By Walter Lunt
One of many local hangouts in Windham in the early 1960s was
the business and entertainment district in North Windham.
Convivial groups of youths, mostly teenagers, would gather
along the busy corridor between Boody’s Corner (Route 302 and Route 115) and
the Lakeland roller skating rink located approximately on what is today the
western edge of the Hannaford parking lot.
Rowdiness, hot rodding and sportive mischief were the rule on
Friday and Saturday nights, especially during the summer and fall months.
Occasionally, the pranks became creative and were the result
of payback, settling a score or just sending a message.A humorous artist's conception of the North Windham 'police car
scene' -- early 1960s.
DRAWING BY JERRY BLACK, ARROWHEAD ART
In those years, there were three police agencies patrolling
Windham: state police, sheriff and local part-time constables known as reserve
officers. Officers from all three departments became well-known for their
individual policing style and personalities, and the young mischief-makers had
their own opinions of each patrolman. The stern, no-nonsense officers were well
known for displaying little tolerance of youthful shenanigans.
One officer, in particular, was the object of much ridicule. The youngsters would often complain about the officer’s supposed harassment and abusive behavior.
One among the assembled youth, we’ll call him Johnny Doe,
decided it was time for payback; he’d carry out a creative stunt that would
send the surly officer a serious message and make him change his ways.
One evening, according to sources who remember the event, the
“offending” officer parked his police vehicle at the Lakeland skating rink
parking lot. It was left locked and unattended while he rode with another
patrolman. It was this situation that gave the knavish Johnny Doe a chance to
exact his creative revenge.
As the story goes, the young Doe wrapped a heavy chain around
the parked police vehicle’s rear axle, and attached the other end to an
immovable object, possibly a tree. Then, Doe and an accomplice waited for the
officer’s return. When this occurred later that night, Doe, driving his own car
along with his companion, hot rodded past the Lakeland parking lot (laying down
rubber all the way) as an enticement to draw a chase.
Now, at this point, the reader may be reminded of the 1973 movie
American Graffiti, which portrayed a similar incident. The cinematic portrayal
shows the police car being upended and its rear wheels ripped from beneath the
vehicle. The Lakeland caper, however, ended in a slightly less dramatic way
when the officer’s police car merely cinched up on the chain and was unable to
proceed.
Whether or not the young Doe and his friend escaped
apprehension for their police car escapade is not known, or not revealed by
those contacted for this story.
But one thing is certain. According to those anonymous sources, the incident DID NOT change the personality or policing style of the victimized officer. <
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