Officer Bertil H. Jentzel was appointed to the Cranston Police Department as a special officer in October of 1925, and appointed to the regular force on March 20, 1926. In 1929 he was assigned as a motorcycle officer to patrol the Arlington and Oaklawn areas of the city. He resigned from the department in August of 1929 to take another job in Toronto, Canada. On his last night on duty his co-workers presented him with a watch and wished him good luck.
Officer Wilfred Gagnon, Jr. – Cranston Police
Officer Walter P. Friend – Cranston Police
Officer Joseph E. Balkun – Cranston Police
Officer James L. Bergin, Jr. – Cranston Police
Officer Richard A. Vieweg – Cranston Police
Officer Richard A. Vieweg was appointed to the Cranston Police Department in December of 1927. He passed away at home on February 16, 1946, at the age of 47 after a brief illness. He was survived by his wife Mary M. (Gray) Vieweg; three sons: Lieutenant Richard A. Vieweg, Jr., serving in the Army Air Force, Seaman 1/c William H. Vieweg serving in the Navy, and Donald F. Vieweg, recently discharged from the army; and two daughters: Seaman 1/c Doris M. Vieweg serving in the Navy, and Phyllis P. Vieweg, of Cranston. Officer Vieweg is buried in Locust Grove Cemetery in Providence, R. I.
Rest in peace.
Officer Gordon M. Thurber – Cranston Police
Officer Gordon Mason Thurber passed away at the age of 42 on December 27, 1921, at St. Joseph’s Hospital in Providence after contracting pneumonia following an operation. He’d served with the Cranston Police Department for several years prior to his death. He was a life-long resident of Cranston, the son of George E. and Annie E. Thurber. He was survived by his mother, a brother William E., and a sister, Mrs. Frannie Colwell. He’s buried in Pocasset Cemetery in Cranston.
Rest in peace.








