Wednesday, May 20, 2020

Tales From the Early Kingstree Police Department

Later this year, Kingstree Police Chief Andre Williams and his 14 officers will move into their new headquarters next door to Town Hall on Longstreet Street. 


Work is ongoing on the new Kingstree Police and Fire Departments.
This is the new police station.

The police department has come a long way since the town's early days. The first census in which we find anyone's occupation labeled as "police" was in 1880. In that census, both George W. Arms and William Blakely listed their occupations as "police." Arms was white; Blakely was mulatto.

By 1893, Arms was serving as the county's jailer as well as the town marshal (the title used instead of policeman at that time). His duties were usually routine patrol, but there were those cases that found space in the newspaper even then. For example, in July 1897, Arms arrested Lowry "Nunky" Pierson and charged him with throwing rocks into an excursion train that had passed through Kingstree on June 22.

By the late 1890s, Richard Stutts had become town marshal, with J.B. Lemmon serving as his assistant.


Fire Chief Tim Duke, Police Chief Andre Williams, 
and Town Council Member Chris Williams at the
groundbreaking for the new police/fire complex 
in November 2019.

B.H. Myers was hired as Town Marshal by the town council in January 1901. Myers also operated a boarding house in Kingstree. He, too, made some interesting arrests, including that of a local carpenter who was described by the newspaper as "pursuing an erratic orbit on the sidewalks and swearing like a pirate." That unfortunate gentlemen spent 30 days on the chain gang for his troubles.

The summer of 1901 was a hot one, and the long, 102-degree days seemed to bring out the worst in the town's youngsters. Myers arrested one small boy, described as having "an abnormally developed bump of combativeness" for having pulled a knife on a playmate during a game of marbles and for giving "vent to his Vesuvian passion in a choice vocabulary of 'cuss' words." In Mayor's Court, the boy was given a choice of "40 stripes, save one" or time on the chain gang. He chose the 39 lashes, which were administered by his father at the jail, where the youngster spent the night to "meditate on the consequences of his conduct."

Six other small boys were hauled before the mayor after they were arrested for playing baseball in the street, which had recently been outlawed by town ordinance. Mayor W.H. Kennedy gave then all a severe reprimand and sent them on their way.


Today's police officers work hard on building good relationships in the community.
Here Chief Andre Williams tests his skill during last May's Kingstree Live.

The town council decided in October 1901 to hire a night marshal. The council interviewed five men for the position, including the current day marshal Myers; former marshal G.W. Arms; J.B. Lemmon, a former assistant marshal; J.P. Nelson; and James Tharpe. Myers, Arms, Lemmon and Nelson were white; Tharpe was black. Council hired Myers. The night marshal was to work every evening and all day Saturday for a salary of $7 per week.

In January 1902, Myers was called to break up an altercation between brothers, Jubal and Clarence Scott, which they were attempting to settle with an axe. Jubal fled to the swamp when Myers arrived. He was pursued, quickly apprehended, and brought back to the scene. By this time, a crowd had gathered and some in the crowd began making "unnecessary comments." Myers put an end to that by knocking several of those making the offending comments to the ground.

After 15 months of service, in April 1902, Myers resigned the position after a disagreement with town council. Myers had been paid by the owner of a store which had closed pending litigation to watch the store at night. Council contended that this was a regular part of the night marshal's job and would not allow him to accept the money from the owners. Myers said he had not charged the owners, but that they had given him the cash as a gift.


At last June's Kingstree Live, John Thomas Thompson found himself "captured"
by Kingstree Police officers Kirby and Cooper.

S.C. Anderson was hired to replace him at a salary of $30 per month. In addition to his work as a police officer, he was also to be in charge of lighting the streetlights every night. The County Record noted that Anderson arrested a woman "for overindulging in booze and attempting to give an open air matinee on Railroad Avenue." Mayor J.A. Kelley fined her $2, which she cheerfully paid before going on her way.

After five months as marshal, Anderson resigned to become manager of W.R. Funk's brickworks. He was replaced by J.A. Scott, who resigned after only a month on the job. Council rehired B.H. Myers as day marshal and his son, Charles, as night marshal. Before the end of the year, B.H. Myers, once again resigned, and council again hired J.A. Scott.

By 1905, S.C. Anderson was again town marshal. In October of that year, he discovered a thief in Wilkins' Retail Store between midnight and 1 a.m. He quickly recruited several townspeople to surround the store, but the suspect broke out the front door and escaped. The thief had filled two valises with merchandise, which he left in the store in his hurry to escape. The $23 taken from the cash drawer was not recovered, however.


At Blocktober Fest, KPD officers kept order but also found time to join 
the crowd in a little line dancing.

One of the more amusing incidents in early downtown Kingstree occurred on the evening of Monday, December 13, 1909. W.H. Carr, manager of Kingstree Hardware, was notified that evening by the night marshal that the door to Kingstree Hardware, then located on Academy Street, was standing open. When Carr arrived at the store a few minutes later, he found the door closed and locked. Mystified, he entered the store and discovered $3 missing from the cash drawer, as well as several items of merchandise and a pistol belonging to one of the town marshals which had been brought in for repair. He also noticed that the keys to the vacant building next door were missing. Still puzzled at how the thief had gotten into the store, Carr began experimenting and soon discovered that the same key opened half the stores on Academy Street, as well as several on Main Street. The next morning Kingstree was a busy place as storekeepers rushed to change their locks.

By 1915, J.H. Epps was police chief, with J.A. Scott and W.W. Dennis as officers. However, the three-man police department did not last long, as it was back down to the chief and one officer by 1919, and it remained a two-man operation well into the 1930s.

From January to March 1935, businesses in Kingstree found pennies missing from their cash registers. Finally in early March, a 30-year-old man, when confronted by the Kingstree Police, confessed that since the first of the year, he had entered a number of businesses and removed pennies from the cash registers, simply because he liked pennies. He said he had taken pennies from the wholesale division of the Kingstree Grocery Company, the Kingstree Service Station, Miller's Market, and the Dixie Garage, as well as from Wakim's Store twice and the Atlantic Coast Line Depot three times. These, he said, were all the places he could remember, but there might have been more.


The Kingstree Police Department, late 1950s or early 60s. Seated from l-r, S.L. McFadden, Chief
George B. Hammet, Orion Williams. Standing, F.D. Wheeler, George H. Roark
J.O. Strong, W.B. Cook, Cecil White, and A.A. Bracey.
Source: Williamsburg County: A Pictorial History

As the town grew, so did the police department. By the late 1950s, the police force consisted of nine officers.

The police station on Mill Street suffered irreparable damage during Hurricane Hugo in 1989. The police moved into the old Highway Department building behind the new town hall on Longstreet Street, with the promise that those arrangements were temporary and that a new police station would be built. Thirty-one years later that promise will finally become a reality. Monday night town council voted to name the new facility the Richard L. Treme Public Safety Complex in honor of the town manager, who happened to have been police chief in 1989. For Richard Treme, Chief Williams and the rest of the Kingstree police officers, the new building is a long-deferred dream come true.


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