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A Time Line Of
The Hatfield Police Department
- 1670 - The
town of Hatfield was incorporated after separating from the town
of Hadley on the east side of the Connecticut river. As part
of Hampshire County in Massachusetts, Hatfield was required to
elect a constable to enforce both the bylaws of the town and
the laws of the county and state. The law required that a constable
be appointed each year at the annual town meeting. Constables
served for one year and were not obligated to serve two consecutive
years but did have to remain in their position until another
had been appointed to replace them. If someone was chosen by
the town to be the new constable and he (or she) refused the
position, he/she was fined $20.
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- 1924 - Two hundred and fifty years after
incorporation, the town of Hatfield established its own police
department. The first chief, Arthur R. Breor, was appointed on
February 27, 1924 and was chief for twenty-three years. His duties
as chief were part-time. He had the use of a town vehicle and
his annual salary was $2,100. He was also required to be the
welfare agent and dog officer for the town. He carried the one
gun that belonged to the department and wore only a police hat--there
was no police uniform.
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- 1947 - Chief Breor resigned from his
position as chief after a controversy developed over the chief's
salary. James McGrath was appointed interim chief and would remain
in that position for seven years.
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- 1954 - Henry J. Sliwoski was appointed chief of police in July of 1954. He would serve as chief for twenty-eight years, until he retired in 1982. His salary was $75 a month and the position was still part-time. There was no police cruiser and still only one gun for the entire department that was passed from officer to officer when they went on patrol. All of the officers were part-time and patrolled in their own cars and were paid mileage by the town.
Hatfield Police Auxiliary
Circa 1954
From Left to Right - Front
Row: Adolf
Ciszewski, William Symanski, Anthony Sikorski, Stanley Jagodzinski,
John Besko, Harry Lizek. Back
Row: Robert
Thayer, William Slowikowski, Ralph Vollinger, Henry Szych, Stanley
Symanski, Frank Godek. Not
In Photo: David
Omasta, Thaddeus Kabot, Walter Harubin.
![[HPD Auxiliary circa 1954]](auxiliary.jpg) |
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- 1955 - Chief Sliwoski obtained the first
police cruiser for the town through the Massachusetts Civil Defense
Agency. It was a 1954 Chevrolet that was painted all white and
had the town seal on the door.
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- 1956 - A second car was purchased from
the Massachusetts Civil Defense Agency. This one was a station
wagon that would also serve as an ambulance.
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- 1958 - All part-time police officers
were given gun permits for the first time. The town purchased
guns for the officers through the Massachusetts Civil Defense
Agency at a cost of $2.50 each. The town also purchased a pair
of handcuffs.
Policemen's Ball 1958
From Left to Right - Front
Row: Mitchell
Kempisty, Peter Malinowski, Stanley Filipek, Henry Sliwoski, John
Brennan, Stanley Malinowski.
Back Row: George
Omasta, James E. McGrath, William Podmayer, Peter Kubosiak, Stanley
Prunal, Joseph S. Wilkes, Anthony Malinowski, Henry Kosakowski,
Peter Backiel.
![[HPD Policemen's Ball 1958]](department.jpg) |
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- 1966 - The town purchased their first
ambulance for $3,254.10. This eliminated the need for the officer
on patrol to transport injured parties to the hospital.
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- 1970 - The police department obtained
their first two-way radio from the Massachusetts State Police
for use in their cruiser. This allowed the officer on patrol
to communicate directly with the state police barracks in Northampton,
which received many of the police calls for Hatfield.
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- 1973 - The police department hired its
first police woman, Patricia E. Cady.
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- 1976 - Through the Comprehensive Employment
Training Act (CETA) program, the town hired three full-time police
officers. All three would eventually leave the department or
become part-time officers.
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- 1979 - The Massachusetts State Police
modernized its radio system and replaced the one radio in the
Hatfield police cruiser with a compatible one.
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- 1982 - Chief David M. Hurley was appointed
to replace Chief Sliwoski. He is still the current active police
chief. In order to comply with the current state law, all police
officers in town were now required to attend formalized training
at the Massachusetts Criminal Justice Training Council police
academy in Agawam.
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- 1983 - Crocker Communications in Greenfield
hired to serve as police dispatch for all emergency calls in
town. Before this date, a "blue phone" network had
served the town, where blue police phones were installed in various
residents homes who agreed to be available to answer police calls
during predetermined times of the day.
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- 1984 - First Hatfield Police Department
policies and procedures manual was implemented.
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- 1985 - Gregory Weeks hired as the town's
first regular full-time police officer. A parking clerk was also
appointed and parking tickets were obtained by the town to enforce
parking laws. Although the parking by-laws were created thirty-six
years earlier by Chief Sliwoski in 1949, they were not enforceable
until a parking clerk was appointed.
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- 1994 - The Town of Hatfield joined the
Massachusetts State Police Public Safety Answering Point (PSAP)
regional dispatch center at the Northampton State Police barracks,
replacing Crocker Communications as police dispatch. As a result,
the town was now equipped with Enhanced 911 (E911) telephone
service, allowing the name and address of a caller dialing 9-1-1
to appear on a computer screen in the dispatch center.
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- 1996 - Tom Osley was appointed the second
regular full-time police officer.
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- 1997 - The Hatfield Police Department gets its first four-wheel drive police cruiser--a 1997 Ford Explorer.
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- 2005 - The Hatfield Police Department obtains its first lidar (laser) speed measuring device for enforcing speed limits.
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- 2005 - As part of a Homeland Security Grant, the Hatfield Police Department obtained a four-wheel-drive all-terrain vehicle for reaching those places inaccessible by a full-sized police cruiser.
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- 2007 - Chief David Hurley retired as police chief after 25 years of service. Lt. Thomas Osley became acting police chief.
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- 2007 - Lt. Thomas Osley was appointed as the permanent police chief.
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