Police Benevolent Association  
 of the City of New York, Inc.  
 Patrick J. Lynch, President     
 www.nycpba.org 
 TIMESLEDGER   |   QNS.COM   |   FEB. 4 - FEB. 10, 2022 7  
 William Brown had done a lot for his 
 country, and his city. As a member of the 
 trailblazing, all-black 369th Infantry Regiment 
 – also known as the Harlem Hellfighters – he’d 
 battled on the front lines at D-Day and the 
 Battle of the Bulge. And he’d seen plenty of 
 action as an NYPD cop, too, rescuing people 
 from burning buildings and collaring armed and 
 dangerous criminals. He had earned more than 
 his share of medals, both police and military. 
 But,  in  the  winter  of  2015,  when 
 community  affairs  officers  from  the  113th 
 Precinct first encountered him, they knew 
 nothing of this. All they knew was that he 
 was a 94-year-old man who lived alone in a 
 heatless house in Queens and was now in the 
 hospital suffering from hypothermia. When 
 they did learn of his law enforcement and 
 military pedigree, however, they went above 
 and  beyond  the  call  of  duty  to  look  after 
 their brother officer. 
 They  came  to  know  a  frail  but  lively 
 One of the medals William Brown 
 earned on World  War  II  fields  of 
 battle. 
 William  Brown  with  two  of  his 
 113th Precinct friends, Detective 
 Tanya Duhaney (left) and Detective 
 Dorrin Ferguson. 
 gentleman, quick with a smile, a joke or a 
 story, who had joined the NYPD after World 
 War II and retired as a detective in 1968. For 
 a few months, they chauffeured him to doctor’s appointments, helped him 
 with  personal  affairs,  got  him  properly  registered  with  the  Veterans 
 Administration, visited him every Sunday and saw to it that his oil burner 
 remained in good repair. But they did more than that. They restored to 
 him the family he had lost. 
 Inevitably, the treasured friendship didn’t last very long. In a few 
 months, in May 2016, William Brown, 95, succumbed to one of his several 
 heart ailments. But even then, the officers found, his death didn’t end his 
 need for assistance. Having no living relatives meant he would have 
 to be buried in an unmarked grave in Potter’s Field, they were 
 told. Not a chance, they decided. 
 The  officers  claimed  the  body  and  arranged  for  an 
 NYPD-blue funeral at the First Church of God in St. Albans, 
 Queens. Then, they saw to it that veteran Infantryman William 
 Brown  was  buried,  with  the  playing  of  taps  and  with  full 
 military honors, alongside many of his Harlem Hellfighter 
 comrades in the Long Island National Cemetery in Farmingdale. 
 Now he was officially a part of NYPD and U.S. military history. 
 Patrolman William Brown of the 79th Precinct 
 
				
/www.nycpba.org
		/www.nycpba.org
		/QNS.COM