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TOWN OF PLYMOUTH
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A Brief History of the Plymouth, Massachusetts Police Department The Plymouth Police Department wishes to thank Town Clerk Laurence Pizer and Mr. James Baker of Plimoth Plantation for their assistance with this project. The first Western European law enforcement function in North America was performed by one Joshua Cooper, who was appointed a "constable" for the Plymouth Court in 1633. While his position was what would today be considered a "judicial" function rather than an "executive" one, he did enforce the orders of the court. Constables were appointed through the 1700s, often serving unwillingly. The first appointments of police occurred in 1861, when Captain Peter Smith and Captain Josiah Baxter were appointed as "day and night police." In 1865 the town budget showed several constables serving the court. At this time there were several entries pertaining to persons being paid a dollar a day for providing police services. Captain Josiah Baxter in that year was paid $109 for 109 days work. Others were paid some lesser amounts for police and night watchman duties. In 1871 the town budget shows the first line item for "Watch and Police" at $949. More officers were added by appointment in 1875. In 1899 the Plymouth Police Department submitted its first Annual Report to the Town. Chief of Police B.F. Goddard reported 120 arrests for the year ending 31 December 1899, 63 of which were on warrants. Seventeen of the arrestees were minors. The most common offenses committed in Plymouth that year were:
Compare these statistics with those from a century later! Chief Goddard reported that the Board of Selectmen had appointed seven constables, of whom four were also appointed as regular police officers. Many domestic quarrels were resolved "without resort to court prosecutions." Many persons under the influence of liquor were "assist[ed] or sen[t] to their homes..." Licensed druggists were inspected, as were the express companies. Chief Goddard also reported that "one-half of the population of the town are located north of Chilton street, and that probably two-thirds of the entire business of the town is transacted in the same section..." He closed by seeking an appropriation for the year 1900 of $3500.00.
"The police...have no office, and the members are obliged...to
sit around the furnace in what is little better than an open cellar...Into this dark and
dreary den the authorities of other towns are introduced to confer with our chief of
police." "To the lockup cells no words of condemnation are too strong to be applied. Warm enough in winter because of their proximity to the furnace, they are for one-half of the year chilly and damp and without a ray of sunlight to cheer and comfort those confined in them...The committee invite the voters of the town to visit the cells and judge for themselves whether they are such as the dictates of humanity can approve." The committee's plans for rehabilitation included "a police office, four cells constructed of iron lattice work, a brick stack supporting the safe and forming a closet for the deposit of seized articles..." This was obviously delayed, as a 1911 newspaper item reported that the State Board of Health had condemned the police station. "It will soon be up to the town to provide more sanitary quarters than those afforded by the basement of the town house, where cells are dark and ventilation is none of the best."
Today the Plymouth Police Department is comprised of 102 full time police officers and 45 other full time and part time employees. Click here for more information about our department today.
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