The Texas State Police (TSP) is a defunct 19th century law enforcement agency that was created following the Civil War by order of Texas GovernorEdmund J. Davis. The TSP worked primarily against racially based crimes in Texas, and included black policemen. It was replaced by a renewed Texas Rangers force in 1873.
Despite the success of the Texas State Police, the fact that the organization was controlled by Governor Davis and employed African Americans made it very unpopular, especially with former slave owners.
Flawed
In September 1870, local citizens of Hill County, Texas refused to cooperate with the TSP in moving against the Kinch West gang; and in December 1870 Hill County citizens blocked the TSP from arresting the killers of a freedmen couple.[2]
Some state police members certainly deserved criticism. Captain Helm, for instance, was accused of murdering prisoners; he was fired, and a warrant was issued for his arrest. Others committed crimes for which the charges were dropped as soon as headquarters was advised. James Davidson, the chief of the state police, embezzled $37,435 and disappeared in 1872.[2][3]
Disbanded
On April 22, 1873, the law authorizing the state police was repealed. Former policeman Leander H. McNelly and at least 36 other state police members then became officers in the reincarnated Texas Rangers force.[1]
Fallen officers
Ten members of the TSP are known to have been killed in the line of duty:{ODMP record}.[4]
In five separate incidents six members of the TSP were killed and two wounded. Likewise, two former TSP members were killed as law officers:
On January 22, 1871, when being transported through Freestone County on way to trial for the murder of Waco City Marshal and former TSP Policeman Laben J. Hoffman on January 6, 1871, prisoner John Wesley Hardin escaped and killed Texas State Police Private Smalley while Lt. Stakes and Anderson were gathering wood.
On October 6, 1871, John Wesley Hardin killed Texas Special Policeman Green Paramore and injured TSP John Lackey.[5]
On July 26, 1872, Hardin wounded Texas State Policeman Sonny Speights in the arm with a derringer pistol, in Hemphill, Texas.
On July 18, 1873, Hardin was involved in the Taylor-Sutton feud and killed former Texas State Police Captain and sheriff of Dewitt County, Jack M. Helms.
Four other TSP members died as a result of a shootout on March 14, 1873. The Texas State Police officers were Wesley Cherry, Jim Daniels, Andrew Melville, and State Police Captain Thomas Williams.
Legacy
The Texas State Police was disbanded on April 22, 1873. In 1935, the Texas Department of Public Safety was formed to serve as one of the several state police forces (the TDPS predecessor was the Texas Ranger Division formed by the Texas Legislature as McNelly's "Special Force of Rangers" and the "Frontier Battalion" in July 1874).[citation needed]
^ abCrouch, Barry A. and Brice, Donaly E.; The Governor's Hounds: The Texas State Police, 1870–1873; University of Texas Press; reprint edition (December 1, 2012), ISBN0292747705 and ISBN978-0292747708
^Varhola, Michael (2011). Texas Confidential: Sex, Scandal, Murder, and Mayhem in the Lone Star State (First ed.). Cincinnati: Clerisy Press. p. 290. ISBN978-1578604586.
^Note: Outlaw William P. Longley later claimed to have killed members of the Texas State Police in the period 1866–1869 (which was before it had come into existence).
^"We have just learned that two negro policemen Green Paramore and John Lackey, were shot yesterday, near DeWitt county line. Green Paramore was killed. We know nothing of the particulars. - Gonzales Index" - The Colorado Citizen newspaper of Columbus, Texas, October 26, 1871 Page: 2
^Press Release; State of Texas, online; accessed October 2016