The Historic Negro Police Precinct & Courthouse Museum: The First Five
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member Markerman62
N 25° 47.057 W 080° 12.181
17R E 579906 N 2852037
Located at 480 Northwest 11th Street, Miami
Waymark Code: WM18EVJ
Location: Florida, United States
Date Posted: 07/20/2023
Published By:Groundspeak Regular Member the federation
Views: 0

In 1944, the City of Miami hired its first five black police officers who were sworn in as "emergency patrolmen" to enforce the law in what was then called the Central Negro District. These stalwart men were Ralph White, Moody Hall, Clyde Lee, Edward Kimball, and John Miledge. By 1945, ten more officers were added. A precinct building was constructed in 1950, and served as a station house and courtroom. It was designed by Walter C. DeGarmo (1876-1951), one of Miami’s first and most prominent architects. Lawson E. Thomas, judge of the Negro Municipal Court, presided over the precinct’s courtroom. He was the first black judge elected in the South since Reconstruction, and Miami’s first black judge. In 1955, the City of Miami appointed its second black municipal judge, John Johnson. He presided alongside five Jewish judges, who had sacrificed their careers to serve at the “colored courthouse.” The Negro Precinct was unique because it was designed, devoted to, and operated as a segregated station house and court. There was no other known to exist in the country at that time. It served as a blueprint for community policing practices, and provided an opportunity for black defendants in Miami to receive proper due process.
Marker Number: F-1045

Date: 2018

County: Miami-Dade

Marker Type: City

Sponsored or placed by: City of Miami Retired Police Officers Community Benevolent Assocation, Miami Community Police Benevolent Association, Southeast Overtown/Park West Community Redevelopment Agency, H.T. Smith, esq, Chief Anita Najiy, Myhistorytour.com and the Florida Depart

Website: Not listed

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