Every Place Has a Story

Women Police Officers on Patrol

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The Vancouver Police Museum’s Kristin Hardie solved the mystery of this ca.1940 photo. The women police officers on patrol are Bessie Say and Jeanette Heathorn.

This great Foncie photo of two women police officers ran in Sensational Vancouver, in a chapter called “Lurancy Harris’s Beat.” Lurancy was the first female police officer in Canada when she was hired along with Minnie Millar by the Vancouver Police Department in 1912, and one of my favourite historical characters.

Jeanette Heathorn and Bessie Say patrol the 400 block West Hastings ca.1940. Photo courtesy Vancouver Police Museum
Bessie Say  and Jeanette Heathorn patrol the 400 block West Hastings ca.1940. Photo courtesy Vancouver Police Museum
Naming the mystery women:

The photo and much of the information about early women police officers came from the Vancouver Police Museum. At the time, the women in the photo were not identified, and the photo was thought to be 1940s.

Kristin Hardie at the Police Museum has now solved the mystery and tells me that the woman on the left is Bessie Say, VPD constable 193 and employed between 1921 and 1941. On the right is Jeanette Heathorn who worked as a police matron in 1938 and 1939. That also narrows down the date of the Foncie photo to between 1938 and 1941.

Bessie is intriguing.

According to a 1970 newspaper article that Kristin sent, Bessie who died at 90, was a retired Vancouver city police matron and former first-class constable in charge of the women’s section of the jail.

Before Bessie arrived in Vancouver she had been a prison guard in England and in Australia.

“In her early days she was keen on horse racing and kept up her interest in hockey, going out to games until a year before her death,” notes the reporter. “She was believed the first fully trained policewoman to be employed by any force in Canada when she was sworn in as matron at the city jail in September 1921.”

I don’t doubt it. Poor Lurancy and Minnie were thrown into the job with no training, no uniform and no gun.

And, three decades later when this photo was taken, things weren’t much better. Women didn’t get uniforms until 1947, they weren’t allowed to drive police cars until 1948 (they went to calls on foot or took the street car), and it wasn’t until the 1970s that women had the right to carry firearms and were assigned the same duties as their male counterparts.

Apparently Bessie didn’t slow down after retirement. She was active in the Red Cross during the Second World War, and according to the article, travelled extensively. “She was camping at 84. She took a daily walk, even through last December’s snow.”

Jeanette also lived a long life. She died in 1992 aged 86.

For more about Vancouver’s first woman police officer see Lurancy Harris

For another photo mystery that was solved see: The Story Behind this 1924 photo

joe ricci et al

© All rights reserved. Unless otherwise indicated, all blog content copyright Eve Lazarus.

Meet Lurancy Harris: Canada’s First Woman Police Officer

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Lurancy Harris and Minnie Millar became the first two women police officers in Canada when they were hired by the VPD in 1912

The following is an excerpt from Sensational Vancouver.

Lurancy Harris and the Vancouver Police Department
Lurancy Harris ca.1915. Vancouver Archives
Joins VPD:

Lurancy Harris was a 48-year-old seamstress from Nova Scotia had moved to Vancouver in 1911 and rented a small apartment on Robson at Howe. One day she was flipping through a newspaper when an ad caught her eye. The Vancouver Police Department was looking for “two good reliable women” to form the nucleus of a women’s protective division centred around issues of morality and protecting the safety of wayward women and children.

She and Millar were sworn in as fourth class constables, the lowest rank in the department with a salary of $80 a month. The women were given full police powers and thrown into the job with no training, no uniform and no gun.

Lurancy Harris
A typical outfit worn by a woman police officer ca. 1912 displayed at the Vancouver Police Museum. Eve Lazarus photo, 2013
First Arrest:

Lurancy made her first arrest five months after she was hired. In the Prisoner Record book of 1912 at the Vancouver Police Museum, Annie Smith, 38, alias Mrs. Stanfield, a bigamist from England told police that she believed that her husband was dead and had answered a personal ad in a Spokane newspaper, met and then married a Mr. Stanfield. On account of his “cruelty” she fled to Vancouver with her two small children. Stanfield found her, found the original Mr. Smith and the two men went to police. While Annie was found “technically guilty” she was given a suspended sentence “on account of the troubles and suffering she had endured.”

Lurancy Harris
Prisoner Record Book, 1912 Vancouver Police Museum
Arrest of Lorena Mathews:

Lurancy’s big break came a month later when she was given the task of escorting Lorena Mathews on the train back to Oklahoma after she was arrested in Vancouver. Mathews had bolted across the continent with her two children and Jim Chapman, her 25-year-old black lover who was suspected of helping her murder her much older husband. Chapman was convicted, Mathews was acquitted, and Lurancy got a promotion.

In 1916, Lurancy bought a lot on Venables Street in East Vancouver. She had a small craftsman house built and planted a monkey tree. The house is still there, a second floor was added in 1983, and the monkey tree towers over it all.

Lurancy Harris
1836 Venables Street. Eve Lazarus photo, 2014.

By all accounts, Lurancy had an amazing career. In 1924 she was promoted to inspector, although she was kept at the pay scale of a sergeant. She retired in 1928 aged 65.

While more women gradually joined the police force, things were slow to change. Women did not get uniforms until 1947, they were not allowed to drive police cars until 1948 (they went to calls on foot or took the street car), and it wasn’t until the 1970s that women had the right to carry firearms and were assigned to the same duties as their male counterparts.

© All rights reserved. Unless otherwise indicated, all blog content copyright Eve Lazarus.