History - Office of Sheriff
Introduction
What is a sheriff? Mention the word
"sheriff" and many people's minds will fill
immediately with images of shootouts and gunfights
in the Wild West. Such is the power of old movies
and television series, which have so magnified the
role of the nineteenth-century American sheriff that
it is now virtually impossible to think of sheriffs
as existing in any other place or time. Most people
would be surprised to know that the office of
sheriff has a proud history that spans well over a
thousand years, from the early Middle Ages to our
own "high-tech" era.
With few
exceptions, today's sheriffs are elected officials
who serve as a chief law-enforcement officer for a
county. Although the duties of the sheriff vary from
jurisdiction to jurisdiction, the sheriff's office
is generally active in all three branches of the
criminal justice system: law enforcement, the courts
and corrections.
The importance of the modern
sheriff was stressed by President Ronald Reagan in
his address to the National Sheriffs' Association on
June 21, 1984. He said, "Thank you for standing up
for this nation's dream of personal freedom under
the rule of law. Thank you for standing against
those who would transform that dream into a
nightmare of wrongdoing and lawlessness. And thank
you for your service to your communities, to your
country, and to the cause of law and justice."
To appreciate the vital function
that sheriffs continue to serve, it is useful to
become acquainted with the long and diverse history
of the sheriff's office, and how the office has
grown and changed over the past twelve centuries.
The
Beginning: The Middle Ages
More than twelve hundred years ago, the country we
now call England was inhabited by small groups of
Anglo-Saxons who lived in rural communities called
tuns. (Tun is the source of the modern English word
town.) These Anglo-Saxons were often at war.
Sometime before the year 700, they decided to
systematize their methods of fighting by forming a
system of local self-government based on groups of
ten.
Each tun
was divided into groups of ten families, called
tithings. The elected leader of each tithing was
called a tithingman.
The
tithings were also arranged in tens. Each group of
ten tithings (or a hundred families) elected its own
chief. The Anglo-Saxon word for chief was gerefa,
which later became shortened to reeve.
During the
next two centuries, a number of changes occurred in
this system of tithings and hundreds. A new unit of
government, the shire, was formed when groups of
hundreds banded together. The shire was the
forerunner of the modern county. Just as each
hundred was led by a reeve (chief), each shire had a
reeve as well. To distinguish the leader of a shire
from the leader of a mere hundred, the more powerful
official became known as a shire-reeve.
The word
shire-reeve eventually became the modern English
word sheriff. The sheriff -- in early England, and
metaphorically, in present-day America -- is the
keeper, or chief, of the county.
Under King
Alfred the Great, who assumed the throne in the year
871, the sheriff was responsible for maintaining law
and order within his own county. However, it
remained the duty of every citizen to assist the
sheriff in keeping the peace. If a criminal or
escaped suspect was at large, it was the sheriff's
responsibility to give the alarm -- the hue and cry,
as it was called. Any member of the community who
heard the hue and cry was then legally responsible
for helping to bring the criminal to justice. This
principle of direct citizen participation survives
today in the procedure known as posse commitatus.
The Office Grows
Originally, tuns had
ruled themselves through the election of tithingmen
and reeves. Over the years, however, government
became more centralized -- concentrated in the power
of a single ruler, the king. The king distributed
huge tracts of land to various noblemen, who thereby
became entitled to govern those tracts of land under
the king's authority. Under this new arrangement, it
was the noblemen who appointed sheriffs for the
counties they controlled. In those areas not
consigned to noblemen, the king appointed his own
sheriffs.
At the
Battle of Hastings in 1066, the Saxon king Harold
was defeated by the Normans -- invaders from the
country we now call France. The Normans, who did not
believe at all in local government, centralized
their power. Rule was greatly consolidated under the
king and his appointees. More than ever before, the
sheriff became an agent of the king. Among the
sheriff's new duties was that of tax collector.
Dictatorial
rule by a series of powerful kings became more and
more intolerable over the years. Finally, in 1215,
an army of rebellious noblemen forced the despotic
King John to sign the Magna Carta. This important
document restored a number of rights to the noblemen
and guaranteed certain basic freedoms. The text of
the Magna Carta mentioned the role of the sheriff
nine times, further establishing the importance of
that office.
Over the
next few centuries, the sheriff remained the leading
law enforcement officer of the county. To be
appointed sheriff was considered a significant
honor. The honor, however, was a costly one. If the
people of the county did not pay the full amount of
their taxes and fines, the sheriff was required to
make up the difference out of his own pocket.
Furthermore, the sheriff was expected to serve as
host for judges and other visiting dignitaries,
providing them with lavish entertainment at his own
expense.
For these
reasons, the office of sheriff was not often sought
after. In fact, many well-qualified men did
everything they could to avoid being chosen. The law
on this point was quite clear -- if a man was chosen
to be sheriff, he had to serve.
The Sheriff
Crosses the Atlantic
When English settlers began to travel to the New
World, the office of sheriff traveled with them. The
first American counties were established in Virginia
in 1634, and records show that one of these counties
elected a sheriff in 1651. Although this particular
sheriff was chosen by popular vote, most other
colonial sheriffs were appointed. Just as noblemen
in medieval England had depended upon sheriffs to
protect their tracts of land, large American
landowners appointed sheriffs to enforce the law in
the areas they controlled. Unlike their English
counterparts, however, American sheriffs were not
expected to pay extraordinary expenses out of their
own pockets. Some sheriffs -- most of whom were
wealthy men to begin with -- even made money from
the job.
Throughout
the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, American
sheriffs were assigned a broad range of
responsibilities by colonial and state legislatures.
Some of these responsibilities, such as law
enforcement and tax collection, were carried over
from the familiar role of the English sheriff. Other
responsibilities, such as overseeing jails and
workhouses, were new.
Prior to
the signing of the Magna Carta in 1215, the most
common punishments for crimes that did not warrant
the death penalty had been flogging or other sorts
of physical mutilation. When confinement became
favored as a more civilized way to deal with
criminals, authorities in medieval England
introduced the county jail. They began to experiment
with other sorts of facilities as well. Among these
were the workhouse, where minor offenders were
assigned useful labor, and the house of correction,
where people who had been unable to function in
society could theoretically be taught to do so.
All three
of these institutions were brought to colonial
America, and the responsibility for managing them
was given to the colonies' ubiquitous law
enforcement officer -- the sheriff.
As
Americans began to move westward, they took with
them the concept of county jails and the office of
sheriff. The sheriff was desperately needed to
establish order in the lawless territories where
power belonged to those with the fastest draw and
the most accurate shot. Here it is said that
sheriffs fell into two categories, the quick and the
dead. Most western sheriffs, however, kept the peace
by virtue of their authority rather than their guns.
With a few exceptions, sheriffs resorted to
firepower much less often than is commonly imagined.
The
Sheriff Today
In the minds of many Americans, the role of sheriff
ended with the taming of the Wild West. Of course,
nothing could be further from the truth. There are
over three thousand counties in the United States
today, and almost every one of them has a sheriff.
Some cities, such as Denver, St. Louis, Richmond and
Baltimore have sheriffs as well.
In the majority of states, the
office of sheriff is established by the state
constitution. Most of the remaining states have
established the office by an act of state
legislature. Alaska is the only state in which the
office of sheriff does not exist.
There are
only two states in which the sheriff is not elected
by the voters. In Rhode Island, sheriffs are
appointed by the governor; in Hawaii, deputy
sheriffs serve in the Department of Public Safety's
Sheriff's Division.
Because the office of sheriff
exists in so many different places and under so many
different conditions, there is really no such thing
as a "typical" sheriff. Some sheriffs still have
time to drop by the town coffee shop to chat with
the citizens each day, while others report to an
office in a skyscraper and manage a department whose
budget exceeds that of many corporations. Despite
their differences in style, however, most sheriffs
have certain roles and responsibilities in common.
Law
Enforcement
Most sheriffs' offices have a responsibility
for law enforcement, a function that dates all the
way back to the origins of the office in feudal
England. Although the authority of the sheriff
varies from state to state, a sheriff always has the
power to make arrests within his or her own county.
Some states extend this authority to adjacent
counties or to the entire state.
Many
sheriffs' offices also perform routine patrol
functions such as traffic control, accident
investigations, and transportation of prisoners.
Larger departments may perform criminal
investigations or engage in other specialized law
enforcement activities. Some unusually large
sheriffs' offices may have an air patrol (including
fixed-wing aircraft or helicopters), a mounted
patrol or a marine patrol at their disposal.
Many
sheriffs enlist the aid of local neighborhoods in
working to prevent crime. The National Neighborhood
Watch Program, sponsored by the National Sheriffs'
Association, allows citizens and law enforcement
officials to cooperate in keeping communities safe.
As the
sheriff's law enforcement duties become more
extensive and complex, new career opportunities for
people with specialized skills are opening up in
sheriff's offices around the country. Among the
specialties now in demand are underwater diving,
piloting, boating, skiing, radar technology,
communications, computer technology, accounting,
emergency medicine, and foreign languages
(especially Spanish, French, and Vietnamese.)
Court Duties
In every state in which the office exists, sheriffs
are responsible for maintaining the safety and
security of the court. A sheriff or deputy may be
required to attend all court sessions; to act as
bailiff; to take charge of juries whenever they are
outside the courtroom; to serve court papers such as
subpoenas, summonses, warrants, writs, or civil
process; to extradite prisoners; to enforce money
decrees (such as those relating to the garnishment
or sale of property); to collect taxes; or to
perform other court-related functions.
Jail Administration
Most sheriffs' offices
maintain and operate county jails, detention
centers, detoxification centers and community
corrections facilities such as work-release group
homes and halfway houses. Sheriffs, and the jail
officers under their authority, are responsible for
supervising inmates and protecting their rights.
They are also responsible for providing inmates with
food, clothing, exercise, recreation and medical
services.
This
responsibility has become more difficult as old jail
facilities deteriorate and become overcrowded. The
mid-1970s brought on an explosion of lawsuits filed
by inmates to protest their conditions of
confinement. In recent years, however, national and
state commissions, along with the courts, have been
working together with local authorities to make
jails more hospitable and humane.
This effort has brought sheriffs and jail officers
into partnership with judges, district attorneys,
and corrections officials. As jail conditions
improve, sheriffs and their departments are earning
increased respect and recognition as professionals.