Showing posts with label DSP Proud. Show all posts
Showing posts with label DSP Proud. Show all posts

Tuesday, 13 August 2013

4th - 6th June, 1947 - Very little crime at Tubas... but Ron hopes that will all change soon!

Wednesday, 4th June, 1947
This Post is apparently in control of a very crime free area there being seven cases reported last month.
We rather suspect the Moktars are not reporting crime & in the contraband section which is common knowledge, bribery & corruption has set in.

We are hoping to get quite an amount when the Patrols start out.

Mr Middleton came down today to look around the station, he found it to his liking.


Thursday, 5th June, 1947
Mr Proud D.S.P. has gone to Jerusalem so Nablus breathes more freely now I suspect.

Mr Tatum in the grand procession of inspections we are expecting the station to receive, came down this morning.

As is typical of him when he is pleased he passed little comment.



Friday, 6th June, 1947
We have been getting up early every morning this week.

I have been going to the office but there have been no cases so there has been very little to do.

I helped the corporal to make up his weekly returns then I balanced my mess accounts.

Sunday, 21 July 2013

24th - 26th May, 1947 - Chatting with the locals, a crash, a court case and Haifa...

Saturday, 24th May, 1947
This is my last day on Gate Guards.  I have talked a great deal with the various T.A.C.s [1] on with me & have both increased my knowledge of the language & the country.

Sunday, 25th May, 1947
I was called on this afternoon to escort Mr Proud to Tulkarm and beyond to the scene of a road accident of the day before involving a police truck & an army truck.  The wreck of the 15cwt was at Lajjun.  The engine and rear axle were all right the rest was not.  The driver was scratch less, the sergeant beside him had two ribs and an arm broken & of the four in the back 1 broken arm & a cut eye.


[1]TACs were Temporary Additional Constables drawn largely, but not exclusively from the Jewish community.



Monday, 26th May, 1947
I was up at 4 o’clock this morning with B.C. Ryan to go as escort to the military camp at Haifa.  We left Nablus at 5am.  We took two mounted police, the witnesses in the case, to the court and then went to Acre to collect the two brothers.  We took them to court where they both pleaded guilty.
Of course the judge was not interested in what they had done with the weapons so after hearing the “learned council” he sent them each to prison for 9 months.  They were both very happy about it.

The examining Magistrate’s court for their civil charges will be set up on Thursday.

After the court we spent 3 hours walking around Haifa.

Monday, 1 July 2013

12th &13th May, 1947 - Ron's escort duties continue and a local has his car searched...

Monday, 12th May, 1947
This morning I went with the SP to Tulkarm & from there to Camp 22 to see the Brigadier.  From there we went to Jenin where I had lunch while I waited.

The escort duty is not too bad except when I am called upon to wait for any length of time.

I am supposed to report in the morning at 7.30 but he is never there until 8.30.  I then have to wait in the recreation room until he requires me.  This may be half an hour or all day.

When we arrive at our destination I have to wait by the car until he returns.
The waiting is the worse part of the job.



Tuesday, 13th May 1947
This morning I was called upon to escort Mr Proud the D.S.P.[1] to Tulkarm.
Mr Proud is a very efficient policeman & a strict disciplinarian.  On the latter point everyone thinks he goes too far but on the other hand he is admired for his first quality.

He made the trip very interesting by explaining all manner of things we passed from plants to ruins.

We lunched “native” in Jenin, then returned to Nablus.  In the later afternoon the S.P. called me out to go to Tulkarm.  On the way we met a super streamline car, an unusual sight on this track.  It was a Transjordan car.  The S.P. questioned the driver as to where he had been: “Jiftlich” What was he doing there?  Lunching.  Who with?  He did not know so we searched the car & found £200 worth of artificial silk, contraband.





[1]I have also found a reference to District Superintendent Proud in the following first hand account of the end of the mandate, by Howard Mansfield, a contemporary of Ron's.  Mansfield was also stationed at Nablus but I haven't yet managed to link the two of them directly...

"It was not possible for the British army and all its equipment to leave the country in the short time before the end of the mandate, and so to retrieve as much as possible an enclave was set up at the port of Haifa through which the troops and equipment would be withdrawn. Volunteers were called for from the Palestine Police to stay on after the end of the mandate to provide traffic control and security, and I volunteered to stay. Even at that, a large quantity of warlike stores was simply disposed of by driving it over a cliff into the sea. A month before the mandate ended, we received word that we were to withdraw from Jerusalem to Haifa. The briefing was given by the normally taciturn Superintendent, Ian Proud, who was not given to exaggeration. This time his briefing was nothing short of dramatic: the Jews were already taking action to secure the main road from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, even before the partition date, and roadblocks had been set up by both Jews and Arabs on the route we would be taking. We would be travelling in the usual soft-skinned 3-ton trucks but there would be an armoured car escort and we must be prepared to fight our way through...."