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13 Nat'l Mun. Rev. 367 (1924)
General Butler Cleans up

handle is hein.journals/natmnr13 and id is 427 raw text is: 




    GENERAL BUTLER CLEANS UP

                  BY AUSTIN F. MACDONALD
                     University of Pensylvania

A report on the first six months' service of the new director of public
safety of Philadelphia. ::


  WHN W. Freeland Kendrick was
elected mayor of Philadelphia last fall,
he promised to devote his time and
energy to cleaning up the city. The
wiseacres smiled and shook their heads
knowingly. These same pledges, they
declared, were made at the beginning
of every new administration. They
had been made in 1919 by a newly-
elected independent, whose sincerity
of purpose could not be doubted. Yet
at the end of his four-year regime Phila-
delphia was notorious for its violations
of the liquor laws and for the daring
operations of its bandits. So it may
not be surprioing that when in 1923 the
pledges of law enforcement were made
by a member of the dominant political
machine, a man who owed his election
to the support of the organization,
they were regarded by many as mean-
ingless.
   CAMPAIGN PROMISES CARRIED OUT
   But no sooner was Mr. Kendrick
elected than he took steps to carry
out his campaign promises of law en-
forcement. It was necessary, he felt,
to put Philadelphia's police force on
a semi-military basis, and so, instead
of   appointing  some   Philadelphia
politician to -the post of director of
public safety, he cast about for some-
one with military experience and a dis-
tinguished record of service. The man
he finally hit upon was Brigadier-
General Smedley D. Butler, otherwise
known as Gimlet Eye Butler and


the Fighting Quaker. There was
some doubt as to whether Butler could
be persuaded to give up active service
in the Marine Corps, of which organiza-
tion he would before many years be-
come the head; there was no doubt as
to his fitness for the task of combating
crime in   Philadelphia. His record
spoke for itself.
  After running away from home to
fight in the Spanish-American War,
he was made a second lieutenant in the
Marine Corps at the age of sixteen.
Twice wounded while marching to the
relief of the foreign legations in Peking
during the Boxer Rebellion of 1900,
he was offered the Victoria Cross by
the British Government for rescuing
an enlisted man under a rain of fire.
His own government refused to permit
him to accept this distinction, but
twice on later occasions conferred upon
him the Congressional Medal of Honor.
Medals meant so little to Butler, how-
ever, that it took an edict from the
secretary of war to make him wear
them. What he wanted was more
fighting, and he got it in Nicaragua,
Mexico and Haiti. He was in charge
of the American forces in Haiti when
the United States entered the World
War, but was relieved at his own re-
quest, so that he might go overseas
at the head of the Thirteenth Regi-
ment of Marines.
  This was the man to whom Mayor-
elect Kendrick offered the directorship
of public safety,- a brigadier-general

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