History -
Tales from Today's PHAs
"A NEWARK CHARACTER"
From Dave Akers
Harold Guerin shines bright in my memory. I recall him on a mid-morning
stroll through the new William Street clinic in the early 80's
(a gasoline fire had put paid to the old one). Walking through,
he would talk to the investigators, asking if they had any sixes
for him, folding up the pinks into his shirt pocket and heading
for the field in his pink and white Caddy. Recalcitrant individuals
he visited in the field usually turned up the next day in clinic,
bright and early. Harold had been the Director of the Welfare Program
in Newark, and he freely used his influence there in the cause
of public health. He must have been near 80 at that time, and he
was a man with considerable style. Dressed in a white suit, panama
hat, flower in buttonhole, two-toned brogues, and always packing
a revolver, he was always an impressive sight as he pulled up to
an address in that large Caddy. Adding to the gravity of his person
was an ear that had been nearly chewed off long ago and not thought
of much anymore. He was a delightful and unforgettable Irishman
who had style and heft in abundance, and he was a natural on the
streets. He often told me that he could talk to Jake Javits on
my behalf to have me permanently assigned to Newark, an offer I
respectfully declined at least twice.
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