Post on 18-Dec-2015
HISTORY OF THE
CLAY COUNTY
SHERIFF’S OFFICE
Clay County Sheriffs
Elam J. Daniels 1859-1863 Joshua D. O’Hern 1863-1865 William Wilson 1866-1867 John W. Sullivan 1868-1870 Henry Bradford 1870-1874 Thomas Roberts 1874-1877 James W. Dewitt (Died in 1885) 1877-1885
Spotlight on Sheriff O’Hern
Served 1863-1865 The Sheriff and Justices of the
Peace were only “law enforcement” at time
Deserters from both Civil War armies robbing and pillaging across county
“County Patrols” were attempted to reduce looting
Early Clay County settler, timber and cattle farmer
Lieutenant in the 2nd Florida Battalion
Linked to the sinking of the Maple Leaf in 1864
Sheriffs Cont’d.
Claiborne (Clay) Wright Feb.16-July 28 1885, (Went Missing.)
Christian Black Aug. 1885-1889 Josephus A. Peeler 1889-May 10,
1894, (Killed on Duty age 36) J. M. Beery (acting Sheriff) May 10-May 22 George W. Hanford Jr. 1894-1895
Spotlight on Sheriff Peeler
Served 1889-1894 Shot and killed in 1894 while
trying to stop an argument at the Green Cove Springs train station (was 36 years old)
During his term used prisoners to do manual labor around jail and courthouse
Old jail was moved to present site, then, new jail built in 1894
First female prisoners housed at jail during this time frame
Sheriffs Cont’d James Weeks 1895-1900 William F. Peeler (Josephus’ Brother)
1900-1905 Charles Wilson 1905-1906
(Killed age 33) R.C.Canova (acting Sheriff unitl Sept. 4,
1906
Spotlight on Sheriff James Weeks
Served 1895-1900, 1906-1911 Middleburg farmer and
Palatka logger Resigned in 1900 to further his
timber business but ran again in 1906
Turbulent time for county as attempts were made to desegregate school(s) in OP
Organized posse with Deputy Ivey to capture bank robbers after Green Cove Bank’s safe blown up; gun battle ensued
Sheriffs Cont’d
James Weeks Sept. 4, 1906-Aug. 24, 1911 (deceased in office, age 60)
L. T. Ivey (acting Sheriff) Aug. 24-Sept. 16, 1911
Theodore S. Cherry Sept. 16, 1911-July 6, 1913 ( Killed on duty)
J. H. King 1913-1917 (disappeared)
Spotlight on Sheriff Cherry
Served 1911-1913 Killed in controversial shoot
out at lynch party camp site (murdered vs. assassinated)
The suspect, a turpentine worker, was shot and killed by lynch party on the same day
Tourist industry along the St. Johns River managed to thrive during period despite civil disorder rampant inland
Cherry was known to face any criminal head on
Sheriffs Cont’d
J. Slater Smith, Sr. 1917-1918 Elam J. Weeks 1918-1929 John P. Hall, Sr. 1929-1964 Jennings Murrhee 1964-1988 C. Dalton Bray 1988-1992 Scott Lancaster 1992-2004 Rick Beseler 2004-Present
Spotlight on Sheriff Hall
Served 1929-1964 Longest serving Sheriff; known
as the “Dean of Sheriffs”; a cattleman and banker, too
During early terms, tackled prohibition issues
During later terms, issues of population growth, civil rights, and agency expansion
Was determined to “clean up Clay County”
First Sheriff with Model-A for transport vs. horseback
Only two paved roads No radio-equipped patrol cars
Spotlight on Sheriff Murrhee
Served 1964-1988 Rapid population growth Big emphasis on Community Policing and
SRO’s “New” jail constructed Reserves Program expanded greatly Tackled “road rage” problem in the 1980’s Traffic Unit formed First true 24-hour patrol Organized agency into divisions Crime Prevention programs Set up SWAT Team and Multi-agency
Drug Task Force
Spotlight on Sheriff Bray
Served 1989-1993 Jump-started modernization
of agency Dealt aggressively with
county’s drug use/sale problem and suburban crime
During term, created first internal investigation unit
Created FTO Program Establishment of P.A.L. Former Orange Park Police
Department Chief, FDLE Agent, and FBI Special Agent
Spotlight on Sheriff Lancaster
Served three terms, 1992 to 2004. Agency accomplished largest crime
decrease in modern CCSO history (15% decrease in 2002 versus 2001)
Tackling county issues such as population growth, urban crawl, police technology needs, violent crime increases, community policing, school violence
Major jail and administrative office expansion project
National, State & Jail Accreditation obtained
Marine Patrol Unit created Stop Stations (8) opened and Operations
Centers in community established (2 in OP and Middleburg)
The History of the Clay County Jail