Cecil Smith was born at Boonah, Queensland on  30th October 1915.  He  grew up in the Fassifern district and married Pearl Rew in 1938.  In 1934, aged 18, he joined the Police Force  through a cadetship and began his career in the Fingerprint Bureau where he  stayed till 1959.  He retired from  Townsville in 1975.  This is his  story: 
“I’d just finished school.  I’d done Senior.  It was the Depression years and jobs were  hard.  I had had a couple of part-time  jobs and there was a new police commissioner appointed who was trying to  modernise the Queensland Police Force and one of the systems he introduced was  the cadet system.  So I applied to become  a cadet and was accepted.  25 were called  up for interviews and 14 were accepted. 
“I had to report to the Commissioner’s office and  was handed over to the Inspector who took another lad and myself back to the CI  Branch and handed us over to his clerk, Mr Warwick Smith.  His clerk talked to us and told us about  security and secrecy then he said, “Oh well, you stay with me” pointing to  me.  The other fellow was to go to the  Fingerprint Section.  And after all that  he said, “What’s your name”.  I said  “Smith”.  He said “No good having two  Smiths in the one office, you go to the Fingerprint Section.”  So that’s how I got to Fingerprints. 
“There were only two other people in the fingerprint section at that stage. It was 1934, the Fingerprint Section had been established about 1909, I think in Queensland. It was established by a fellow named Fowler, who was the brother of a fellow of the same name who had gone, from Sydney to Scotland Yard to learn fingerprints. On his return he established the NSW Fingerprint Section. When he came back here, his brother, Duncan, went to Sydney to learn the art and when he returned to Brisbane founded the Queensland Police Fingerprint Section. There was him and after him, Warwick Smith, became a fingerprint expert and he was followed by Bruce Pascoe who was in charge when I went there and a man named George Marsh was 2IC. George Marsh was an ex-serviceman who’d served in the First World War. He’d been injured there and he had a limp from his war injuries but it didn’t affect his work as a fingerprint man. Promotion was very slow and he had many years of service before he got promoted to Acting Sergeant. In those days, it was Constable, Acting Sergeant, Sergeant, Senior Sergeant and then Inspector. He had 20 odd years service before he became acting sergeant. Very slow movement.
“It didn’t take me long to work out that eyesight  was a good requirement and that I was probably better at identifying  fingerprints more quickly than either of the two experienced men that were there  because their eyesight wasn’t quite so good.   So when I got into a place of authority, I made sure that all the  identification jobs went to the younger men.   They could see better.  There  wasn’t a five-year apprenticeship in those days.  All the expert evidence was given by the OC  until I got in charge of Fingerprints when I allowed fellows who were doing the  job to give the expert evidence after they had five years service. 
“Training involved reading a book written by a  fellow named Henry from Scotland Yard.   That was the book that told you about the normal classification of  fingerprints.  Later on there was another  fellow from Scotland Yard named Battley who had developed a system of  identifying single prints instead of having the whole 10.  So that was firstly the Henry book and then  the Battley book.
“I was identifying fingerprints quite early in  the piece.  There’s no real time of  identifying fingerprints.  You’d throw  them over to one the senior fellows to check to make sure you were right, but  that was all.  When taking fingerprints,  you’d have a metal slab and some printer’s ink and a rubber roller and you’d put  spots of ink on the slab, roll the ink out on the slab and get a thin film of  ink on the slab and then you’d put the fingers on the slab, get the ink on them  and put them on the form. 
“For crime scene fingerprints, we used mercury  and chalk when I first went there.  We  used light powder, lico podium that you threw on the print and blew the thing  off and that left the outline of the print and then you carefully brushed that  off and put some mercury and chalk on to make it more permanent.  But that had a greater risk of damaging the  print when you were wiping the lico podium off and so we gave the use of the  lico podium away altogether and went straight to brushing on mercury and  chalk. 
“During the 1940s there were not very many scenes  of crimes identifications.  That was a  kind of a red letter day if you identified one at a scene of crime because all  we had was a print at the scene of crime on your desk and you’d try to memorise  it as you were searching fingerprints and hope that your memory was good.  You’d be lucky to do more than a score of  identifications in a year.  So we needed  good eyes and a good memory. 
“The Fingerprint Section didn’t grow very quickly  after I came there.  Within about 12  months after that another cadet was appointed and we had the two police and the  two cadets in the office.  Later on  another cadet turned up but the staff didn’t increase in the fingerprint section  very much at all.  It remained static for  years.” 
During World War II the Fingerprint Section was  moved out to Camp Hill to protect the fingerprint forms which numbered about  100,000. 
“That was a place which was alleged to be haunted  so that was very convenient, someone to look after the things when you weren’t  there too.  It wasn’t only the  Fingerprint Section that moved out.  The  modus operandi section moved out as well.   And then, somebody from fingerprints used to go to CI Branch in the  morning and go around and check all the external jobs and at the scenes of  crime, and then came out, back to the centre where we working.  We only stayed there about 12 months and then  moved back into the City.” 
In 1941 the NSW Fingerprint Bureau became the  central bureau which meant sending an extra set of prints to them for  storage. 
In 1949 when Cec Smith was in charge of the  Fingerprint Section, his evidence was vital in securing a conviction in a murder  case at Ocean Island. 
“That was a case in which the fact that we went  to Ocean Island was an accident to start with.   Ocean Island was a phosphate island where there were a number of Chinese  labourers employed as well as some islanders, under European supervisors.  One night, one of the European overseers and  his wife were murdered in their house and the local policeman was away.  They tried to get a policeman in New  Zealand.  There was no ship handy to  bring back and there happened to be a ship off the Australian coast so they  diverted it to come to Moreton Bay and we hopped into a police launch and went  to Moreton Bay where we climbed on board the ship in the bay and headed out to  Ocean Island.  At that stage, there were  three of us who went - the two detectives and myself.  And so we got to Ocean Island.  When we got to the island the trail was warm,  a fortnight old at that stage but the local native police had kept guard on the  house the whole time.  We found one blood  stained print out a window where the fellow had gone out and a palm print on a  window sill of the bedroom.  The bedroom  although it was inside the house, had a large window and he’d put his hand down  on the sill and vaulted into the room and his palm print was there.
“Eventually we fingerprinted everybody on the  island and as a result of fingerprinting - there weren’t too many to  fingerprint, about 1200 altogether - we identified the palm print as belonging  to one of the Chinese labourers.  That  was the main evidence that was used at Suva to convict him.  He was convicted and we then had to go to  Fiji, Suva for the trial and he was executed at Suva.  At the time of his execution, he named one of  the European supervisors, as being involved in the murder.  But I didn’t know anything about that until  after I happened to accidentally run into the Administrator of the Island  walking down Pitt Street in Sydney and he tells me this story.  If they told us that we might have wanted to  have a few words with him, because when we first went there, just for the sake  of starting with someone, we started with supervisors and the one fellow we  interviewed was the most nervous person I’ve ever had anything to do with  interviewing.  If it hadn’t been for his  wife keeping him quiet, he might’ve confessed on the spot, I think.  But anyhow that passed over and the fellow  who was executed, allegedly claimed that this European was involved but whether  that was so or not, I don’t know.  I only  picked that up by talking to the Administrator.” 
Cec was involved in another murder but this time  did not have a successful outcome. 
“I was involved in the Betty Shanks murder but nobody was arrested  for it.  Betty Shanks’ body was found in  a yard one morning but no one was ever convicted for the murder.  I had a palm print on the fence but it was a  very poor palm print and it was never identified.” 
Cec Smith was the first cadet to rise to  commissioned rank. 
“I happened to have a hobby of speaking and  writing.  I was a member of Rostrum.  On one occasion the Commissioner was asked to  address some group about something to do with the Police Force and he sent the  file over to CI Branch and it ended up on my table.  So instead of giving them the information, I  wrote out a speech and sent it back and the Inspector saw it on the way through  and thought it was suitable.  He liked  publicity and thought – this is all right.   So at any time he was asked to make speeches, he grabbed me.  He couldn’t get me on to the staff right away  but eventually he made me manager of the pipe band and I was on staff.  I wrote more speeches for him and eventually  became a member of the staff as the manager of the pipe band and established a  public relations section after that.  All  that the public relations section looked after was the Police Youth Clubs.  But I was also interested in training and  somewhere along the line I became responsible for recruiting and training and  consequently I made sure that the fellows were trained as I thought they should  be trained.  Along the line then I became  responsible for the uniform of the whole jolly force.  At that stage I was responsible for designing  the first policewomen’s uniform but really, I grabbed my wife and the wife of  one of the other officers to work on this.   It was a very formal type of uniform they designed but nevertheless.  It went for a few years before it was  changed.
“In 1975 I retired from Townsville where I was in  charge of North Queensland.  After I left  the police force, I was employed by the police force to, as a kind of a  housemaster for a few years working the evenings at the Academy with the cadets  who were in training. 
“I enjoyed my police career.  The high point was relieving Deputy  Commissioner.  I enjoyed the Fingerprints  at the time but I was quite happy in every area that I worked.” 
(Cec Smith was interviewed in July 2004).

