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Oregon's new police force
Organizing the force The State Council of Defense for Oregon responded by drafting a plan for organizing a state police force. The council modeled the plan after the famed Texas Rangers and other similar forces. At the request of the defense council chairman, the Oregon Legislative Emergency Board met and adopted the plan. The board also provided $250,000 for operating the force through the end of 1918. The majority of the new guard had seen military duty before, many in the Spanish-American War. The men, mostly between 18 and 45 years old, were issued uniforms from the national guard with campaign hats and leather leggings. They also received Springfield or Winchester rifles. And, the force ordered five automobiles and 12 motorcycles, some with side-cars. Officers were paid according to corresponding military salary while the privates earned $90 per month. Once at strength, the military police numbered about 11 officers and 180 enlisted men.
The task at hand A significant portion of the police force, two officers and 50 enlisted men, covered the grain belt of central and eastern Oregon in the summer and fall months. Their goal was to prevent serious damage to crops from fire or "other destruction at the hands of lawless men." Substantial details of the force were stationed in Athena, Condon, Helix, Heppner, La Grande, Maupin, Moro, Pendleton, Pilot Rock, and Umatilla - all communities growing grain needed to feed the American soldiers fighting in Europe. Officials estimated that the police visited and safeguarded nearly 1,500 farms during this duty. Along similar lines, large detachments saw duty fighting 38 forest fires. Making arrests
Controversy follows The end of the war soon brought an end to both the controversy and the Oregon Military Police. Within three weeks all but 15 men were mustered out of service. The governor sought to continue the military police as an ongoing presence. In January 1919 he recommended that the Oregon Legislature establish "a state constabulary of ten or fifteen men as a small mobile force for state police-duty." Withycombe envisioned the organization helping with the enforcement of prohibition and game laws as well as helping to prevent forest fires.
He defended the military police, saying that "despite the vicious criticism leveled against this organization by the lawless element, whose habits were rather rudely interrupted by the activities of the state police, and by many well-meaning citizens who were not informed truthfully, the Oregon military police performed an excellent service." But in the end, his opponents won the day. The organization came to an end on March 30, 1919. Law enforcement in Oregon reverted to a fragmented system with separate groups enforcing prohibition, criminal, arson, forestry, fish, game, and other laws. While the State Traffic Division police developed by 1921, it wasn't until 1931 that the Oregon State Police Department was created. In many ways, that force followed in the footsteps of the Oregon Military Police. (Oregon State Defense Council Records, Publications and Ephemera, Box 8, Folder 4, Oregon State Council of Defense News Letter, November 1918; Oregon Historical Quarterly, vol. 45, page 124; Governor's Messages to the Legislature, 1919, page 14; History of the Oregon State Police, Department of State Police, 1981) |
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