词条 | Alice Stebbins Wells |
释义 |
|name = Alice S. Wells |image= Alice stebbins wells.jpg |caption = Alice Wells was the first female officer in the LAPD |birth_date = {{Birth date|1873|6|13}} |death_date = {{Death date and age|1957|8|17|1873|6|13}} |badgenumber = |birth_place = Manhattan, KS, United States |nickname = |department = Los Angeles Police Department |service = United States |serviceyears = 1910–1940 |rank = Sworn in as an officer – 1910 Sergeant – 1934 |awards = |relations = |laterwork = Official LAPD historian, Speaker }}Alice Stebbins Wells (June 13, 1873 – August 17, 1957) was the first American-born female police officer in the United States, hired in 1910 in Los Angeles.[1] CareerEarly careerAlice was a graduate of Oberlin College and Hartford Theological Seminary, where a study she conducted concluded there was a large need for woman officers.[2][2] She also previously served as a minister in Kansas and a member of the Women's Christian Temperance Union.[2] Wells joined the Los Angeles Police Department after a long battle of petitioning with many citizens who supported her or that she persuaded. With such a huge community reaction the mayor, police commissioner, and the Los Angeles city council had no other excuse but to let Alice become the first policewoman in the LAPD and was classified under civil service.[2] Wells went on to become the founder and first president of the International Policewomen's Association and traveled throughout America and Canada to promote female officers. Since 1891, law enforcement agencies had employed women only for the care of female prisoners. After Wells successfully petitioned for a place on the LAPD and was sworn in on September 12, 1910, she was hired and equipped with a telephone call box key, a police rule book and first aid book, and the "Policewoman's Badge Number One".[3] Wells was responsible for hand sewing her own police uniform, which was the first police woman's uniform in the United States. It was a floor-length dress and jacket. A reproduction of this very outfit is on display at The Los Angeles Police Historical Society Museum.[4] Wells was assigned to work with the LAPD's first juvenile officer, and was quickly the subject of an order issued by the force that ruled that young women could now only be questioned by female police officers. Wells began her career supervising skating rinks and dance halls, as well as interacting with female members of the public.[3] In addition, although Wells was a sworn officer she was not entitled to carry a gun, unlike male officers.[2] Two years after Wells joined the force, two other female officers were sworn in, with all female officers now under the control of the Civil Service. Sixteen other cities and several foreign countries hired female police officers as a direct result of Wells' activities by 1915, when Wells created the International Policewomen's Association.[3] She always advocated for more women officers to help youth in need and women who might not feel comfort in speaking to policemen.[2] Wells also founded, and was the president of, the Los Angeles Social Hygiene Society where she supported sex education in the city of Los Angeles.[2] Contribution to modern female policingDue to Wells's advocacy for women's and children's rights, more women were recruited after the Equal Employment Opportunity Act of 1972 to undertake community policing assignments. This is due in part because policewomen were thought to be better at defusing potentially violent situations than policemen.[5] Nationwide publicity and retirementThe appointment of Wells attracted nationwide attention. In 1914, she was the subject of a biographical film entitled The Policewoman.[6] The University of California created the first course dedicated to the work of female police officers in 1918, and Wells was made the first president of the Women's Peace Officers Association of California in 1928.[3] In 1934 she was also made the LAPD historian, and by 1937 there were 39 female officers in the LAPD, and five reserves. Wells remained the department's historian until she retired on November 1, 1940. She is remembered for having "fought for the idea that women, as regular members of municipal police departments, are particularly well-qualified to perform protective and preventative work among juveniles and female criminals."[3] Wells died in 1957, and her funeral was attended by high-ranking officers from the LAPD, and a ten-woman honor guard. Personal lifeShe was married and a mother of two.[7] See also
References1. ^[https://archive.is/20120919192115/http://www.wpoaca.com/archives/wells.htm "The First Women Police Officer] in the U.S" Women Police Officers Association of California 2. ^1 2 {{cite journal|jstor=23711153|title=Police social workers: a history|first=Albert R.|last=Roberts|date=1 January 1976|publisher=|journal=Social Work|volume=21|issue=4|pages=294–299|via=}} 3. ^1 2 3 4 Women in the LAPD Los Angeles Police Department retrieved January 20, 2008 4. ^Kreuzer, Nikki "Offbeat L.A.: Police on my Back- The LAPD Museum", The Los Angeles Beat, May 26, 2013. 5. ^{{Cite journal|last = Lersch|first = Kim Michelle|title = Exploring Gender Differences in Citizen Allegations of Misconduct|journal = Women & Criminal Justice|volume = 9|issue = 4|pages = 69–79|doi = 10.1300/j012v09n04_03|year = 1998}} 6. ^[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0177121/ The Policewoman] at IMDB retrieved January 20, 2008 7. ^1 2 3 4 http://search.proquest.com/docview/199369685 External links
6 : 1873 births|1957 deaths|American women police officers|Los Angeles Police Department officers|People from Manhattan, Kansas|Burials at Forest Lawn Memorial Park (Glendale) |
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