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Lafayette Indiana Police DepartmentHistory
Early law enforcement in Lafayette was mostly non-existent and the city quickly earned the reputation of a rough and tumble river port. Arrests for gambling and fighting were common. In 1853, the town of Lafayette was re-incorporated under the laws of the second Indiana Constitution and an elected position of Town Marshall was created. Thomas Jefferson Chissom was the first Town Marshall and served two terms in that office prior to being elected as County Sheriff. During Chissom's term as County Sheriff three men convicted of murder were hanged on the court- house square following the much publicized trial. Today's Police Department can trace its beginning to a small police force established early in 1854 while Chissom was the City Marshall.
Bob Kriebel, local historian, describes early law enforcement in Lafayette as a motley mix of elected law officers, and private merchant police with occasional aid from various local militia groups. Kriebel says, "In 1832 fear about the Black Hawk War on the Illinois frontier caused about 300 men from Lafayette and surrounding area to organize and call themselves the Lafayette Guards. A War of 1812 veteran who still owned a musket drilled them in some primitive way or other. An early volunteer leader of this movement, a genuine civic booster, was the merchant Thomas T. Benbridge. Later Benbridge helped organize a small merchant police team of a few men who patrolled the downtown business district overnight. There followed a little later a more formal City Watch, and then a Town Marshall, followed by the paid city police force. The county sheriff and Fairfield township constable were also present as peacekeepers." In 1893 the police department was once again reorganized under a new statute setting up a Metropolitan Board of Police Commissioners to run the department. This removed the administration of the department from the direct control of the Mayor and City Council. A police Superintendent was appointed by the Commissioners and paid $1000 per year. In addition there were two Captains (one for the day shift and one for the night shift), two mounted patrolmen and sixteen patrolmen (foot patrol). Captains earned $60 per month while the mounted patrolmen earned $70 per month to compensate them for supplying, feeding and housing their own mounts. The police department now occupies its fourth home since the 1890's. We began the 20th century in a small office on the ground floor of the county courthouse. During the early 1940's the department moved, along with other city offices, to a building on the southeast corner of 6th and Columbia Street . In 1958 the city abandoned that location and built a new municipal building on the southwest corner of 6th and Columbia in which the police department occupied about one third of the space. In 1994 that City Hall building was extensively remodeled and enlarged and the police department moved back in to the new facility after several months of operating from various rented spaces downtown. The newly remodeled facility more than doubled the space that had previously been allocated for police use in the building but department growth over the past 10 years has left the department in overcrowded work space again. You can link to two albums from here. The first contains a mix of historic LPD images and the second contains images of our shoulder patches and different badges. You may select different viewing sizes from within the album but the images are best displayed at the medium size or smaller. These are all low resolution images to make loading faster and viewing at large size will substantially degrade the image. Information about many of these images is limited and if you know any of the people shown please contact us so that we can add names or other information. Our department will gladly accept LPD memorabilia for a public display we hope to someday build. |
LPD Headquarters
20 North 6th. St. Lafayette, IN 47901 EMERGENCY: 911 Non-Emergency: (765) 807-1200 Fax: (765) 807-1281 |
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