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LA FOP State Lodge History
The Louisiana State Lodge was chartered in 1954 and is
comprised of 30 Lodges statewide with over 5,000 members -- active and retired
-- in local law enforcement. November 1998 marked the grand opening of the State
Business Office in Baton Rouge. The Louisiana State Lodge continues to grow and
make its mark at both the State and National levels.
The Fraternal Order of Police is the world's largest police
organization with over 318,000 local, state, federal, and retired law
enforcement members in over 2,000 Local Lodges in 49 states. The FOP has
championed improving the law enforcement profession.
Before the organization's birth in Spring 1915, policemen
nationwide toiled 12 hours a day under deplorable conditions for insufferable
wages. They had little to be optimistic about and change seemed
unlikely.
Two veteran Pittsburgh, Penn., officers met on a downtown
street corner in April. Martin Toole and Delbert Nagle supposed, "if labor could
organize, shouldn't the police also find a way? Not as a labor union, but as an
organization for the 'social welfare' of all the police." Hence, the Fraternal
Order of Police was conceived.
Within the first week of May, Nagle drew up a petition for
the United Association of Police, which stated: "We the Undersigned Do Hereby
Agree to Support and Maintain the Above Entitled Association Until a
Constitution is Duly Drawn and Officers Chosen." Apart from the author, the
petition bore the signatures of James McCleary, John McDermott, Battle Keys,
M.T. Corcoran, Frank T. Wolinski, Philip A. McTighe, Meritt J. Murphy, and Jacob
Hannes.
The members of the Fraternal Order of Police, now numbering
23, held their first meeting on the morning of May 14, 1915, in Pittsburgh's
Wabash Building.
Some members were displeased with "United Association of
Police" because "that name sounded too much like a Union, and Union sounded too
antagonistic." During the debate, Nagle moved the organization be known as the
"Fraternal Order of Police." The motion carried.
Within a week, Nagle, Toole, and Larkin sought support from
city Mayor Joseph G. Armstrong. At the initial encounter between a government
official and a committee from the F.O.P., the members were received cordially.
The Mayor was assured the Order was not a union and that, in fact, "the word
strike is ruled out completely because we who are obligated to protect life and
property will see that obligation fulfilled regardless of all else."
In conclusion, the self-appointed committee related that if
police organizations could span throughout the entire state, "we could get many
things through our legislation that our council will not, or cannot give
us."
Mayor Armstrong, having strong pro-labor leanings said, "I
don't see a thing in the world wrong with this. You'll have my hearty approval
and full cooperation." With this endorsement and support, the F.O.P. spread
rapidly through Pittsburgh, and by mid-September membership had grown to just
below 600. Subsequently, Mayor Armstrong came to be known as "The Father of the
Fraternal Order of Police."
In these early months of the Order, Nagle decided "we should
have some kind of an insignia, a button... through which brother members of the
future could identify each other even though they be separated by many states."
He took his idea to an artist, Mr. H.J. Garvey, whose sketch of the emblem was
soon adopted as the official sign of the F.O.P. Garvey's sketch, which was later
registered with the U.S. Patent Office in 1948, symbolizes authority, vigilance,
friendship, and the bond of mutuality between members, and the seal of Fort
Pitt, in remembrance of the Orders origination.
By early 1917, membership in Pittsburgh grew to 1,800.
During that summer, Nagle and Toole led in the expansion throughout their state.
On Oct. 15-17, the first National Convention was held in Pittsburgh. At this
inaugural gathering, the Grand Lodge was established and placed with the
authority of issuing charters to subordinate lodges. A Constitution and Bylaws
were drafted, and four members of lodges other than Fort Pitt were added as
officers of this first Grand Lodge.
With both the formation of the Grand Lodge and the secure
foundation established in Pennsylvania, the Order continued its expansion in the
1920s. The F.O.P. became strong in both Ohio and Indiana. By 1929, growth
brought about the need of a National Organizer, which John Kuespert was elected
on Aug. 15.
In the 1930s, three more states were added including West
Virginia, Michigan, and Kentucky. Expansion was not the only aspect of
accomplishment in the '30s. On Aug. 29, 1933, the order passed "the most
important resolution of its first quarter century." The minutes read: "...that a
committee of five be appointed to form state organizations."
By the time the 25th anniversary of the F.O.P. took place in
1940, a Grand Lodge had come into being, approximately 200 lodges had been
chartered, and 23 annual conventions held.
Though the F.O.P. struggled along with the Nation during
World War II, it not only retained its existence, but "became recognized on
Capitol Hill as the Organization speaking for the Nation's
Policemen."
In the 1940s and '50s the Order continued to expand with
lodges in South Dakota, Arizona, Rhode Island, New Jersey, Maryland, Delaware,
Florida, Tennessee, Mississippi, Louisiana, North and South Carolina, Alabama,
and Georgia.
Not only did the F.O.P. expand with new Lodges, but on Sept.
19, 1941 a motion that "The Grand Lodge grant a charter to the Ladies" passed
unanimously. "The ladies" were those women who in accordance with their motto of
"We do not let him walk alone," desired to begin a National Ladies
Auxiliary.
These years were filled with the Order's engagements with
issues such as Legislature, Civil and Human Rights, and Public
Consciousness.
Throughout the national tumult of the 1960s, the F.O.P.
continued expansion with lodges in Missouri, Kansas, and Nebraska. Although
growth continued, the Order experienced some unrest from sources like the Police
Review Boards and the Justice Department.
The members of the F.O.P. persisted through these hardships
as likewise their brothers had endured in the past. This tenacity that has
prevailed since the Order's conception led it to the height at which it stood in
1975. The evolution that began with 23 men who 60 years earlier vowed to
continue to support this organization come what may unfolded until it spanned
the nation with 1,100 lodges containing 140,000 members.
As the Order continued into the late '70s, its level of
national recognition continued to increase with the opening of an office just
four blocks from the White House and only 10 blocks from the Capitol Hill. The
F.O.P. had truly established itself in our nation's Capitol. The office would
serve not only as a clearing house for F.O.P. concerns from all over the
country, but would fulfill the need of influencing national legislation and
federal programs which affect the police.
The Order's accomplishments in Washington, D.C. were
extended on Sept. 29, 1976 when President Gerald Ford signed into law H.R. 366,
otherwise known as the $50,000 Survivorship Bill. This law, which was conceived
15 years earlier at the 35th Biennial National F.O.P. Conference, provides that
the dependent of any police officer who dies of an injury sustained in the line
of duty will receive a lump sum of $50,000.
As the F.O.P. came into a new decade, the national
leadership turned to a "Return of the Fraternal Order of Police to the
Membership." In an effort to accomplish these goals regional workshops and
seminars were developed throughout the country in an effort to spotlight the
National F.O.P. in a non-crisis situation.
The Order continued into the eighties with many noteworthy
achievements. With the coming about of a new lodge in Washington D.C.,
membership rose until it reached 160,000 in 1982.
Additional steps forward were taken in our nation's Capitol
when the F.O.P. leadership became active on the National Labor Advisory Council.
A panel was created to open doors of communication between representatives of
labor organizations and both political parties.
As the F.O.P. continued to develop as an organization, many
legislative goals were also fulfilled. In 1985 the Order held firm in its
support of the Bill HR-4, which regulates the manufacture, importation, and the
sale of armor-piercing ammunition. It was the F.O.P.'s position that what good
comes of banning the manufacture and importation if we can't prevent the sale of
the "cop killer" ammunition. The eventual passage of the Bill was called the
biggest legislative victory in years for law enforcement.
As the Order approached the decade of the '90s, the Order
consisted of approximately 270,000 members. Through the hard work of the
Expansion Committee, individual State Lodges, and increased exposure given the
F.O.P. by the news media, this number has grown to over 318,000 members.
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