A LOOK BACK
In 19th century London, there lived a man who became synonymous as the
greatest detective the world had ever known.
His ability to solve crimes became known in every part of the world
and the mere mention of his name brought fear to the hearts of criminals.
That man’s name was Sherlock Holmes.
In the first half of the 20th century and halfway around the world in
a small beach town called Huntington Beach, there was another man who was
fast becoming known as a master detective.
LaVern “Vern” Keller joined the Huntington Beach Police Department in
1928 after having worked in our oil fields and Fire Department. In 1932,
he became Huntington Beach’s chief of police. Just after that, Keller’s
talent as a crime deduction would be tested. This happened on a Sunday,
March 20, 1932, when an 18-year-old youth entered Ted Bartlett’s Shell
gas station, at 7th Street and Pacific Coast Highway, at 8:15 p.m. and
ordered Bartlett at gunpoint to hand over all the money in the cash
register.
After being held up four times in four years, Bartlett handed the
gunman $18.22, all that was in the register. While the gunman was inside
robbing the gas station, a second youth waited outside in a Ford Model A
Roadster. When joined by the first youth, the two robbers began their
getaway through the downtown streets.
But while the two robbers were leaving the Shell station, two local
men -- Art Anderson and Ken Gilchrist -- were pulling into the station.
Bartlett quickly told the men of the robbery, and Anderson and Gilchrist
began chasing the robbers in their Chevrolet down Main Street at speeds
of nearly 80 miles per hour. The two cars sped through Downtown
intersections.
But at Yorktown Avenue and Lake Street the robbers left the road and
turned unto a road that led through the Huntington Beach Co.’s ranch and
where they were able to give Anderson and Gilchrist the slip.
But unbeknownst to the young robbers, Anderson and Gilchrist had
gotten their license plate number. At 8 a.m. the next day, Keller
contacted the Department of Motor Vehicles in Los Angeles and learned
that the license plate number was issued to a Fred Sandbrook in Los
Angeles and belonged to a 1921 Ford Model T.
With that information in hand, Keller, along with Officer Les Grant
and service station manager Ted Bartlett, drove up to Sandbrook’s home in
Los Angeles. From Sandbrook they learned he had sold the car to a George
Crane of East Los Angeles. So the three drove to Crane’s house on El
Sereno Street. Keller found Crane at home and learned that he had sold
the car to a Bill Jackson who worked at a gas station in Sierra Vista.
It was less then 24 hours since Bartlett’s station was robbed and the
three went in search of Jackson.
Next week we’ll see how Huntington Beach’s master detective Keller
solved this crime in one day and how he went on to solve a second crime a
few months later.
* JERRY PERSON is a local historian and longtime Huntington Beach
resident. If you have ideas for future columns, write him at P.O. Box
7182, Huntington Beach, CA 92615.
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