Let’s remember when a Seattle judge ordered three teenage hooligans to get haircuts, on this day in 1965 (December 16)

Chris Burlingame
Journal of Precipitation
2 min readDec 16, 2019
Photo by Francis Farago, on Unsplash.

Burglary is bad, no one says otherwise, but what could be worse? Having long hair, of course. Or at least that was the case in the sixties. One area man had enough.

From HistoryLink and Alan J. Stein:

On December 16, 1965, in Juvenile Court in Seattle, Judge Stanley C. Soderland orders haircuts for three boys accused of burglaries. The young men, two aged 17, one 15, are chastised by the judge, who likens their looks to that of young girls.

The boys were accused of a string of small burglaries, making off with money, cigarettes, and booze. In court, Seattle Police Officer Pat Murphy detailed the crimes and the recovery of some of the loot at the home of one of the 17-year-olds. The three miscreants, each with a history of drinking, curfew violation, and hell raising, stood before the judge with page-boy haircuts that almost reached their shoulders.

Judge Soderland ordered the two oldest boys to stand trial as adults, and ordered the 15-year-old held for the State Department of Institutions in a work/study program. But the judge held his wrath for the most egregious act of societal contempt amongst the three.

“If you think you’re being cute with that long hair,” bellowed the judge, “you’re wrong! You may think you are showing yourselves as rebels but you just look ridiculous. Why don’t you go all the way and wear skirts and paint your faces?”

The judge ordered haircuts for all three, and they were escorted from the courtroom.

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Chris Burlingame
Journal of Precipitation

Seattleite, (mostly) retired arts/culture blogger. Come for the Seinfeld references, stay for the Producers references.