K.C.P.H.S.
DEDICATES GRAVESTONE
FOR THE FIRST AFRICAN-AMERICAN
POLICE OFFICER
OF THE KANSAS CITY
POLICE DEPARTMENT
Beneath
the bright blue skies
of Father's Day Sunday,
the Kansas City Police
Historical Society
began its step into
history. After
months of research,
the founding members
of the society diligently
researched one particular
past member of our
police department.
Their goal was to
identify and locate
as much history as
possible about the
member. His
name was William F.
Davis, the first African-American
officer appointed
to the department.
Officer
Davis joined the department
in 1874, the same
year the police department
came into existence
under Chief Thomas
M. Speers. Until
now historians had
claimed that at least
two other black officers-
Lafayette Tillman
and Robert Alexander
were the first African-Americans.
However a line-by-line
search of the city
register from 1874
and a 1878 K.C. Times
newspaper, revealed
William F. "Bill"
Davis was a "colored"
policeman for fifteen
years. He died
in 1891 at age 48
from liver complications.
To
honor Officer Davis,
the Kansas City Police
Historical Society
dedicated the
below marker
at his gravesite,
located at the Elmwood
Cemetery (Truman and
Van Brunt) on June
19, 2005 so future
generations will know
who he was and why
his legacy was important
to the history of
this department.
Article
from the July, 2005 issue of the
Informant written by the Media
Relatons Office of the Kansas
City, Missouri Police Department.