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Mark Twain to Unsinkable Molly Brown; The Downtown Hannibal Missouri Walking Tour
Item 11 of 18

The Hannibal Police Station and Jail opened in 1879 during a time of growth and expansion for the city. The population boom included an increase in prisoners, pushing the city to build a new jail. Although the building's Victorian architecture seems extravagant, city officials at the time routinely limited costs by constructing public buildings that served many purposes or agencies. The Police Station and Jail also served as home to city offices (City Hall), a courtroom, and a church. 


Hannibal Old Police Station and Jail (Old Jail Museum & Gift Shop)

Hannibal Old Police Station and Jail (Old Jail Museum & Gift Shop)

Hannibal's post-Native-American history begins in 1918 when Abraham Bird obtained the land as compensation for the losses he suffered during the 1911 earthquake in his hometown of New Madrid. One year later, the town of was platted and called Hannibal. Only a few families resided in the new town throughout the 1820s and the incorporation of Hannibal did not transpire until 1838, when a newly formed Hannibal Company sold land at low prices to settlers.

Like numerous other Mississippi River towns, Hannibal owed its initial growth to river trade. Steamboats docked along the Hannibal waterfront with shipments of grain, hemp, hogs, and especially lumber, which grew to be the city's largest and most valuable resource through the nineteenth century. Hannibal's early industries included a pork-packing plant, tobacco factories, flour mills, and sawmills.

The greatest boost to the town's development came in 1859 with the completion of the Hannibal and St. Joseph railroad. Despite the Civil War, Hannibal experienced robust population growth and economic expansion during the 1860s. Hannibal's population reached 10,125 in 1870, which climbed to around 15,000 by 1878 (around the time construction of the now-historic Police Station and Jail commenced). 

The town enjoyed a reputation for its frugalness for much of its early history, which included a tradition of constructing buildings that supported several municipal agencies. Hannibal's first police station and court shared a building with the fire department and city-government offices. Hannibal's first jail (a calaboose) opened in 1841. After suffering damanage during a fire in 1853, the city repaired the calaboose, which allowed it to serve the city until 1879 when the now-historic Police Station and Jail opened; the city demolished the original structure in 1922.

The new jail arose as a result of Hannibal's aforementioned growth, which included more prisoners. City officials began debating a new plan in 1878, with some budget-minded city councilmen proposing the city convert the lower story of the fire station into the new jail, thus combining jail, police, and other city offices more conveniently. However, the plan proved highly impracticable. Thus, the Hannibal city council authorized a new jail building if the cost could be held under $1,000, an unrealistically low figure even in during the 1870s. Finally, after nearly a year of debate, the council handed the matter over to Hannibal's mayor, J.F.K. Hayward. He had long believed the best plan involved building next door to the fire station at 4th and Church; the city council approved of his idea on July 28, 1879. 

Keeping with the city's tendency to construct multi-purpose public buildings, the cell block and police department, comprised of a police chief and six officers, occupied the first block while the second floor served as the home to a courtroom and city offices, ostensibly operating as City Hall. A church also used the upper floor for many years. But, in 1914, the city built a new building to house its offices, and the historic building largely served only the police and its jail. 

In 1976, the city completed a new, modern 25,000-square-foot police station, which left the fate of the 1879 structure in doubt. City officials hoped to demolish it, but public outcry prevented that plan from coming to fruition. Instead, the building ended up in the hands of the Hannibal Fine Arts Museum, whose staff and volunteers restored it to use as a museum and community center. Currently, as of 2022, the building is home to the Old Jail Museum & Gift Shop. 

Cameron, Janice R. "Nomination Form: Hannibal Old Police Station and Jail." National Register of Historic Places. mostateparks.com. 1979. https://mostateparks.com/sites/mostateparks/files/Hannibal%20Old%20Police%20Station%20and%20Jail.pdf. 

Hannibal History Museum. Accessed November 3, 2022. https://www.hannibalhistorymuseum.com/?m=0.

Image Sources(Click to expand)

By Sa magnuson33 - Own work, CC BY-SA 3.0, https://commons.wikimedia.org/w/index.php?curid=35451159