George W. Matsell
George Washington Matsell (1811 – July 25, 1877) was the first New York City Police Commissioner.
Biography
He was born in New York City, New York in 1811 to George Joshua Matsell. His father was an English immigrant from Norfolk. Matsell worked as an apprentice in his father's bookstore during his childhood, eventually opening a bookstore of his own. He married Ellen Miriam Barrett on April 6, 1834. He became a police magistrate in 1840.
Observing that the city had long since outgrown the outdated city guard system, Matsell began organizing regular night patrols throughout the city, especially along the New York riverfront, where they made several arrests and were successful in preventing criminal activities. Matsell's efforts would soon influence police reforms which would not only be adopted in New York but, with the passage of the Municipal Police Act in 1844, throughout the United States as well.
Under the act, police departments were given a larger responsibility over the city and New York Mayor William Frederick Havemeyer would soon promote Matsell as police chief of the newly created New York City Police Department. Among the new reforms under Matsell's administration, patrol methods were improved and a strict discipline instilled, the results of which would be seen during the Astor Place Riots of 1849 and common violence seen during between Nativist and Tammany supporters during New York's political elections. Matsell would also seek to establish a special police division to patrol the cities river and waterfront areas, with property values at an estimated $350 million ($9.92 billion in present-day terms[1]), to protect against the numerous river pirates of the period.
In 1857, the Metropolitan Police Act was passed by the state legislature in favor of the previous Municipal Police Act over a decade earlier and allowed the establishment of a police commission to oversee the New York's law enforcement. In the ensuing battle for control of the NYPD however, Matsell was forced to resign his position as the commission assumed administrative control. See New York City Police Riot. In 1859 he was the author of "Vocabulum, or, The rogue's lexicon: compiled from the most authentic sources".
In 1866, George Wilkes and Enoch Camp sold the National Police Gazette to Matsell.[2][lower-alpha 1]
Upon the reelection of Havemeyer in 1871, Matsell was again nominated for a position as superintendent of police. He was soon appointed as a police commissioner, and officially elected president of the board of police commissioners in July 1873. His return would only be a brief one as, with the defeat of Havemayer the following year, Matsell left along with him returning to the law firm which had previously established.
He died on July 25, 1877.[4]
Notes
- ↑ Other sources state that Wilkes sold the Gazette shortly after his purchase of the The Spirit of the Times in 1856, and that Matsell was the publisher of the Gazette through the American Civil War.[3]
References
- ↑ Consumer Price Index (estimate) 1800–2014. Federal Reserve Bank of Minneapolis. Retrieved February 27, 2014.
- ↑ Mott, Frank Luther (1938). A History of American Magazines 1741–1850. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. pp. 328, 418 and footnote 132. OCLC 1893743.
- ↑ Betts, John Rickards (Spring 1953). "Sporting Journalism in Nineteenth-Century America". American Quarterly 5 (1): 42. JSTOR 3031289.
- ↑ "Death of George W. Matsell". New York Times. July 26, 1877. Retrieved 2011-05-10.
George Washington Matsell, ex-President of the Board of Police, and twice Superintendent of Police in the City, died at 7:10 A.M. yesterday, at his residence in East Fifty-eighth-street, after an illness extending over three weeks. At his bedside were his wife, three sons, and his daughter. He was conscious and...
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