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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.

 

 

How are you faring during the Pandemic?

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Interesting Articles

 

 

We would very much like to hear how you are faring during the worldwide pandemic.

Here in Bermuda we are slowly but surely getting back to what is being called the “New Normal” as we enter Phase 4 of our recovery on 1st July 2020.  The attached chart shows some of the easing of restrictions such as reopening the airport for commercial flights,  permitting gatherings up to a maximum of 50 persons,  with nightclubs and  bars reopening subject to public health guidelines. We will still have a curfew in effect from midnight to 5am daily but I think it’s fair to say we have weathered the initial storm very well in comparison with most other countries, and I believe all due credit has to be given to Premier Burt for his leadership during the crisis.  

Bearing in mind that we have a population of some 62,000 we have so far had a total of 146 confirmed Covid-19 cases, with 9 deaths, 134 persons having recovered, and at latest report we have just 3 active cases and 1 person hospitalized.  In recent weeks we have had only a few extra cases reported, hence we are now in a position to move forward with gradual re-opening.

However, it has to be said that our economy has been seriously damaged with hundreds of lay-offs;  our two major hotels,  the Hamilton Princess and Southampton Princess have announced they will be closed for a year, and this was followed by news this morning that Rosedon is closing until 2021.  Just about all cruise ship visits are cancelled for this coming season.  Bars and restaurants are struggling to survive as are many retail stores and businesses.  It remains to be seen what our Government can do to stimulate the economy.

Judging from what we have heard from our former colleagues on Island,  our ExPo members appear to have  managed to stay safe and healthy, with just one of our members, Marj Amos, testing positive  for Covid-19 after returning to the Island on a special flight from Florida where she had been vacationing,but fortunately she was asymptomatic and after 2 weeks of self isolation she tested negative and is now fully back to normal.  

We would really like to hear from our members around the world about your experiences during these most difficult of times.  How have you and your family fared during the crisis and what have you been doing, or not doing during the past 4 months?  Please drop us a line via email or in the comments section below, as we would love to hear from you.

 

29th June 2020

We have received our first reply from Dave and Penny Long in Florida.  Dave served here from 1964 - 1967 before he and his Bermudian wife, Penny, moved to Florida where Dave qualified as a pilot flying corporate jets before joining Continental Airlines as a senior pilot.  You can read more about Dave and Penny in our Then and Now column at  http://expobermuda.com/index.php/tan/17-dlong

 
David and Penny Long out on the golf course

 

"Roger has asked me and others to write something about how we are managing through this devastating pandemic: Well, as I now fit in the octogenerian age and Penny not far behind with a compromised immune system we decided to isolate ourselves as suggested by the President and his team led by the unflappable Dr Fauci, that being mid-March and we are pretty much staying in that same mode today! Most know the curve had flattened in the US and individual states were opening up, all was looking promising until Florida and others opened their bars and beaches urging masks and self distancing at which time all hell broke loose and our cases spiked as the suggestions were not upheld by the younger crowd and unfortunately the cases are still climbing.

We live in a gated community so it has not been as isolated as most areas restricted to home. A handful of years ago we scaled down our home and moved about 3/10 of a mile away and basically changed our view from our pool to the golfcourse. 

Living close to the golf course!

 

Many stop by our lanai to visit, self distancing by remaining in their golfcart and we too go for an “airing out” driving around our community on our cart stopping to say hello as we pass familiar faces. We have been so fortunate to sit idly and watch a family of Sandhill Cranes from babies to trying to take flight; Blue birds and Cardinals nest; hummimgbirds flitting by; hawks catching their prey; many song birds outdoing each other and watching grass grow! My sock drawer is in order, numerous books read and more TV than we would like to admit to and too many naps, not to mention looking like rock stars with masses of unruly hair.

I have been doing our immediate shopping with marked out social distancing lines, one-way arrows, mask wearing employees and thankfully most shoppers.The employees are constantly cleaning giving a sense of security. In the beginning the shelves were almost bare except for Ex-Lax and Rice Cakes but fortunately soon began returning to normal, well almost! Penny never too sure what product I will walk in the door with!

I do not know how we would manage with out social media especially FaceTime. It has kept us in constant touch with our daughter, grandchildren, and Penny’s sister in England. We also have made many phonecalls to keep in touch with friends and of course emails, texts and messaging. Unfortunately our daughter being one of the frontline workers as Director of Nursing contacted Covid and was extremely ill with her symptoms lingering for a long time, it was so worrisome being so far away.

Like you, we will both be happy when we can feel free and move about like we were once used to. Until this time we wish you all a healthy and safe re-entry to the life we love and cherish.

God bless

David Long

 

29th June 2020

We have also heard from former P.C. Bill Cree who served here for 2 years in 1970-1971

 
Here on MD's Eastern shore, we were extremely fortunate that because we are Rural and the population is not crowded into tight urban communities, we have extremely low Covid 19 exposure and until today, only a total 4 deaths, usually sadly because of underlying chronic health issues. 
I stay in touch with some of my Bda friends and they are apparently doing O K too.
 
Bill Cree
Dining outside in Easton, sporting my Covid facial and tonsorial  hair growth, after awhile of the in-house quarantine, I could not be bothered to shave, since our offices were closed by the Governors directive.

6th July

Robert "Bob" Payne

 

We just received the following from Robert "Bob" Payne  -  45 years ago I arrived as a new boy in Bermuda, and we all know how our lives were changed by the Bermuda experience. I have never forgotten those days. Pat and I were married at Stella Maris in St.George in 1972, so nearly 50 up. I served until 1975 and returned to UK where I served in Dorset Police and subsequently with Devon and Cornwall until retirement in 2002.....37 years in total.
As we enter the ‘ beginning of the end’ after 14 weeks in ‘ Lockdown’ ( we hope) that everyone in our great circle is fit and well, and for those who have been less fortunate, a swift return to rude health. The 14 weeks will be stained on our minds forever but, the consolation was the fantastic weather we experienced here in UK, a glorious Spring.
I will be talking to the two colleagues I keep in touch with , namely Ray Lloyd and LP Brown, that they might update you.

The Murder of Constable William Thomas Burrows Brown

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Interesting Articles

 

Retired Det/Supt George Rose
 
 
The Murder of Constable William Thomas Burrows Brown(e)
written by George Rose

 

Over 150 years ago in 1867, Police Constable Brown was murdered in Bermuda during the course of carrying out his duties. Although the name of Constable Brown(e) appears at the very top of the Bermuda Police Roll of Honour which lists the names of those officers who have died in service, the detailed circumstances surrounding his death have hitherto remained unknown. 

In Memory of Those Who Died in Service

 

Until now, that is, when fellow EXPO researcher and retired Inspector John Skinner discovered in the Bermuda Archives that Constable Brown had been – “killed in the execution of his duty” – in March 1867. This handwritten information was recorded within the Pensions section of one of the books entitled the Annual Income and Expenditure of the Government of the Colony of Bermuda – more commonly known as the Blue Books.

Rebecca [Martha] Brown received the pension sum of £40
as the widow of Constable William Thomas Burrows Brown 

 

In 1867 Rural Constable Thomas Burrows Browne (sic) became the first Bermudian officer to die in the execution of his duty. While trying to recapture an escaped prisoner, the man stabbed him and the Constable later died from an infection. Despite this tragic event, for which the assailant was committed to the local lunatic asylum, the Island generally remained free of serious crime.

Relying on the contents of the above information I conducted follow-up research using the Bermuda Library Digital Collection in an attempt to uncover details of Constable Brown’s murder. I discovered that on Tuesday, March 26, 1867 the Bermuda Royal Gazette reported as follows on the ‘STABBING AFFAIR IN HAMILTON PARISH’.

“Of this shocking affair we have been placed in possession of the following particulars: –

James Bascome – twice a patient in the *Lunatic Hospital, and from which he was discharged in October last – was brought before the Worshipful T.W. Mercer, Esq., on Monday the 18th instance by Constable F. Wood of Smith’s Parish, charged with being in the Store of Mr. Benjamin Paynter, at the Flatts’ Village, with a six-barrel revolver concealed in the right sleeve of his coat. Wood stated that his attention was drawn to the circumstance by Paynter, who had become alarmed at finding Bascome thus armed, knowing his character.

The "Lunatic Hospital" where James Bascome was a patient was
located  on the North Shore in Devonshire and shown as the Old Lunatic
Asylum in this Savage Ordnance Survey Map from the 1890's

 

“That on his (Wood) taking possession of the pistol, Bascome caught him by the throat. Wood then summoned Mr. Samuel Doe to assist him in taking Bascome to Mr. Mercer’s office. Mr. Mercer thought it necessary to call in a brother Magistrate, the Worshipful Samuel C. Outerbridge. After hearing the evidence of Constable Wood, the Magistrates decided on committing Bascome under remand, as it was known that there were at least three persons who would depose to them being in bodily fear of him. 

“The Magistrates, therefore, issued a Warrant of Committal until 10 o’clock on Thursday following, but instead of Constable Wood taking him directly to Hamilton gaol as required by the Warrant, he allowed Bascome to go to the residence of his mother, some one or two miles out of his way, and when he got there he set Wood and his authority at defiance.

“Wood then called to his aid Constable Brown, and they both entered a room pointed out to them as the one in which Bascome had secreted himself. As soon as they did so Bascome sprang from his place of concealment on Brown, and stabbed him in the right side immediately over the lung. Fortunately the wound, though dangerous, is not of so severe a nature as it doubtless would have been had not the instrument used been checked in its progress by coming in contact with one his ribs.

“Brown says he did not see Bascome till he felt the blow.

“We are pleased at being able to add that Mr. Brown was considered better by his Medical attendant last evening, though still unable to depose as to the circumstances of the case.

“Mr. Browne (sic) is an exceedingly useful man in the Parish of Hamilton, and his loss would be much felt.

“Bascome was recaptured on Friday and lodged in Hamilton gaol.”

Some days later, on Tuesday, April 2, 1867 The Bermuda Royal Gazette informed the Bermuda public that Constable Brown had died of his injuries and that a Coroner’s inquest had returned a verdict of ‘Wilful Murder’ against the killer. 

“We are truly sorry to learn that Constable Brown, of Hamilton Parish, who was stabbed on Monday week by the coloured man Bascome, as mentioned in our last issue, died from the effects of the wound on Tuesday last. 

“An inquest having been held by C. C. Keane, Esq., Coroner, a verdict of “Wilful Murder” was returned. 

“Brown has left a wife and five children, who were entirely dependent on his labour for support. We are told that the Coroner and the Jurors unanimously gave their fees to the unfortunate widow, and subscription lists have been opened for the same laudable purpose in different parts of the island.” 

On Tuesday, May 7, 1867 The Bermuda Royal Gazette informed that on the previous day at the Easter Session of the Bermuda Court of General Assize before the Honorable John Harvey Darrell, Chief Justice, and the Honorable Joseph Wood, Assistant Judge, Presiding. [After opening prayers]

“…………..The Court soon after assembled, and the Grand Jury, of which Thomas F. J. Tucker, Esq., was chosen Foreman, being empaneled, His Honor the Chief Justice delivered the following Charge:–

‘Mr. Foreman and Gentlemen of the Grand Jury I am sorry to find that the Criminal Calendar for the present Assize is more heavy than usual, and that it comprehends several cases of a very serious nature.

‘The first to which I shall direct your attention, is a charge against a coloured man residing in Hamilton Parish, for the alleged murder of a Constable, who was aiding another Constable in endeavoring to apprehend the prisoner and convey him to gaol, in obedience to an Order from the Magistrates. This prisoner was formerly a patient in the *Pauper Lunatic Hospital, from which he had some-time since been discharged; and a question will naturally arise whether he was not insane at the time of inflicting the wound, from the effects of which it is alleged the Constable afterwards died.

‘But if the evidence brought before you shall lead to the conclusion that the prisoner is the person who wounded the Constable, and that the death resulted from that wound, you will find the Bill of Indictment against the prisoner, without entering upon any enquiry whether he was then insane or not; inasmuch as that question will more properly come under investigation at a subsequent stage of the proceedings, in the event of your finding the Bill against him.

‘There is another charge for a Capital crime founded on an accusation against a private soldier of having committed a rape; and there are two charges against other persons for alleged attempts at a similar offence.

‘In all these cases it will be incumbent on you carefully to scrutinize the evidence of the complainants, and to inquire in each case whether that testimony is so far corroborated by circumstances proved by other witnesses, as to satisfy you of the truth of the accusation, and that the imputed violence was really committed against the will of the party complaining; for unless the evidence should be such as to raise a reasonable presumption of the want of consent you ought not to find these Bills of Indictment.

‘As many as five complaints for feloniously stabbing or cutting with dangerous weapons will be brought before you.

‘It is very lamentable to observe the increased frequency of crimes of this class, in the colony, within the last few years. It would seem as if the wild habits of the reckless people who resorted here in such numbers during the blockade of the Southern ports of America in the years 1864 and 65, had taken a hold in the country which has not yet entirely past away, and were still producing effects very detrimental to the peace and welfare of the community.”

One week later on Monday, May 13, 1867 at the Easter Session before the same Justices of the Bermuda Court of General Assize there appeared the following cause mention as reported in The Bermuda Royal Gazette the following day:

“The Queen ag. James Bascome.  Murder     True Bill      Tried.  

(The Jury in this case kept together from Wednesday to Saturday, and did not agree a Verdict – one of the Jury being taken ill on Saturday, and being reported by a Medical gentleman to be too ill to perform his duty as a Juror, the Jury was discharged, and another empaneled to try the case.)

Note. – Bascome’s case is now before a 2nd Jury.” 

The following week on Monday, May 20, 1867 at the same Easter Session and before the same Justices the case was again mentioned when it was reported the next day by The Bermuda Royal Gazette that –

“James Bascome’s case is probably unprecedented in the annals of our Jurisprudence, and it may be doubted whether such a case has appeared elsewhere. Two Juries having entered on the trial of the prisoner were discharged without giving any verdict, neither of them being able to agree. 

“The prisoner was indicted for the Wilful Murder of a Parish Constable, William Thomas Burrows Brown, who received a mortal wound while endeavoring to arrest Bascome.” 

“The former trial commenced on Wednesday morning, the 8th instant, and Thursday afternoon, the 9th, at 3.0 p.m., the Jury retired to consider the case.

“On Saturday, the 11th, it was reported to the Court that one of the Jurors was taken ill, and a medical gentleman having been called in to visit the ill man certified [to] the Court that he was unable to act longer as a Juror, and thereupon the Court discharged the Jury without its giving any Verdict, at ½ past 11 in the forenoon, and remanded the prisoner to Gaol.

“On Monday morning, the 13th, at 9.30, or soon after, a second Jury was empaneled, to try the case, and the second trial lasted until 7 p.m. the next day, when the Jury retired to consider its verdict. This second Jury was not more fortunate than the former one, for after remaining out until 4.0 p.m., on Saturday, the 18th, which was the last day of the Assizes, the Foreman announced that there was no probability of its agreeing to a verdict, and the Court, in consideration of the near approach of the close of the Session, discharged the second Jury, and again remanded the prisoner. He therefore still remains for trial.

“The Court stands adjourned to Monday, the 3rd proximo, at 11 o’clock.”

As will have been noticed by reports during this month of May, it is apparent that the Royal Gazette newspaper was only published every Tuesday in those far off days and it is recorded that one item had advised that the Gazette had bumped the proceedings of the House in favour of advertising.  It is reasonably likely to think that the same policy had been adopted in the reporting of court cases whereby if they got too old they were likely omitted altogether.

Nevertheless, The Bermuda Royal Gazette reported as follows in their Tuesday, November 12, 1867 issue that on the previous day at the Michaelmas Term of the Bermuda Court of General Assize before the Honorable John H. Darrell, Chief Justice, and the Honorable Eugenius Harvey, Assistant Judge, Presiding.

“The Queen vs James Bascome – Murder – Tried, and found not guilty on account of his insanity at the time of the commission of the offence.”

View of Hamilton in 1868 by Arthur Green
Sessions House is the large building at top right which then housed the House of Assembly
and the Supreme Court where  James Bascome was tried twice before being found not
guilty on account of his insanity at the time of the commission of the offence.
 

There are as yet unconfirmed and somewhat confusing accounts on line that Constable William Thomas Burrows Brown was born in Bermuda in 1820 as the eldest son and 4th child of Adam John Meek Brown (1782-1872) and Grace Sandiford (1793-1876) whom he married in 1814. Adam J. M. Brown is thought to have been a shipbuilder in Hamilton Parish and is believed to have been of Scottish ancestry.  

Constable Browne [note the change in spelling, as William Thomas Browne is said to have added the ‘e’ on to his last name and used it consistently] married Rebecca Martha Webb in 1841 in Bermuda and together they had raised 7 children.

Holy Trinity Church, Hamilton Parish
Photo taken by J.B. Heyl

 

Parish records examined at the Bermuda National Library show that Constable Browne was buried in the cemetery grounds at the Holy Trinity Church, Trinity Church Road, Hamilton Parish, Bermuda. I’ve made prolonged enquiries with church vestry staff in an effort to locate the burial site in the hope that an inscribed gravestone could be located which may have revealed useful information and also thereby have provided the opportunity for a commemorative police experience. 

Sadly, this exercise has thus far been to no avail. The most abiding explanation given is that because of a protracted re-numbering of the graves some 13 years ago the exact location of the plot cannot now be ascertained and has probably been lost forever.

Holy Trinity Church, Hamilton Parish
This photograph was hand painted circa 1900
 published by S. Nelmes, The Tower.

 

15th June 2020

Editors note -  It is most unlikely that we will ever find a photograph or likeness of Constable William Thomas Burrows Brown(e), but we are hoping that we may find one or more of his descendants if any are still here in Bermuda, or elsewhere.  George Rose is currently following a line of enquiry which might hopefully trace descendants of his family.  If you can assist in any way please contact our website at info@expobermuda.com

We were also looking for an old photograph of Holy Trinity Church, along with an old photo of the Sessions House pre-1900 which we believe housed the Court of Assize, or Supreme Court,  where James Bascome was tried twice before being found not guilty on the grounds of insanity.  Within a few hours of publishing an appeal on the website 'Bermuda History: Our Island; Our Heritage', we received the above images of both the Sessions House and Nelmes photo of Holy Trinity Church kindly submitted by Gerri Crockwell to whom we are most indebted.  

Gerri also kindly provided information about the "Pauper Lunatic Hospital" where James Bascome had been treated prior to this matter going before the court, and he was probably returned to the hospital after his trial.   The "Lunatic Hospital"  as it was then called was built on a piece of 7 acre property on the North Shore in Devonshire in 1846 and was used for 22 years before being moved to the former Devonshire College Building.  

We thought at first it was likely that the Lunatic Hospital was the building later used as a military hospital which still  stands on Palmetto Road just to the east of the Tyne's Bay incinerator, but   Seán Pòl Ó Creachmhaoil then kindly produced  an extract from the Savage Ordnance Survey Map from the 1890's showing the site of the "Old Lunatic Asylum" just off the North Shore in Devonshire.   Seán also provided us with additional photos of Holy Trinity Church and other landmarks, while Linda Esch, also a contributor to 'Bermuda History: Our Island, Our Heritage' has reported that the old building still exists on Long Range Hill in Devonshire.

George Rose and I are both extremely grateful for and most impressed  by the assistance we received from contributors to the 'Bermuda History: Our Island, Our History' website.  It is clearly an invaluable resource for anyone studying the history of Bermuda, and I for one will be calling on the website again whenever we are conducting research and we need assistance.  Many thanks to all concerned for your assistance on this project.

27th June 2020

EDITORS NOTE -   George Rose continued his efforts to locate the exact site of the old "Lunatic Hospital/Asylum" as it was then called, and has just provided this additional information about exacty where it was located:-   

"Extended enquiries to trace the exact location of the Lunatic Asylum resulted in me making a walking visit to the site in company with a knowledgeable member of the Cox family living nearby who explained that after demolition of the Asylum it was replaced by a three-storey building conventionally known as the Incubator.  

We stood at the site once occupied by the 'Incubator' which, in turn, was also demolished to make way for an estate of condominiums. The Asylum once stood directly east of, and adjacent to, the existing seniors' care residence known as 
Elder Home Care Services immediately south of the railway tracks in Devonshire Parish."
 
1st April 2023
Poem by Alan Smith
(published courtesy of the author)
 
 
EDITORS NOTE  -  Whilst attending the official opening of Holy Trinity Church's 400th  Anniversary Exhibition  held at the Edinburgh Gallery, at City Hall in Hamilton on Saturday 1st April 2023,  it was pointed out to me that the above poem about the murder of P.C. William Thomas Burrows Brown(e) which was written by Alan Smith earlier in the year, was on display in the exhibition. The curator of this excellent exhibition, Vaughan Evans, had been made aware of the murder of William T.B Brown(e) when George Rose was making enquiries in an attempt to locate P.C. Browne's grave in the Holy Trinity Church graveyard.  Mr. Alan Smith had written several poems related to the history of Holy Trinity Church especially for the exhibition.
 
Also on display at the exhibition was a timeline for the 400 year history of Holy Trinity Church, and an entry for 1867 made special mention of the stabbing of Constable William Thomas Burrows Brown(e) and his death several days later of an infection 
 
 Extract of Timeline for 400 year history
of Holy Trinity Church
 

Annual ExPo Reception - January 2020

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The following article about our Annual Post-Christmas Reception at the Officers Mess should have been posted shortly after the reception was held on Saturday 18th January 2020, but unfortunately, our website crashed during that same weekend and was out of action for approximately 6 weeks.  We apologize for the delay in its publication.  

Organizers of the ExPo Reception
Gail Correia (Treasurer) and Cal Smith (President)
 

We held our annual ExPo post-Christmas reception at the Officers Mess on Saturday 18th January 2020, and despite rather blustery conditions we had an excellent turnout with about 50 people in attendance, and a good time was had by all.

Senior Wine Tasters!
Reese Bartley, Ralph Lindo and Vendal Bridgeman
 

The Officers Mess is an ideal location for this event because it is not only the perfect size, but it is also now being used to house the Police History Museum which most of our members had not seen before.

Commissioner Stephen Corbishley was in attendance and warmly welcomed everyone to the Mess. He made a special point of recognizing the valuable contribution our ExPo members have made, and continue to make to the BPS.

Commissioner Corbishley also kindly awarded Police commendations to three of our members, George Rose, John Skinner, and myself (Roger Sherratt).

George Rose receives a Commendation from COP Stephen Corbishley
 

George was commended for his outstanding work in researching the life of Edward “Bosun” Swainson, the first cricketer to score a century in Cup Match and also the first black officer promoted to the rank of Inspector. George spent 2 years conducting his research and wrote an excellent article about “Bosun”.  CLICK HERE to view the article on our website.  As a result of George’s work on this project, a member of the Swainson family very kindly donated the cricket bat and cricket pads used by “Bosun” along with a cricket ball, and a trophy awarded to him, to the BPS and which are now on display in a room set aside specially for Police History items* at the Officers Mess.

Presentation to COP Corbishley by John Skinner.
After John received his Commissioner's Commendation he in turn 
presented ther Commissioner with a hard copy of his extensive
List of Police Officers 1879-1979 for the Police Museum
 

The commendation awarded to John Skinner was for his outstanding work in compiling a list of all those men and women who have served in the Bermuda Police during the 100 years between 1879 (the date of the official founding of the Police Force) and 1979. This amazing list, comprising over 3,000 names, can be found on our ExPo website, and John presented a hard copy of it to Commissioner Corbishley at the reception. It has taken John countless hours of research and cross-checking to produce the list, and he has pointed out that some of the official police records, particularly those for the 1950’s are not 100% accurate with some names missing. CLICK HERE to view John's list.

Editors note - We would ask you to please check the list and let us know if you discover that any names are missing. The beauty of John’s list is that it can easily be added to or corrected if mistakes are ever found.

Awards Galore!
(l-r) Roger Sherratt, George Rose, Cal Smith, John Skinner and COP Corbishley 
 

Commissioner Corbishley also presented yours truly with a commendation for close to a decade of being the Editor-in-Chief of our ExPo website which has always been intended to provide former and retired members of the Bermuda Police Service with a means of “keeping in touch with each other” in addition to recording our collective history for future generations. Ironically, the website happened to go down over the week-end of the reception because of serious technical problems! Fortunately, it is now operating again as you will know if you are now able to read this article.

Nadine and Robin Henagulph 
Sue and Dave Garland 
Bob and Susan Stewart

It was great to see some of our senior (age-wise) colleagues at the reception, including Robin (joined in 1962) and Nadine Henagulph, Dave (joined in 1961) and Sue Garland, Arthur Bean (joined in 1960), Bob (joined in 1959) and Susan Stewart, and Keith Lovell (joined in 1959).

Arthur Bean and Reese Bartley 
 
Steve Shaw, Dave Ashurst and Roddie Barclay
Carolyn Haynes, Rose Pearman, Reese and Gilda Bartley
 
 Juanita Shaw, Roddie Barclay and Marj Amos*

Editors note -  * CLICK HERE for an article in our Keeping in Touch column (dated 10th May) about a major shock Marj Amos had following a trip to Fort Lauderdale not long after our Reception, during which she had problems returning to Bermuda because of the coronavirus pandemic causing severe disruption to airline schedules.  

Our ExPo President, retired Inspector and presently the Commissioner’s Staff Officer, Cal Smith, welcomed everyone to the reception and asked for a moment of reflection in memory of those of our members who have passed during the past year. They were:-

D.C. Franklyn “Frank” Deallie            January          2019
Insp Neil Cox                                     January          2019
P.C. Stephen Foster                          January          2019
C/Insp Peter Stubbs                          January          2019
C/Insp David Parsons                        February        2019
P.C. Frank Dowie                               May                2019
P.C. Michael Parris                            May                 2019
P.C. Frank Thompson                       July                  2019
Sgt Laurie Phillips                             July                  2019
C/Insp Gerald “Gerry” James           July                  2019
P.C. Leroy Jones                              August             2019
PS Crawford “Crow” Rae                 September       2019
PC Kevin John Brennan                  October           2019
Insp. Stanley Colin Hill                     November       2019
PC Brian David Malpas                   January           2020 
 

All in all, this was a most enjoyable evening even if many of the stories told were somewhat embellished, and many of those who were not present were subjected to the kind of gossip specially reserved for such gatherings.

Finally, a sincere thanks to Inspector Grant Tomkins, and to former P.C. John Sweeting who was visiting the Island, for kindly agreeing to man the bar for the evening.

CLICK HERE to view our complete Photo Album of this ExPo Reception.

John Sweeting and Grant Tomkins

More Articles …

  1. Memories of Police Beach
  2. Fugitives who live in fear
  3. Coronavirus insights from Portugal - Craig Morfitt
  4. John Skinner's Amazing List
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