charlie sherrill
SWCA Member
You don't see them much anymore. When I started as a LEO in 1969 we still used them, mostly for traffic control. The department I started with put you walking a beat downtown before you graduated to a cruiser. Part of what we did was directing traffic. The police whistle was an important part of this. As the traffic lights changed you made a long blow on the whistle followed by a few short ones and you waved the cars through the intersection. Most drivers understood this. When I first started portable radios were not issued to everyone and if you got into something you blew your whistle to let other officers know you needed help. It also let non police folks know to get out of the way. Later as I went to patrolling in a cruiser whistles were still very effective while working traffic accidents or other traffic situations. As mentioned on another thread Acme was pretty much the standard whistle. The whistle was carried on the uniform shirt with a lanyard string attached by a clip to a shoulder epaulet, a cloth flap fastened by a button on the top of a uniform shirt. Most police uniforms still have them even though I haven't seen a whistle attached to them in a long time. The whistle was usually at the end of the lanyard clipped to a shirt pocket flap, which most uniform shirts still have. When you look at a modern uniform, and I'm not talking tactical stuff, you now know why they have epaulets and pocket flaps. I still carried and used one until the end of my career almost four years ago even though I kept it in my shirt pocket. It's the same one I started with. I still have it and may bring it to Tulsa and blow it a few times. If you hear it you'll know who it is.