Saturday, April 18, 2015

1957 ~ Brownsville Police Department at Ft. Brown Administration building No.4 built 1867

 '57 Fords~ This photo was taken after a new fleet of patrol cars were delivered.
These photos were taken by B-P-D Ret. Captain Ruben Garcia when he was relatively new on the force.  In 2014 I interviewed Capt. Garcia to record the names of these police officers.  His recall seen here is a testament to his memory and a glimpse of the great historian he was.  

The man on left is "Charlie" Butcher [Thanks to Pattie Medina for the correction.]



The Ft. Brown Army called that building no.4.  It was the Administration from 1867 until the fort closed in the late 1940s.  The city purchased much of the Ft. Brown property including buildings.  The police department had been in the Market Square building which was renovated in 1948.  They moved into temporarily into a building on E Elizabeth and 11th then the Ft Brown building.

 late 1940s photo of Police Headquarters in Fort Brown Administration Building
 Side view of police headquarters
Building No.4 ~ 1920's when Ft. Brown was still used by the U.S. Army


Photos courtesy of the Brownsville Historical Association

8 comments:

  1. One of the photos name Charles Butler, it was Butcher, Charlie Butcher, he was a neighbor. Good work. Keep it up!

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    1. Thats right. Thays my grandfather. Charley Butcher

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  2. Thanks Pattie! A correction has been inserted under the photo.

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  3. yes thanks Pattie, that was Dad..He was with the BPD from 1949 to 1989..he had a lot of stories

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  4. I'm looking for CAMEROS from Brownsville TX...

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    2. Check with the Historic Ass. I doubt they would be of any use but they're the people you're supposed to be able to be able to check with and get viable assistance or advice. If we had a local genealogical society they would be your first choice but the BHA had those genealogical records that were once used by local genealogists until the Central Library transferred those library stacks to the BHA in the Old City Cemetery Center which is now closed and going to be used as the Costumes of America. The genealogical records were removed and stored away by the Stillman Museum people but I doubt you'll get access or assistance from anyone who knows how to assist you and if you do let us know! Your best best would be to use the Ancestry.com database records or similar service such as www.genealogybank.com which you can probably do for free at your local library. Good luck

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    3. I am the granddaughter of Jose Camer

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