector,
nine Captains, seventeen Lieutenants and fifteen
Sergeants. On April 27, 1962 the department’s first
indoor pistol range was officially opened. It was
located in the sixteen street park. It was built by the
officers themselves with financial assistance from the
local PBA and local business merchants. In 1964 a new
police manual was implemented. It outlined the duties
and responsibilities of all members of the department.
In addition new specialized units were enhanced, such as
the Gambling Squad, Alcohol, Beverage and Control Squad,
Narcotics, and the Juvenile Aid Bureau. These units
were of great assistance in helping to solve complex
problems of that era. The department was also increased
from one Inspector to two Inspectors, nine Captains to
ten Captains, and fifteen Sergeants to seventeen
Sergeants. In addition this was the time period when
the police department started to change radically. It
was also around this time period that Bayonne was again
a first, in its use with police walkie-talkies both to
transmit and receive.
In May of 1972 the police
department moved out of the old police headquarters,
which was built in 1905, into a new modern police
command center. The new facility was built between
Twenty Seventh and Twenty Eight Street on Avenue C as
part of a large municipal service complex. At this
time the department consisted of one hundred and ninety
four sworn officers, which included one Chief, two
Deputy Chiefs, ten Captains, seventeen Lieutenants,
seventeen Sergeants, and one hundred and forty seven
Police Officers.
In 1982 an in-depth police manual
was developed. It not only included duties and
responsibilities, rules and regulations and uniform
requirements, but it also instituted standard operating
procedures and in-service training bulletins that would
guide the police officer in performing his duties and
keep him or her abreast of changes in the law or
department policy.
In 1989 the department started to
enter the computer technology age. A computer aided
dispatch system was instituted. This technology greatly
improved the department’s response to call for service
capabilities. During this period a complete audit of
the agency was conducted to show ways of running the
organization more effectively. In the early 1990s as
part of a department reorganization project, civilian
dispatchers were added to the department to make more
sworn officers available for street patrol. The
supervisory ranks, as well as the overall number of
sworn police officers, were streamlined to make the
agency more cost effective. In addition the purchase of
computer terminals replaced the typewriter. This state
of the art equipment vastly enhanced the department’s
administrative abilities. As a result of the
streamlining process, as well as the increase use of
civilian personnel, the total strength of sworn police
officers in the department was lowered to one hundred
and sixty nine members.
In the mid 1990s, as a result of
federal grant monies, civilian employees took over the
position of the Police Desk Clerk. In addition more
police officers were added to the department to
supplement such programs as Community Oriented Policing,
Cops in School and Drug Abuse Resistance Education. A
new mobile command center, fully equipped with modern
communications, was purchased. In addition mobile data
terminals were added to the police patrol vehicle. This
gave the police officer in the field the ability to
process report writing capabilities through the use of
the computer. In 1999 a complete audit of the agency
was again conducted, in part because of a large increase
in sworn personnel. In addition the municipality of
Bayonne was entering a period of radical change. The
Military Ocean Terminal had closed and in the year 2001.
The approximately four hundred and thirty six-acre site
would be turned over to the city. Route 169, (changed
to Route 440 in 2001) a major highway on the eastside of
town was widened and extended to connect directly to the
Bayonne Bridge and Staten Island, New York. Commercial
establishments were being developed on the new highway.
Furthermore a light rail train system was being
constructed within the city. This transportation
network would connect the city of Bayonne with direct
access to other northern New Jersey cities, as well as
the financial districts of New York City. Commuter
traffic through the municipality was expected to
increase dramatically in the coming years. In March of
2002 a new communication center was installed in police
headquarters. It included the most advanced technology
available for receiving and tracking communications and
tracking personnel. It also dispatches fire services as
well as police services. There are twenty communication
center personnel and one supervisor to man five
consoles, rather than three consoles as in the past. In
2003 police sergeants were assigned to the
communications center as supervisors. These positive
developments required the Bayonne Police Department to
change with the times. It is anticipated that the
police department will continue to expand as the city
itself grows in population and importance to the New
York, New Jersey metropolitan area.
Over the years the Bayonne Police
Department had developed into a modern law enforcement
and service oriented agency. Today’s police officer is
better trained, better educated and better equipped than
his predecessor. New recruits are mandated to complete
a seventeen-week Basic Police Training Course.
In-service training schools are scheduled for officers
as they progress through their career. Computer
operation, radar operation, criminal investigation, sex
crime investigation, auto theft investigation, missing
person investigation, hostage negotiation, evidence
collection techniques, crime prevention techniques,
community oriented policing and drug abuse resistance
education are some examples of the type of in-service
training that today’s police officer must become
proficient at to properly perform his or her duty.
Although a college education is not a requirement to
become a police officer, approximately fifty percent of
today’s sworn officers either have a college degree or
have attended college courses. Police equipment has
been improved significantly since the early sixties.
The Bayonne Police Department of the new millennium has
well equipped police vehicles, state of the art radios,
as well as sophisticated computer systems.
Since the institution of the Bayonne Police Department
in September of 1869, over nine hundred officers have
been appointed to the organization. Sixteen police
chiefs have served during this time. Presently there
are two hundred and forty-three sworn officers assigned
to the police department which include one Chief, three
Deputy Chiefs, nine Captains, fourteen Lieutenants,
forty-one Sergeants and one hundred and seventy-four
Police Officers. These include fourteen female police
officers, one holding the rank of Captain and three
Sergeants. Most of the positive changes in the police
department over the last thirty years came about as a
result of the public demanding better service and more
protection from their tax supported police agencies.
Their demands are as current today in the year 2003 as
they were during the turbulent 1960s. The future
history of the Bayonne Police Department will depend in
large part on how today’s police administrators face the
challenge of providing quality police service and
protection to its citizens using police manpower and
municipal tax dollars wisely.
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