Filter Results:
Category: Police Department
A fleet of patrol cars of the Greece Police Department, 2000's.
Greece Police Department patrol car, mid 2000's.
A group photo of the Greece Police Department outside of the old Greece Town Hall, 1999.
Precinct 2 of the Greece Police Department, 1970's.
Groundbreaking ceremony for the new Greece Police Department Headquarters located on Vince Tofany Blvd. Supervisor Bill Reilich is pictured in the white hard hat, Chief Patrick Phelan is second from the right and Deputy Supervisor Michelle Marini on the far right, January 2016.
Chief Detective William Gray at Town of Greece Exposition explaining display to interested children, 1950's.
Supervisor Bill Reilich & Greece Police Chief Patrick Phelan with a young attendee seated on a Greece Police motorcycle at annual "I Dig This Town" event, 2016.
The construction of the new Greece Police Department Headquarters located on Vince Tofany Blvd, 2016
2017 Glimpses of Greece Supervisor's Choice Award - "Fireworks Over the Police Station" by Doug Worboys.
Greece Police Department officers and vehicle fleet, 1930's.
Greece Police Department officers, 1930's.
1954 Town of Greece Expo, Traffic Control Exhibit. Sgt. Gray, Chief Milton Carter and Supervisor Gordon Howe.
Old Greece Police Department Headquarters on Island Cottage Road. Used from 1975-2016 when it was relocated to the newly constructed Gerald D. Phelan Greece Police Department Headquarters on the Town Hall Campus.
The Gerald D. Phelan Greece Police Department Headquarters located on Vince Tofany Blvd. Opened in 2015.
Frank L. Pitcher was a Greece Police Officer from 1931 until 1962, when he retired as a sergeant. He was one of the "Magnificent Six"; the six original officers of the Greece Police Department. When he started as a constable in 1931, there was only one other officer; former Police Chief Milton H. Carter. They each worked 12 hour days, seven days a week. The pay was one dollar per arrest. Chief Carter said that Frank's experience working in his father's blacksmith shop helped on the job. "He'd knock 'em down and I'd put the cuffs on," Chief Milton one time reflected. He was married to his wife May for over fifty years and had three children; two daughters and a son. Frank L. Pitcher died September 14, 1969 at the age of 72.