Washington D.C. Metropolitan Police
1900-1909
First World Series – First Zeppelin Test Flight – “Call of the Wild” written – FORD Motor Company Founded – Work Begins on Panama Canal









1902 cap badge of Officer Joseph W. McDaniel.

1908 Map of Ladroit Park in Bloomingdale D.C

Five Year Old Arrested. Seated on his front porch, his arm around his pet dog, Nellie, who tried to guard him, little five-year-old Gus Oputz, who was arrested last night by Officer Clay, the giant policeman of the Fourth precinct, tried to decide this morning why he had been arrested. He said he had done nothing. The dog said nothing, but gazed with a savage intensity on each visitor, and made each visitor feel embarrassed by taking an unwholesome interest in his trousers.
According to the police, Gus was arrested for destroying private property. The extent of the depredation consisted of taking six lathes from a disused and disreputable shanty, and nailing them together tha he might get a kite that was caught in a tree.
The residents of the neighborhood in which Gus lives are intensely wrought up over his arrest, and are unanimous in their declaration that it was unjustified. Gus is not worried over the matter. In a calmly, judicial manner he insists that the officer is a “mean man,” and expresses the conservative opinion that he will come to no good end.
This afternoon the matter will be threshed out before Judge De Lacy at Juvenile Court.
Gus was arrested by policeman last evening as he was peacefully poking at his kite, which was lodged in the topmost branches of a tree. A large crowd, attracted by the unusual picture of a six-foot-and-a-half policeman arresting a five-year-old child, hooted at the unresponsive Clay.
At the station house the boy’s father agreed to be responsible for the lad’s appearance in court today.
– The Washington Times, August 11, 1908


Below is a 1906 Ford vehicle common in D.C.


From the ” Ghosts of D.C. “
1906 Speed Limit Set: 12 Miles Per Hour
Washington, D.C., April 6, 1906 –The Senate Committee on the District of Columbia today reported favorably a bill providing for the punishment of violations of the speed laws relating to automobiles. It limits the speed to 12 miles an hour within the city limits of Washington and 20 miles outside the limits.
For the first offense a fine of from $5 to $50 is provided; for the second offense a fine of from $10 to $100, with discretionary imprisonment; for the third offense, within one year, the fine prescribed is from $50 to $250, and it is made mandatory upon the court to sentence the offender to serve from one to six months in the workhouse.

Officer James Duvall

Captain James Duvall was one of the first officers assigned to the bicycle unit. He was involved with the Women’s Suffrage movement and testified before the United States Senate in 1908.


Captain James Duvall