1909 – 1959
George had a brother who later became the Rev. Henry Temple Robins, who had been Bishop Cashmore’s curate but who was, in 1960, the rector of Whimple, near Exeter, Devon. This same Rev. Henry’s oldest daughter [Commissioner Robins’ niece] is the godchild of Bishop Cashmore.
George married Lucy Ethel Bedwell in March 1935 in Hendon, Middlesex, England.
Lucy "Lou" was born on November 11, 1910 in Highbury, London, England. She died in 1985 in Attard, Malta.
Mr. Robins left Ceylon in 1948 and moved to Tanganyika (now Tanzania) as a Senior Superintendent.
Between the years 1950 to 1952 he was director of Colonial Police studies at the Police College, which was then near Coventry and is now in Hampshire, England.
In 1952 he returned to Tanganyika as Assistant Police Commissioner.
The recipients of honours are displayed as they were styled before their new honour – George Herbert Robins MBE Assistant Commissioner of Police, Tanganyika.
Mr. Robins was Deputy Commissioner until 1954 when he left Tanganyika and proceeded to Cyprus.
Between 1954 and 1957 Mr. Robins was Commissioner of Police in Cyprus, before becoming acting Police Commissioner in Nigeria until early 1960.
In 1960 he was admitted as a Grade IV Officer of the Order of St. John of Jerusalem.
Having had a distinguished career in the Colonial Police, Mr. Robins was selected by the Secretary of State for the Colonies as Deputy Commissioner of Police in Bermuda to replace Deputy Commissioner, Mr. Maxwell B. Parker who was due to retire on 1st May 1960.
The retirement of Deputy Commissioner Parker, and the appointment Mr. George Robins as Deputy Commissioner of Police in Bermuda was first announced publicly in the following articles published by the Royal Gazette and the Bermuda Recorder on Saturday March 19, 1960 as follows:[
After nearly 25 years' service in the Bermuda Police Force, Mr. M. B. Parker is retiring on May 1. He came here from Barbados, where he was a junior Inspector, in November,1935.
In January,1938 he was promoted to Assistant Superintendent and in July, 1941 he became Deputy Commissioner, a post he holds today. Announcement of Mr. Parker's retirement was made by the Colonial Secretariat yesterday.
Replacing Mr. Parker is Mr. George Herbert Robins, whose first police appointment was as Assistant Superintendent in Ceylon in 1930. Nineteen years later he was transferred to Tanganyika as a Senior Superintendent; he was promoted to Assistant Commissioner in 1951 and Deputy Commissioner in 1953.
Mr. Robins’ next appointment took him to Cyprus, where he remained for three years as Commissioner of Police. In September 1957, he was re-engaged as Deputy Commissioner of Police, Federation of Nigeria, and is currently on leave in the United Kingdom from that post. He is married and has three children.
The Secretary of State for the Colonies has selected Mr. George Herbert Robins M.B.E., K.P.M., for appointment to the post of Deputy Commissioner of Police, Bermuda, to replace Mr. M. B. Parker who will be retiring on 1st May 1960.
Mr. Robins’ first police appointment was as an Assistant Superintendent in Ceylon in 1930. He was transferred to Tanganyika as a Senior Superintendent in 1949 and promoted to Assistant Commissioner in 1951 and Deputy Commissioner in 1953. In 1954 he was appointed Commissioner of Police, Cyprus, and served in that territory until he retired in June 1957.
In September, 1957 he was re-engaged as Deputy Commissioner of Police, Federation of Nigeria, and is currently on leave in the United Kingdom from that post.
Mr. Robins is married and has three children. He will be accompanied to Bermuda by Mrs. Robins.
ANNUAL POLICE REPORT - In late April 1960, Commissioner of Police, R.G. Henderson submitted the following Annual Report to the House of Assembly as reported in the Royal Gazette on Monday May 2nd 1960.
The Police Commissioner’s Report, as reported in The Royal Gazette (RG) on Saturday, had been submitted to the House of Assembly the previous day and is here reproduced in full.
Mr. R. G. Henderson, among other things, asks for Jaguar cars for his road squads, two women policemen, increases in pay for some ranks, increased training courses in the United Kingdom, reinforcements at Hamilton Docks, and a police station in Warwick's "Murder Mile."
The Governor stated in passing the report to the House that he suggested the pay increases be acted on at once, together with the reinforcements for the docks and the Warwick police station.
The Commissioner prefaced his report dated April 18, [1960] by recalling that he was asked on December 4 last year to make a full report on the Police Force and to state:
Here is the text:
1 – This report deals mainly with the third question from the House of Assembly and gives an explanation as to why I consider the answer to both the first, and to a lesser extent the second, is "no."
A summary, with the estimated cost, is given at the end.
2 – Establishment, General – Present authorized establishment (all ranks) is 211.
Present actual strength (as on 18.4.60) is 179. Vacancies 32.
Apart from local recruitment, which I am anxious to encourage, the shortage of single men's quarters limits the intake of overseas personnel. The Crown Agents are in the process of recruiting 31 men which it is hoped, if there are no further resignations in the near future, will bring the strength up to establishment. (There were 18 resignations last year,)
3 – The Band Block, which is situated to the north of the Prospect Parade Ground, has been earmarked for the Police. This will accommodate 16 single men and the Crown Lands have intimated that this Block will be available for occupation in August, 1960. Sixteen men can be quartered at Admiralty House but should this building be required for any other purpose the Force would be in need of a further 16 rooms. In short there will be just sufficient accommodation for the present authorized establishment when the Band Block is completed and provided that Admiralty House is still available.
URGENT
4 – Housing, The housing question requires urgent attention. It controls the strength situation and, until rectified, an increase in establishment is not possible.
5 – Establishment, If full establishment (211) were reached, I do not think it would be sufficient for the Force to discharge efficiently its normal duties. The increase, which I am recommending, will rectify this situation and at the same time provide the manpower to deal with any foreseeable emergency. My recommendations, in order of urgency and priority, are as follows:
6 – A schedule of the present and proposed distribution of establishment, including Gazetted Officers, is shown in Appendix 1.
It will be noted that this establishment which I am recommending includes a substantial increase in the number of Sergeants (21 – 39) and three new posts of Assistant Superintendent of Police. This, I am convinced, is a very necessary improvement to provide better prospects of promotion and is a point which Superintendent Lewis particularly stressed with regard to the C.I.D. Promotion to the new posts would be made from within the Force.
7 – In order to accommodate the increased establishment as soon as possible, I recommended that Government rent or purchase suitable buildings in the areas in which the men will work.
8 – DETAILS:
The amount should be at the following rate:
I am endeavoring to find a suitable plot with about ⅓ to ½ an acre of land on or near Middle Road in the vicinity of the junction with Khyber Pass. The Public Works Department have drawn a plan of a suitable building (attached to original copy of this report). I suggest that, until this new Station is built, Government rent a house in the same locality as a temporary measure.
I was advised by all persons, with whom I came in contact during my enquiries that the most suitable car for our purposes would be a Jaguar. This car is slightly larger than our law at present allows (2¾ inches wider and 14¾ inches longer) but in view of its suitability for police work I strongly recommend that legislation be introduced to enable the Police to use Jaguar cars for Patrol work. The T.C.B. have informed me that they would have no objection to the amendment. These cars are used by 39 different Police Forces in the United Kingdom and are very suitable for the housing of wireless equipment.
(b) Increase in Establishment. Increase from 211 (all ranks) to 273 which includes two Police Women.
(c) Creation of more higher-ranking posts.
(d) Salary Increases.
(e) Training. Instructional courses to be stepped up.
(f) Allowances for detectives and specialists.
(g) Police Station. New police station to be built in Warwick Parish. House to be rented until building completed.
(h) Police Patrol Cars. Regulations to be amended to enable the force to use larger cars than are now permitted.
15 – COST.
The figures given below are approximations, but they are as near as it is possible for me to estimate:
Annual Recruitment Expenditure (New establishment at proposed rates)
Less
TOTAL £103,544
16 – Building up the Force will be a slow process and I do not think the cost to Government will reach the full estimated total until 1964. A jump in local recruitment, which might possibly take place as a result of improvements in conditions of service in regards to both salaries and prospects, would of course reduce the estimated expenditure.
Appointment of New Deputy Commissioner - The Winter edition of the BPS MAGAZINE at page 38 announced as follows the arrival in the colony of Mr. Gordon (sic) Herbert Robins, MBE to fill the post of Deputy Commissioner of Police.
Deputy Commissioner Robins’ wife, Lou, was an excellent artist who quickly became actively involved in the local arts scene, as evidenced by the following article in the Royal Gazette on June 20th 1960.
MARINE ART EXHIBITION REFLECTS MOODS OF SEA
Use a little imagination and you will be able to smell the sea when you go [to] the Art Gallery of the City Hall. Another excellent art exhibition, sponsored by the Bermuda Society of Arts, opened on Saturday and will continue until July 23. The theme is nautical and purposefully coincides with the Bermuda Race, now well under way.
Familiar are the local beach scenes, and especially eye-catching and well executed are those by Helen C. Wayland, Ruth Fountain, Ruth Hooper, Lou Robins, F. Kenwood Giles and Humbert.
The sailing ships of days gone by and local fishing smacks are captured well by Captain Musson, Lou Robins, D. M. Kirkpatrick and John Mitz. Captain Musson has another good "ship" painting which he presumably did in New York against the famous skyline. Lou Robins must also be commended for her beach scene at Lagos Lagoon in Nigeria.
The Royal Gazette reported on Friday June 24th 1960, that the House of Assembly was considering information on housing rented to police officers, along with proposed salary increases:-
PRIVATE PROPERTIES (All furnished unless otherwise noted)
CROWN LANDS PROPERTIES (Rented unfurnished – all with Government owned furniture)
*At present occupied by 66 Police Officers.
Maurading Dogs Problem - Deputy Commissioner Robins volunteered as a member of a committee set up to examine problems with marauding dogs throughout the Island as reported in this articdle in the Royal Gazette on August 13th 1960.
TRAPS SEEN AS BEST SOLUTION TO PROBLEM OF MARAUDING DOGS
Holding the rank of Deputy Commissioner of Police, Mr. Robins is reported as being a voluntary committee member set up to examine the problem of marauding dogs around the Island.
Trapping was thought to be the answer but the question of who was to set the traps was considered by the committee chairman Lt.-Col. Astwood who said he thought the solution to this would be to have the police set them out when complaints were received concerning dogs on the prowl.
He said the help of the Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals would be enlisted to open the traps and take care of the animals apprehended in that manner. In this way the animals would be well treated, especially innocent dogs who happened to wander into the traps. The committee were to meet again shortly to finalize their plans.
EDITORS NOTE - Our next article will cover the year 1961.