The Great Jail Incident
Back in the late 1930’s, it was determined that the old jail behind the Wicomico County Courthouse was not adequate and a new one was needed. The first phase entailed razing the old jail. As is proper with government projects, the job was put out for bids.
On the day the sealed bids were opened, my grandfather’s bid was substantially lower than anyone else’s. When questioned by his peers as to how he could do the job at such a low cost. He replied that it wouldn’t cost that much to just dynamite the old jail and haul the rubble away. At that point, he was told he had really made a serious mistake because it was illegal to set off dynamite within the city limits. They told him it would cost him far more than his bid to bring in a crew with sledge hammers and raze the old jail. He just shrugged and said nothing.
Late the following Sunday night a great explosion was heard in downtown Salisbury. The following morning found him standing in front of the Clerk of Court with $25 in his hand. When asked what the money was for, he told the clerk that it was for the maximum amount he could be fined for setting off dynamite within the city limits according to the City Charter. He then proceeded to help with shoveling the rubble into dump trucks and clearing the space where the new jail was to be erected. Needless to say, his costs were well under his estimate.
7 comments:
Thanks for the great story Mr. Chevallier. As a "come here," (15 years ago, but still a come here!) I appreciate the chance to hear your colorful tales of Salisbury's past. I wonder if anyone could help with finding and posting pictures to go along with the stories?
How funny is that story? Thank you for sharing!!
Looking good George , he was a
very smart man. Is the fine still the same? Just curious , others need to heed! (nanticoke mayor)
Smart man he was
I spent to long in that hell-hole.
Sounds like a man that knew the charter LOL. Good story George. Keep them coming.
George:
I've been following your pieces here on Salisbury News and always enjoy them. Thanks for publishing these local history pieces on the Salisbury area for readers of SBY. This one was entertaining. I'm looking forward to more great installements.
Mike
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