Caught short

Sergeant Joyce
Sergeant Joyce

On one occasion, a driver I observed drive through a stop sign without stopping wouldn’t stop when I tried to pull him over.  He drove for several blocks with me behind him, lights flashing.  Finally he did stop in front of a house but jumped out of his car and ran inside.  His wife, who he left to deal with me, was laughing so hard when I approached the vehicle she could hardly contain herself.  She handed me his wallet and told me he didn’t stop because he had to get home to use the bathroom.  His need was greater than his fear of the police.  I decided under the circumstances I might have done the same thing and let the matter pass.

Joyce spent 21 years on the Dallas Police Department.  These are some random anecdotes from her time in uniform.

Turning 40

Sergeant Joyce
Sergeant Joyce

When I turned 40, I was in patrol working deep nights.  On my birthday, my long-time partner Rodney Spain, trying to help me grasp the enormity of the occasion, assured me what I called freckles on the backs of my hands were in fact age spots.  The night went downhill from there.  Our sergeant Carl Dorman and Rodney handcuffed me to my squad car’s push bumper on Flagpole Hill, an area frequented by the gay community and the usual assortment of unsavory characters that frequent big city parks in the wee hours.  Then they drove off and left me.  I like to think they stopped somewhere where they could still see me in case some ne’er-do-well happened by and was inclined to take advantage of my situation.  Fortunately, I was less matronly back then and was able to contort my body so that I could reach my handcuffs key in my pocket and escape my predicament.  Carl and Rodney left in Carl’s patrol car so I drove to the 7-11 we frequented, marking out when I got there.

Joyce spent 21 years on the Dallas Police Department.  These are some random anecdotes from her time in uniform. 

War between the states

 


A Rambling Reminiscence of Experiences During the Great War Between the States

by Jacob Harris Rockwell

Chapter I

More than half a century has rolled by since the beginning of the gigantic struggle.  It would be marvelous indeed for one to commit to memory, without erring in any of the incidents occurring in such varying experiences, and if I should err in any of the brief statements, I hope some comrade will kindly correct me so here goes for the first random shot.

I make no claim to a brilliant war record but, to me, there were many thrilling experiences.

On the 14th of June, 1861 I enlisted as a private soldier in a cavalry company of Missouri State Guards, commanded by Captain T.W. Cruse.  The company was know as the Salina Company Mounted Rifles.  I was enlisted for six months, and our first encounter with the Yankee army was at Booneville, Missouri on the 17th, three days after the enlisting period.  There was no worry waiting for action in a real war.  We were all raw recruits. The troops that we met were seasoned soldiers, well-armed and equipped.  We were pushed back, with small loss on either side.  This took place on the Lamine River.  The next morning, conceit run out of us, we took up the line of march south to meet General Sigel at Carthage, Missouri. Continue reading “War between the states”

Tositoya

Tositoya

as told to Montie McBride Rockwell

Tositoya was a little white boy with an Indian name.  Tositoya is the Indian name for “White Chief.”  When Abigail Stringer came west from Indiana to help in an Indian school in Fort Sill, Indian Territory, she met Dave McBride from Illinois and as you people do, the young couple married, and as the years went by three sons were born to them, Robert (Tositoya), William and Amos. Continue reading “Tositoya”

Montie’s story

The Story of Montie Gertrude McBride Rockwell

by Montie Rockwell

I was born on February 6, 1886 at Doan’s Crossing, Texas, fifteen miles north of Vernon, Texas, where the long drive of longhorn cattle crossed the Red River going north to market from north (sic) Texas and Mexico.  In those days there were no trucks or cars.  Everything was done on a horse, on foot, or by horse-drawn vehicles.  The cowboy’s life was anything but a bed of roses!  On those long drives there was drought, floods, lightning and thunderstorms to frighten the cattle, making them stampede.  Only by going to the front of the here or line and getting the cattle to circling could the boys get the cattle to bunch up and settle down.  Boys even lost their lives in the operation. Continue reading “Montie’s story”