Under
Spanish law, before the conquest of Trinidad by the British forces in 1797, the
police force in Trinidad came
under the control of the Agualcil Mayor, who was a member of the Illustrious
Cabildo which formed the effective government of the colony.
The
police in those days comprised six men. These were kept in at St. Joseph, the
old capital of Trinidad. As the little village of Cumucurapo grew into the town
known as Port of Spain, their activities became increasingly concentrated
there. At the time of the British conquest, Trinidad was going through a very
turbulent period. The Spanish colonial establishment was relatively small,
comprising a dozen or so officials, headed by Governor Chacon and supported by
a handful of local Spaniards, a few Frenchmen and a couple of Irishmen. Their
chores derived mostly from criminal elements and republicans both black and
white, runaway slaves, freebooters and members of various militaries who absent
without leave. All these found a ready heaven in Trinidad, arriving by the
hundreds from the nearby islands and from down the main. They challenged
Chacon's authority almost daily and alarmed the French creole establishment,
who were conservative royalists and who had invested what was left of their
fortunes in the purchase of slaves and the establishment of plantations. Both property
and life were under threat on a regular basis. Chacon could not handle it for
much longer.
All
this changed with the arrival of the British forces. Sir Ralph Abercromby left
his aide-de-camp Colonel Thomas Picton in command of the island. Historian
Michael Anthony recounts his words to Picton:
"I
have placed you in a trying and delicate position, nor ... can I leave you a
strong garrison: but I shall give you ample powers. Execute Spanish law as well
as you can. Do justice according to your conscience. That is all that can be
expected of you."
With
some 15,000 people, mostly French-speaking, both European and African, who had
republican sentiments and disliked the English for their support of the French
royalists, Picton's job must have been a tough one. History shows that he dealt
forcefully with insurgents, malcontents, revolutionaries, lunatics, criminals
and opportunists by deporations, public hangings, decapitations and the
exposing of body parts of the executed at the town gate and other public
places, as was the custom in England and the continent of Europe at the time.
Colonel
Picton created a military police force. One could say that the military
tradition of the police service in Trinidad, which has come down to the
present, has its origins from Picton's time. Picton "instituted the
compulsory enlistment of Free Blacks and coloured men into the police and as a
result the police force was soon regarded (and so it was considered for many
years) not as an essential service but as a form of punishment." writes
Fr. Anthony de Verteuil in his "History of the Irish in Trinidad".
Certainly,
it became an important employer for the Barbadians, Grenadians, Vincentians and
other "small islanders', who came in great numbers to this island. Even in
the 1930s, when former police commissioner Eustace Bernard joined the service,
he could write in his memoirs:
"The
Trinidadian, not the Tobagonian, thought that it was 'infra-dig' to become a
policeman, and that the policeman's status, if he had one, was low
indeed."
From
very early on, recruits did in fact come from overseas, not just the British colonies
in the West Indies, but significantly from Ireland. Fr. de Verteuil recounts
that in 1823, the police force consisted of James Mean, who was the Chief of
Police, Assistant Chief H.G. Peake, Corporal Alexander Sandy, and Constables John
McCarthy, B. Vasquez, Peter Stevens, Michael Christie, James Stephens and Peter
MacDonald. 2 years later, there were 100 constables in the service, mostly from
Barbados.
The
commissioned officers were of course from Europe, as all positions of authority
during this period of colonial rule were held by British officials. There was
an inspector, later called inspector commandant, and two sub-inspectors. Not
all the Barbadians who entered the force in those years had African ancestors. There was in Barbados a relatively large
community of impoverished white people, who had been transported to the island
during the previous century, some to be servants of the upper classes, others
to serve indentureships on similar contracts as the Indians who came to Trinidad.
These were called "Red Legs" for obvious reasons and because of the
class system endemic in the colonial period were treated no differently from
the coloureds by the official establishment, who were or pretended to be of the
upper classes.
A
quarter of century later, in 1877, five members of the Royal Irish Constabulary
were brought into the local police force. In 1876, the Police Headquarters was
built on St. Vincent Street. On the site of this building once stood the
barracks of the old West India Regiment which was brought back from Martinique
in 1802. It was built in the Italian gothic style of limestone quarried at
Picadilly Street in Port of Spain and cost some £90,000 altogether. It was
equipped with an iron ball on a flag post, which fell precisely at midday
Greenwich mean time.
It
contained a residence for the head of the force as well as quarters for the
volunteer fire brigade and the volunteer corps. At one time, the stipendiary
magistrate of Port of Spain held his daily court there. In 1882, it burnt down
as a result of a fire started in the lamp room. 1862 [?] saw the establishment
of a "plain clothes detective branch".
In
1884, Commandant Baker described the force as being composed of 436 men of all
ranks including 30 additional in that year. His staff consisted of two
inspectors, Englishmen, one posted in Port of Spain, the other in San Fernando.
A sergeant major from the Irish constabulary for each division, five sergeant
superintendents, one a black man, the others former soldiers from the Irish
constabulary, 21 sergeants, both white and coloured, 26 corporals of mixed
ancestry, three grades of constables, full strength 350, some of who were
European, the others mostly from Barbados "and two or three natives of
Trinidad in the whole force, who are usually wathless from stupidity. Besides
this stupidity, there is a great dislike to enter the force amongst the natives
and the dislike has existed for years." [Source?]
J.
N. Brierly came to Trinidad in 1874 to join the police force. Making a name for
himself as a detective, he became senior inspector and was instrumental in
laying out San Fernando and Port of Spain into beats. Fr. de Verteuil recounts
that he travelled extensively to all parts of the island on horseback, giving lectures
and instructions. Amongst those Irish were Darcy Costelloe, Fahay Flynn, Murphy
Peake and Fraser.
The
police force was to be severely tested in the last decade of the 19th century
with the Hosay Riots and with the Cannes Brulées Riots, when pitched battles
were fought both in the countryside and in Port of Spain between poui stick
wielding batonniers and policemen armed with riot batons. By 1890, the York and
Lancaster regiment that had been stationed at St. James barracks, left
Trinidad. They had been stationed here from the conquest, a distinguished corps
whose battle honours include the peninsular wars (March 29, 1815) to the 2nd battalion
Aribia (Feb 24, 1824), to the whole regiment India (December 12, 1826). To this
day, buttons are found bearing the distinctive rose and the numbers 65 and 84.
A
great many Irish policemen were to stay on in Trinidad and marry into local
families both black and white.
In
1903, the force now considerably strengthened and housed at St. James barracks
in quarters vacated by the York & Lancaster regiment, assumed a military
character and was turned out in force to deal with the rioters of the Water
Riots, who subsequently succeeded in burning down the Red House. Former
commissioner Eustace Bernard, who entered the Police Barracks in 1934,
remembers a police force cast in the model of the old school, 2000 strong,
commanded by Colonel A.S. Mavrogordato, "every officer was white and with
few exceptions came from the United Kindgom. They were termed commissioned
officers."
Their
appointments had to be published in the Royal Gazette, an official British
publication. Bernard recalls that the highest rank a constable could get was
sergeant major. He remembers the three local men who rose to that rank as Sgt.
Major Rose of the ... department, Sgt. Major Woods in charge of training and
Sgt. Major Williams in charge of police headquarters. There was a Sergeants' Mess for non-commissioned
officers of the rank of sergeant and above, where no one below that rank may
enter and in a similar manner the Officers' Mess.
In
those days, there was no such thing as a 44-hour week. Men in training worked
for their officers, "making up beds, sweeping floors, cleaning yards and
boots, chopping wood etc." Eustace Bernard was in fact the first local man of colour to rise from the rank of constable to that of Commissioner of Police.
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