The early years of Tukey's era as marshal was relatively quiet compared to what he would encounter close to the end of the decade. He began with the reorganization of the
Boston Police Department. Under Tukey, the force increased to 22 officers during the day and 8 at night. They were dispatched throughout the city at $2.00 per day and $1.25 per night. The city was divided into sections and the order was set to clean up the streets of Boston. The increased visibility of officers gave rise to local notoriety to certain constables, such as
Derastus Clapp and Samuel Fuller. During the 1848 public excavation on
Boston Common, Tukey and his people discovered stolen money in front of an eager crowd. The January 7 excavation found $1100.00. This was the beginning of his public image in Boston and he welcomed the publicity. He was in charge of the investigation of the
Parkman–Webster murder in 184950. In 1851, he returned runaway slave
Thomas Sims to Georgia after a court ordered compliance with the
Fugitive Slave Law. Shortly thereafter, Tukey began using raids to clean up the city. Tukey had an eye on vice establishments in the city. The early results of the first raid concluded that nine men and sixty women were arrested for prostitution. The following week's raid is known as the "Celebrated
Ann Street" raid. There were over 150 arrests made in the red-light district of
Boston on 23 April 1851. The targets were gamblers and prostitutes, with Tukey finding great success. Again in 1851, Francis Tukey instituted a weekly "show-up of rogues." The policy he established was to have known criminals show up and be identified in public as criminals. This was to make sure that the public knew their faces and could identify the criminals if they had to. The first collection brought 76 pickpockets, burglars, thieves and more that were forced to "run a gauntlet of crowing citizens who tore their clothing and marked their backs with chalk." The results of Francis Tukey's time as city marshal are varied. During Tukey's reign, it is believed that he neglected the growing number of wandering children in the Boston streets. The children, if taken in, would become apprentices or domestics until they reached adulthood. This was a rather "unenlightened attitude toward juvenile delinquency" in Boston at the time. Francis Tukey would be the city marshal until 1852, a tenure lasting six years.
Benjamin Seaver, the mayor, removed Francis Tukey and most of the Boston Police force and replaced him with Gilbert Nourse Esq (1852–1854). The resignation was forced. Upon his removal, Tukey decided to relocate to
Sacramento, California. ==Move to California==