The Weekly Vista

Cashin leaves fingerprin­ts around world

- ••• Lucas is currently the co-president of the Bella Vista Historical Museum, located next to the American Legion at the corner of Highway 71 and Kingsland. For more informatio­n, see www.bellavista­museum. org.

This is a reprint from The

Weekly Vista of March 25, 2015. Many retirees who have moved to Bella Vista have brought with them so many experience­s that their story could fill a book, and the Cashins were no exception. “In Caracas, Venezuela, in 1965, William and Eva Cashin were growing weary of the foreign scene. As a State Department employee, the Cashins had lived in Europe, South America, and the Orient, and they were looking for a quiet spot in which to spend their later years. In the same year in Northwest Arkansas, John Cooper Sr. began selling homesites in his newly opened resort community called Bella Vista. The Cashins, on a stateside visit, bought a

lot…” (From the Bentonvill­e Daily Record, August 31, 1989).

After buying their first lot in 1965, the Cashins returned to Bella Vista two years later and traded it for one at the corner of Cooper Road and Orr Lane. They finished their assignment in Venezuela while Cooper built their house, and they moved into it in July 1967. Mrs. Cashin died in 1993, but the house was not sold until after Mr. Cashin’s death in 1998.

Prior to retiring to Bella Vista, Cashin had an exciting career in the field of fingerprin­t identifica­tion. According to the website for the New York

State Division of Criminal Justice Services, www. criminalju­stice.ny.gov, he started out wanting to indulge his childhood love of horses by becoming a trick rider for the New York State Police, but in 1926, his first year on the job, he was badly injured in a trick riding accident. During his lengthy convalesce­nce at the Samaritan

Hospital in Troy, he began looking at other career possibilit­ies. That is also where he met and eventually married his nurse, Eva Beaulac.

Having read about the new fingerprin­t system of identifica­tion, Cashin asked his uncle, Father William Cashin, chaplain of Sing Sing Prison, if he knew anything about it.

Father Cashin advised him to contact Clara Parsons, who was in charge of the Prison Department’s Identifica­tion Files in Albany. She agreed to become his private tutor and taught him well. Upon returning to work, Cashin establishe­d a Bureau of Identifica­tion for his troop and began serving as a fingerprin­t instructor at the State Police School, as he continued to increase his knowledge in the field.

The sudden death of Clara Parsons in 1936 left a vacancy, and Cashin was offered the title of Director of the Division of Criminal Identifica­tion, a job he held until 1943, and then again from 1946 to 1960. During his tenure, he introduced so many innovation­s that fingerprin­t experts from Canada, Japan, Spain, Puerto Rico, Brazil, Thailand, Israel, Greece, Indonesia and Lebanon came to the Division to study his new technology.

Because of his work in training foreign officers, the State Department invited Cashin to go to Greece in 1959. He spent three months there helping to set up an identifica­tion bureau and, upon his return, was offered a job with the State Department.

Cashin retired from New York State in 1960 and accepted the job with the U.S. State Department. According to the Criminal Justice website, he worked in Brazil, Bangkok, the Philippine­s and Venezuela before a close call with an earthquake in Caracas in 1967 convinced him it was time to retire for good, and that’s when they settled in Bella Vista.

 ?? Courtesy of Bella Vista Historical Museum ?? The Samaritan Hospital in Troy, New York, which opened in 1898 and is pictured on this 1906 postcard, is where William Cashin met his future wife, nurse Eva Beaulac, when he was recuperati­ng from a horseback riding accident in 1926.
Courtesy of Bella Vista Historical Museum The Samaritan Hospital in Troy, New York, which opened in 1898 and is pictured on this 1906 postcard, is where William Cashin met his future wife, nurse Eva Beaulac, when he was recuperati­ng from a horseback riding accident in 1926.
 ?? Courtesy of NY Criminal Justice website ?? Employee Margaret McCarthy demonstrat­es automated fingerprin­t searching on the new IBM card sorter in 1937.
Courtesy of NY Criminal Justice website Employee Margaret McCarthy demonstrat­es automated fingerprin­t searching on the new IBM card sorter in 1937.
 ?? Courtesy of NY Criminal Justice website ?? When William Cashin started his new job in 1936, he investigat­ed ways to automate the time-consuming search process of fingerprin­t identifica­tion.
Courtesy of NY Criminal Justice website When William Cashin started his new job in 1936, he investigat­ed ways to automate the time-consuming search process of fingerprin­t identifica­tion.
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