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Latest Interesting Article

Interesting Articles

 

This section features interesting articles written by former colleagues on a wide range of subjects related to the Bermuda Police Service or recounting personal experiences.   We are delighted to receive articles from anyone who wishes to put pen to paper, and will assist with editing where necessary.

 

 

Gilmour Simons' Surprise 85th Birthday Party

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Young P.C. Gilmour Simons in 1961
 

The Police Recreation Club was the venue for a very special occasion on Wedenesday 28thJuly 2021 when members and friends of the Simons family held a “Surprise” Birthday Party for one of our former colleagues, Gilmour Simons, who was celebrating his 85th Birthday.  The event was beautifully organized by his two daughters, Paula and Pamela,  and although Gilmour lived close by, on Alexandra Road, he was taken completely by surprise when he entered the main hall at the PRC.

Gilmour with his two daughters, Paula (left) and Pamela (right) 
Gilmour surrounded by his grandchildren
 

In addition to family members and friends, we had three former police officers in attendance including myself (Roger Sherratt), Arthur Bean, and Phillip Smith.  I was assigned to Gilmour when I first stepped off the plane and onto the beat in Hamilton in early June 1964, and he gave me excellent advice and was a pleasure to work with.  We remained good friends for the last 57 years.

Although Gilmour didn’t serve for long in the Police, anyone serving in the Force on the morning of February 2nd 1965 will remember the events outside BELCO that fateful morning when P.C. Ian Davies lay seriously injured having been attacked by BIU picketers, and Gilmour, along with several other officers was involved in a pitched battle to protect P.C. Davies for which they received bravery awards.  CLICK HERE to read an article in our “Then and Now” column about Gilmour.  

 
Group of fairly new recruits who attended a 6 week basic training course
in late 1961 before the Training School was officially established.
Top row (l-r) Marcus Packwood,  Phil Pearson,  Phillip Smith,
Custerfield "Custy" Crockwell,Sgt Thomas Doyle (Instructor), 
Lawrence "Mincy" Rawlins, Reginald Tuckett, and Gilmore Simons.
Kneeling -  Melvin Gibbons, Thomas Barton,  Glyn Washington, 
Lennett "Lenny" Edwards & Eddie "Boxhead" Foggo
 

Gilmour served in the Bermuda Police from 1961 until late 1965 when he left to join the Prison Service, and he later worked for many years in security.  He has always been proud of having served in the Bermuda Police, and it was not until quite recently that I discovered that his father, Arthur Charles Gilmour Simons,  and his father’s three brothers,  O’Brian, Austin and Ambrose all had two things in common. All four brothers served in the  Bermuda Police as young men, and all four played for Somerset Cricket Club in the annual Cup Match Classic.

In fact Gilmour was born during Cup Match in 1936 at the time when his father was said to be playing in the match  although we don’t know if his son’s birth affected his performance on the field that day!  Arthur Charles Gilmour Simons  was one of the greats of Cup Match  who captained the Somerset team and also went on to be President of Somerset Cricket Club.  Perhaps it should be noted that young Gilmour never played cricket although if you read his “Then and Now” article you will see that he knew how to catch and how to swing a piece of reinforcing rod to help save his fellow police officer! 

Since joining the Police in 1961, Gilmour had always maintained a close friendship with retired P.C. Mel Gibbons who we hoped would be able to attend the birthday party but unfortunately, Mel is not at all well these days and was not able to make it and sent his regrets.  Gilmour spent much of the evening with Arthur Bean, Phillip Smith and myself fondly reminiscing about “the good old days”. 

Gilmour Simons seated
Standing (l-r) Roger Sherratt, Phillip Smith and Arthur Bean
 
 

I gave a few remarks at the party and thanked Gilmour for his service to the Bermuda Police at a very difficult  time in our history, presented him with a watch as a gift on behalf of ExPo, and wished him a very Happy Birthday and Many Happy Returns of the day. 

 Gilmour receives a birthday watch from Roger Sherratt

 

EDITORS NOTES

It was not until I received an invitation to Gilmour's 85th birthday party that I finally discovered his first name is spelled "Gilmour" -  not Gilmore.  All of our Police records spell his first name as Gilmore.  I will correct the spelling wherever possible on our website and ExPo files but I can't change the official Police records.

CLICK HERE for an extensive article, “Reflections on 2nd February 1965” about  a special gathering at the Bermuda Industrial Union (BIU) Headquarters, 50 years to the day since the BELCO riot at which retired Supt. Andrew Bermingham, former P.C. Wentworth Christopher, and myself were invited to sit on a panel discussing the events of that day and to provide our own personal accounts of what happened outside BELCO.  Attendees included Gilmore Simons, Eugene "Buck" Woods who also gave his personal comments  during the evening  and Peter Duffy. The article also includes accounts given by several other police officers present that day in 1965, Mike Caulkett, William Connell McBurnie, and Nick Hall.   

 

Glynn Washington's rescue at sea

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Rescue in Hamilton Harbour

 

Commendation presented to P.C. Glyn Lefroy Washington 
by H.E. The Governor, Lord Martonmere on 15th October 1964
 

We recently came into possession of the above copy of a Governor's Commendation in 1964 to a young Police Constable,  Glyn Lefroy Washington, and were asked if we could check into the circumstances surrounding the award, and what  happened to P.C. Washington since then.

 

As you can see from the wording of the Governor's Commendation, P.C. Washington had shown initiative and courage while on duty in the Police launch on Wednesday 26th Augiust 1964 when he piloted the police boat across the bow of the "Queen of Bermuda" and picked up a visitor who was sailing a sunfish which had  become becalmed directly in the path of the liner. The sunfish was sucked into the wash of the ship, capsized and eventually appeared in the ship's wake astern, but not before P.C. Washington came to the rescue at the last possible minute and plucked the sailor from his sailboat before it was sucked under the water.  As the Commendation states, P.C. Washington's "quick thinking and prompt action undoubtedly averted what might well have been a fatality and his conduct was a credit to him and to the Police Force.

 

Fortunately, I had recently been in touch with Glynn via email, and was aware that he was living in St. George's so it was no problem getting in touch with him about this incident involving the tourist and the "Queen of Bermuda". I also remembered Glyn quite well because he had been stationed in Hamilton when I first arrived on Island in May 1964.

 

Perhaps the first thing to do is to correct the record about the spelling of Glynn's first name which was recorded in the Commendation and in our police records as Glynn. He has assured me that the correct spelling is Glynn.

Young P.C. Glynn Lefroy Washinton
 

Glynn was born in St. George's in August 1937.  After leaving school Glynn went to work for Meyer Industries where he was a boatsman servicing visiting ships, delivering water towed in water barges, and picking up sick crew from passing ships, and he still remembers coal barges being used in Bermuda. He has always loved boats and spent the next 7 years at Meyer's during which time he developed an excellent knowledge of Bermuda's waters.

 

In 1961, the Police Force was advertising  locally for recruits and Glynn decided to  apply, along with  a group of other young Bermudians. He was successful in being accepted and joined the Police Force on 2nd Septpember 1961, along with  six fellow Bermudians, several of whom went on to have long and distinguished careers in the Force.  Joining on that day were Lennett "Lenny" Edwards, who went on to become Commissioner of Police,  Custerfield "Custy" Crockwell, and  Eddie "Boxhead" Foggo who both went on to become Inspectors,  Gilmore Simons, Phillip Smith, and Reginald Tuckett. Four more local recruits joined the Force around the same time -  Marcus Packwood, Phil Pearson, Tommy Barton, and Mel Gibbons who became one of Glynn's closest friends, and still is.  

 

Commissioner George Robins had taken over as head of the Police Force in 1960, and realized that local recruits were at a disadvantage in their basic training compared with overseas recruits from the U.K who would attend a 3 month course at the Police Training Centre in Millmeece, Staffordshire, before coming to Bermuda. When Glynn's intake of recruits were hired, COP Robins organized a six week training course for them at Police Headquarters, with Sgt Tommy Doyle as their main instructor.  This was a forerunner of the Training School set up in 1962.

Group of fairly new recruits who attended a 6 week basic training course
in late 1961 before the Training School was officially established.
Top row (l-r) Marcus Packwood,  Phil Pearson,  Phillip Smith, Custerfield "Custy" Crockwell, 
Sgt Thomas Doyle, Lawrence "Mincy" Rawlins, Reginald Tuckett, and Gilmore Simons.
Kneeling -  Melvin Gibbons, Thomas Barton,  Glyn Washington, 
Lennett "Lenny" Edwards & Eddie "Boxhead" Foggo
 

Following the training course Glynn was initially posted to St. Georges, but just 3 months later he was transferred to the beat in Hamilton. Shortly after he moved to Hamilton, the Police Force acquired its first ever Police Boat "Blue Heron"  which was built by two young constables, Derek Jenkinson and Dave Garland on a shoestring budget, and was launched in early 1962.   CLICK HERE for an article on our First Police Boat.   Glynn was in the right place at the right time because, with his extensive marine experience and knowledge of local waters, he was one of the first officers to be assigned to the Marine Section along with John "Flaps" Barnett , "Dolly"Jack Nash and several others.   This was at a time when Marine Section officers would split their time  on the beat, manning the dock gates along  Hamilton Docks , and  going out on patrol in the Police boat.

 

Glynn was certainly in thre right place at the right time on Wednesday 26th August 1964 when he was patrolling Hamilton Harbour in the police boat while the "Queen of Bermuda" was arriving in port.   Glynn spotted a man in a sunfish becalmed in the middle of the harbour directly in the path of the ship which by this time was sounded her horns in an attempt to get the sunfish to move out of the way.  Glynn realised the sailor, a tourist, had no way of moving anywhere, so he headed straight for the sailboat,  and told the sailor to jump on board - just in the nick of time.  No sooner had Glynn moved out of the way than the ship bore down on the sun fish which was sucked under the keel, and popped up on the other side of the ship with not a scratch!.  Glynn returned the shaken sailor and his sailboat  back to Salt Kettle and then continued on patrol.

 

Glynn received his  Commendation from H.E. The Governor, Lord Martonmere at a Police Parade  for both the regular police and the Reserves held at Prospect in October in 1964,  as reported in the newspaper.

 

 

Glynn continued to serve  in the Police Force until making the difficult decision to resign in May 1965.  When asked about why he decided to leave the Force,  Glynn explained that with a new family he was finding it difficult to meet his financial obligations on Police pay (when he joined the Police Force his annual salary would have been £850 which was less than he had been earning at Meyer's)  and he made the decision to return to Meyer's where he could earn lots of overtime.  He remained at Meyer's for 34 years before finally retiring.

 

Glynn and Sandra have a son, Gregson, and a grandson, Aiden who is now 18. Throughout his life Glynn has always enjoyed being on the water and has always had a boat until recently.  For many years Glynn and his brothers had a wooden Bermuda dinghy that they kept in Coot Pond.

 

Glynn's nephew, the renowned painter, Otto Trott has fond memories  of his Uncle Glynn who used to take Otto and his brothers swimming between Fort St. Catherine and Tobacco Bay.  Glynn  had grown up in that area;  he knew every rock and cranny and would take his nephews diving and exploring the  underwater caves around Tobacco Bay.   

Painting of Glynn Washington and his grandson Aiden
published by kind permission of Otto Trott

 

A few years ago Otto happened to see his Uncle Glynn with his grandson in a punt in the area where Glynn used to take Otto and his brothers on their adventures. Otto took several photos of Gynn with young Aiden from which he then captured the scene  in a series of beautiful paintings, one of which is now in the Masterworks Collection. 

Glynn and his grandson Aiden standing next to the painting
by Otto Trott now in the Masterworks Collection of Fine Arts
 
 

So,  in answer to the question about what happened to young P.C. Glynn Washington since his dramatic rescue of the "becalmed" tourist in Hamilton Harbour back in 1964,  Glynn is now retired and lives happily with his wife of 55 years, Sandra, at the home where he was born.  He may not have moved very far but  Glynn has led a full life, and can hopefully look back with some nostalgia on the time he spent in the Bermuda Police Force.

A "Knickers Nicker"!

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A 'Knickers Nicker'!

submitted by John McQuaid 

Young P.C. John McQuaid

 

It's not often anyone sends us information about articles in the Royal Gazette going back all the way to the 1940's,  but we recently received this article, exactly as it appeared in the Royal Gazette and Colonist on  9th July 1943, from our good friend and former colleague, and avid historian, John McQuaid.  Heaven only knows how he came across it but it immediately brought a chuckle when I read John's title -  "A Knickers Nicker"!

The young P.C. who made this arrest of a U.S. Sailor in Flatts Village was P.C. Alfred James "Jimmy" Amos who served in the Bermuda Police from July 1943 until November 1958.   who was said to be able to handle himself when confronted with trouble. By coincidence, I've been liaising with the Late Inspector Amos's son, also name Jimmy,  to publish an article in our "Hall of Fame" about his father who was a  very well known and highly respected Inspector who tragically died of a heart attack in 1958 while still serving in the Bermuda Police Force.

 

U.S. SAILOR HURT IN FIGHT WITH CONSTABLE

——————

Taken to Hospital After an Arrest at The Flatts

—————

An American sailor was taken to the King Edward Hospital last night following a scuffle with a policeman who had arrested him after he is said to have been seen taking clothes off a clothes line in the Flatts area.  The sailor was injured about the head by the policeman,  P.C. Amos, in his resisting arrest, it is understood, and several stitches had to be put in a cut.  The incident gave rise to a flood of rumours but the Royal Gazette and Colonist was informed by the Commissioner of Police, Mr J.S. McBeath late last night that the Police did not link the sailor with any other investigation now proceeding.

A typical Bermuda washline before the
days of washing machines and dryers

(Photo courtesy of Gerri Crockwell)

Mr. McBeath told a Royal Gazette and Colonist reporter, who asked if he had anything to release through the press:  “No luck! I would be only too glad to tell you if there was anything to tell.”

Some details of the incident at The Flatts were told to the Royal Gazette and Colonist by Miss Caro Spencer, District Nurse. Miss Spencer said that at about 6.30 p.m. a little girl called Eunice Hayward, who lives near her, informed her that a sailor was taking clothes from the clothesline in her yard.  Miss Spencer saw the man going away and immediately notified the Police.

She added that Police Constable Amos arrived in a very short time and that the sailor was found on the hill near the house at the back of the Whitney Institute and west of “Hillcrest”. According to Miss Spencer the policeman ‘had to hammer him,’ so much so, apparently, that she said the sailor was unconscious when the ambulance arrived to take him to the hospital.

Jimmy Amos had a distinguished career in
the Bermuda Police
and rose to the rank of Inspector
 
(Photo courtesy of Inspector Amos' Jimmy Amos)
 

Miss Spencer said that the man had taken her nurse’s uniform off the line, and her underclothing, and that he was wearing a woman’s slip when P.C. Amos arrested him. 

Reprint of original article from ‘The Royal Gazette and Colonist’  newspaper, dated 9th July, 1943.

 

John McQUAID - July 2021             

More Articles …

  1. Life in Jersey Under Nazi Occupation
  2. Old Crock's Brigade!
  3. A Date with the "Ganja" Flight
  4. Happy 75th birthday to Orson Daisley
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