David Richards and Sarah F Lock
1835-1911
Information on
David Lock comes from "Kentucky: A History of the State, Battle, Perrin, & Kniffin,
7th ed., 1887"
and the Campbell County Historical Society. Family information comes from
the files at the Campbell County Historical & Genealogical Society in Alexandria
David R Lock was the
father of Newport's modern police force. He was born in London, England,
February 2, 1835 to John Brown Lock and Nancy Ann Richards, natives of Devonshire, England. John B and Nancy
Ann and family immigrated to Newport, Ky., in 1849, where John Bradford Lock was
a grocer, and for a number of years was poor commissioner and treasurer of
the city schools. John Brown Lock was born in 1806 in England and died in
Newport Jan 1881 and was buried in Newport Cemetery. Nancy Ann was born in 1805
and died 5 Jan 1870 in Newport and was buried in the Newport Cemetery (now known
as Evergreen).
Children of John Bradford Lock and Nancy Ann Richards
1.
Frederick John Lock
b-Dec 1830 in London England; d-11 Sep 1903 in Newport; m (1) Sarah Glover in
Mar 1861 (b-8 Dec 1834 in Portsmouth Oh; d/o Hozel & Elizabeth Clover; d-1 June
1885 in Newport) (2) Bettie in 1892; became a doctor in
Newport
2. Mary Lock b-2 Nov 1832 in London; d-20 Dec 1913 in Birmingham Ala. br-Evergreen
Cemetery; m-Joseph Worcester
3. David Richards Lock b-2 Feb 1835 in London; d-24 Aug 1911 in Newport; m-2
May 1859 Sarah F Hagerty (born Aug 1837 in Ohio, daughter of Elizabeth Helm of Newport)
4. Anna R Lock b-12 Sep 1837 in London; d-4 June 1915; m-James R Stone 19 Sep 1857
5. John Brown Lock b-22 Feb 1840 in London England; d-22 Dec 1925; m-Mary K
Revell in 1875
6. Sarah Lock b-2 Feb 1842 in London; d-27 Oct 1921 in Cherokee Okla. br-Enid
Cemetery; m-Isaac Newton Horner 19 Mar 1861
7. Eliza Lock b-1844 in London
8. Frances Lock b-1846 in London
9. Elizabeth Lock b-17 Oct 1847 in London; d-16 Oct 1917 in Newport; m-William H
Horner 18 Oct 1882
10. Lida Lock b-1849 in London England
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David Richards Lock was educated in the common schools of London, England, and Newport, Ky., and learned the trade of a plasterer, serving an apprenticeship of three years. He worked at his trade for a number of years, when he was appointed city collection, and served four years as city marshal.
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Children of
Frederick John Lock and Sarah Glover
1. William O Lock b-Mar 1853 in Ohio; m-Laura H in 1873
2. Frank Lock b-1860 in Ohio
3. Elizabeth Lock b-1862 in Ohio
4. Frances Lock b-1866 in Newport
4. Bertha Lock b-Sep 1873 in Newport
5. Georgia Lock b-July 1876 in Newport
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Children of Mary Lock and Joseph Worcester
1. Anna Worcester b-23
May 1854 in Newport
2. Samuel Henry Worcester b-1864 in Newport; d-2 Oct 1917 in Birmingham Ala. br-Oak
Hill Cemetery
3. Abbie Worcester b-1 Dec 1869 in Newport
4. John Lock Worcester b-14 Feb 1873 in Newport; d-12 Aug 1947 in Seattle Wash.
br-Kansas City Mo.
5. Oliver Morton Worcester b-1877 in Indianapolis; d-12 Oct 1880 in Aurora
Indiana; br-Evergreen Cemetery Southgate Ky.
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Children of Sarah Lock and Isaac Newton Horner
Harry Newton Horner b-7
Dec 1861 in Newport; d-6 Apr 1948 in Enid Okla. br-Enid Cemetery
Ernest Horner b-30 May 1863 in Newport; d-19 Sep 1954 in Quincy Ill.
br-Greenmount Cemetery; m-Clara
Anna Lee Horner b-3 July 1870 in Newport; d-1964 in Okla. br-Enid Cemetery;
m-Winfred W Wheeler
Bessie Bowers Horner b-9 Sep 1872 in Newport; d-1956 in Okla. br-Enid Cemetery;
m-Roettinger
Fannie Cowden Horner b-2 Nov 1876 in Newport; d-15 Apr 1970 in Cherokee Okla. br-Enid
Cemetery; m-Sherman W Hill
Alfred Cookman Horner b-18 Apr 1883 in Newport; d-3 Sep 1920 in Albuquerque New
Mex. br-Enid Cemetery
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Children of William O Lock and Laura H
1. Frederica Lock b-Sep
1873 in Ohio
2. Jessie E Lock b-1877 in Newport
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Children of David Richards Lock and Sarah F Hagerty
1.
William Henry Lock
born in 1861; d-October 1907 in Newport; br-Evergreen Cemetery; m-Mary
Mouszard; m-2-Mary Kruse 18 July 1895 in Cincinnati
2. David Richards Lock Jr. b-9 Aug 1885 in Newport; m-Stella B Ware
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Child of William Henry Lock and Mary Mouszard (1859-1890)
1. David Richard Lock b-9 July 1884 in Newport; d-11 Apr 1935 in Dayton Ky. br-Evergreen
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Children of Anna Lock and James R Stone
1. Walter P Stone b-1858
in Newport
2. Frederick John Stone b-1861 in Newport
3. William H Stone b-1864 in Newport
4. Clifford L Stone b-1870 in Newport; d-2 Nov 1893 of typhoid fever; br-Evergreen
5. Ruth Stone b-Jan 1884 in Newport
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Children of John Brown Lock and Mary K Revell
1. William Richards Lock
b-6 July 1875 in Newport; d-30 Apr 1876
2. John Brown Lock b-11 Jan 1877 in Newport; d-21 Dec 1884
3. Wilbert Edward* Lock b-18 Dec 1878* in Newport; m-Mae
4. Mary Lock b-6 Nov 1880 in Newport; d-12 Feb 1885 in Newport
5. Josephine Lock b-Dec 1882 in Newport
6. Frederick James* Lock b-15 Oct 1884 in Newport; d-21 Apr 1953 in Kenton Co
7. Hope Revell Lock b-14 Sep 1886 in Highlands; d-9 Apr 1941; m-L F Hanger
8. John Bradford* Lock b-11 Nov 1888* in Highlands; m-Claire
9. Kitty C Lock b-Aug 1890 in Highlands
* information comes from WWI draft card
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Children of Sarah Lock and Isaac N Horner
1. Harry Horner b-1861
in Newport
2. Ernest Horner b-1863 in Newport
3. Anna Horner b-1869 in Newport
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Children of Elizabeth Lock and William H Horner
1. Watson G Horner
b-1884 in Newport
2. Edith W Horner b-1886 in Newport; m-Harry M Zeltner
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David R. fought for the Union joining Company E 8th Kentucky Cavalry in 1862, rose from the ranks to become a Second Lieutenant, and was captured August 2, 1862 and sent to Libby Prison where he remained until March 1865. He marched at the grand victory parade in Washington in May 1865 with the other captured officers liberated from Richmond's Libby Prison. Tradition has it that Abraham Lincoln met the English-born Lock, who looked more robust than the other ex-captives, patted him on the shoulder and joked that "prison life did not harm you, did it?"
After operating a fish, poultry and ice store at 521 York Street, he became President of the Central Savings Bank and Trust Company. All police chiefs needed an established civilian source of income because they had no guarantee of being reappointed once the politicians who chose them left office. He was also an agent for the Champion Ice Company of Covington.
Lock first assumed the post of "city marshal and chief of police" in 1873. Albert S Berry, an ex-confederate officer, earned a one-cent fine in December 1874 for knocking "flat down" Marshal David R Lock, a Union veteran. Until 1901 Lock headed the police force during four separate administrations for a total of 15 years. Of the six other police chiefs from 1873 to 1901, none served longer than five years and their average tenure was just two and half years. It was Lock who dispersed the Forty Thieves Gang.
The concern over crime that had surfaced in 1877 grew. Lock and his assistants, one of who was Thomas Cottingham, a native of Ireland who had come to Newport in 1860, discovered a cave along the Licking River near the foot of Fifth Street. This cave had a small entrance, but it opened up to a large room and several rooms led to passages to the outside. Also discovered was a secret room behind a closet in an old building at Fifth and Patterson by a building contractor. In the room was a supply of jimmies, keys, saws, and other burglary tools, all labeled part of the Forty Thieves. The discovery of this cave helped break up the gang. The cave has since collapsed during a succession of floods.
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Cincinnati Daily Gazette, Thursday, 9 January 1879, page 8
Mr. D R Lock, ex-City Marshal, went to Cincinnati with a party of friends in a sleigh. At the Oberly House he fell in with several friends of Fitzgerald, whom he killed in self-defense last spring. These fellows commenced a quarrel with him, but he got away from them. They followed him to the foot of Broadway and getting him in their power, gave him a terrible beating.
As Mr. Lock did not fire the shot that killed Fitzgerald until he was convinced from the cries of "Kill him" and the manner they were dragging him to a brick pile that it was their intention to beat his brains out. It is a disgrace to civilization that he should be in continual danger from these ruffians.
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Cincinnati Commercial Tribune, Thursday, 12 June 1884, page 3
CHIEF OF POLICE D R LOCK last night instructed the police to arrest all persons caught shooting fireworks of any description within the city limits. He says it is becoming an intolerable nuisance a month before the Fourth of July.
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Lock replaced felt hats with the London "Bobby" helmet on the 19th century police uniform. By 1889 the department generally consisted of 16 men appointed for two-year terms. They worked twelve hour shifts, with each officer assigned to walk a particular beat in one of the six wards. The force stood at 24 men in 1899. Average pay in 1896 was $2.28 per day for lieutenants and $2 per day for the officers on the street. The first known report of annual arrests appeared in 1889 when there were 663, followed by 504 in 1890. Arrests totaled 511 in 1898.
David R Lock died August 24, 1911
in Newport and was buried in Evergreen
Cemetery. He was a Mason and a Knight Templar, a Republican politically,
and a member of the Episcopal Church in religion. Lock's daughter-in-law,
the wife of his son David R Lock Jr. died about the same time while on a trip to
Denver intended to improve her health. Lock's funeral was postponed for a couple
of days for the return of his daughter-in-law. A double funeral was held
at Grace Methodist Church in Newport and both were buried at Evergreen.