George Bodeker: Difference between revisions

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Bodeker's father, a German immigrant, was a veteran of the [[Mexican-American War]] whre he befriended Jefferson Davis. During the [[Civil War]], Davis appointed him a "Detective of the Confederate States" involved in espionage behind enemy lines.
Bodeker's father, a German immigrant, was a veteran of the [[Mexican-American War]] whre he befriended Jefferson Davis. During the [[Civil War]], Davis appointed him a "Detective of the Confederate States" involved in espionage behind enemy lines.


Bodeker ran for chief in the [[1907 Birmingham mayoral election|1907 election]], narrowly losing to [[W. E. Wier]] who claimed that liquor and sporting interests were aligned against him in the race. After Wier's retirement, Bodeker won the office handily in the [[1910 Birmingham mayoral election|1910 municipal election]], defeating [[Thomas Shirley]]. On [[November 18]] of that year Bodeker corresponded with [[Booker T. Washington]] regarding race, crime and [[prohibition]]:
Bodeker ran for chief in the [[1907 Birmingham mayoral election|1907 election]], narrowly losing to [[William Wier]] who claimed that liquor and sporting interests were aligned against him in the race. After Wier's retirement, Bodeker won the office handily in the [[1910 Birmingham mayoral election|1910 municipal election]], defeating [[Thomas Shirley]]. On [[November 18]] of that year Bodeker corresponded with [[Booker T. Washington]] regarding race, crime and [[prohibition]]:


<blockquote>''...it would be impossible for me to give you the exact figures of crimes committed by the colored people, however, I wish to say that the Prohibition Law as I see it has not benefited the white people or the negroes, as Prohibition is a farce wherever it has been tried. I do not see any difference relative to crimes committed by either race. Respectfully, Geo. H. Bodeker, Chief of Police.''</blockquote>
<blockquote>''...it would be impossible for me to give you the exact figures of crimes committed by the colored people, however, I wish to say that the Prohibition Law as I see it has not benefited the white people or the negroes, as Prohibition is a farce wherever it has been tried. I do not see any difference relative to crimes committed by either race. Respectfully, Geo. H. Bodeker, Chief of Police.''</blockquote>
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{{Succession box | title=[[List of Birmingham police chiefs|Chief of Birmingham Police Department]] |
{{Succession box | title=[[List of Birmingham police chiefs|Chief of Birmingham Police Department]] |
years=[[1910]]&ndash;[[1914]] |
years=[[1910]]&ndash;[[1914]] |
before=[[W. E. Weir]] | after=[[Martin Eagan]] }}
before=[[William Wier]] | after=[[Martin Eagan]] }}
{{End box}}
{{End box}}



Revision as of 21:12, 27 January 2010

George Henry Bodeker, Jr (born May 26, 1865 – died December 29, 1931) was Chief of the Birmingham Police Department from 1910 to 1914, a period when the position was elected at-large by city voters.

Bodeker's father, a German immigrant, was a veteran of the Mexican-American War whre he befriended Jefferson Davis. During the Civil War, Davis appointed him a "Detective of the Confederate States" involved in espionage behind enemy lines.

Bodeker ran for chief in the 1907 election, narrowly losing to William Wier who claimed that liquor and sporting interests were aligned against him in the race. After Wier's retirement, Bodeker won the office handily in the 1910 municipal election, defeating Thomas Shirley. On November 18 of that year Bodeker corresponded with Booker T. Washington regarding race, crime and prohibition:

...it would be impossible for me to give you the exact figures of crimes committed by the colored people, however, I wish to say that the Prohibition Law as I see it has not benefited the white people or the negroes, as Prohibition is a farce wherever it has been tried. I do not see any difference relative to crimes committed by either race. Respectfully, Geo. H. Bodeker, Chief of Police.

His correspondence seems somewhat at odds with his public support for Mayor A. O. Lane's calls for regulation of saloons and his statement that "the negro vagrants cause more trouble in a city than all other criminal classes combined".

In 1911 Bodeker submitted a proposed bill to the Alabama Legislature that would remove the office of police chief from political vagaries by making it a permanent position, subject only to a court finding of bad behavior or inefficiency. As Chief, Bodeker gave rising judicial star Hugo Black a gold watch on his October 22, 1912 retirement from the Birmingham Police Court.

In 1914, Bodeker ran for the office of Jefferson County Sheriff. He was removed from office at the start of the campaign by Commissioner George Ward amid charges that he had accepted bribes from bordellos and gambling houses. Instead he founded Bodeker's National Detective Agency with offices in the Brown-Marx Building and branches in Charlotte, North Carolina; Chattanooga, Tennessee; Jacksonville, Florida; Montgomery and Mobile.

Preceded by:
William Wier
Chief of Birmingham Police Department
19101914
Succeeded by:
Martin Eagan

References

  • Fell, Charles (1908) "Chief Bodeker's father has eventful career as Confederate Detective." Birmingham News
  • Suitts, Steve (2005) Hugo Black of Alabama: How His Roots and Early Career Shaped the Great Champion of the Constitution Montgomery:NewSouth Books. ISBN 1588381447