History

Edward-McMahonThe first recorded Sheriff of New Hanover County was in 1739, the same year that the town of Wilmington was incorporated. The oldest existing prison in the county is underneath the Burgwyn-Wright House at Third and Market Streets.

The first elected Sheriff was in 1868. The same year, the first two deputies and jailer were employed. One of the deputies and the jailer were African-American.

The location of the Sheriff's Office during the 1860s was in the same building as the courthouse. The Sheriff's duties expanded as time went on, and larger facilities, jail, and more money were always items before the county commissioners.

At the turn of the century, county commissioners strove to meet the needs of the Sheriff's Office by raising salaries, securing up-to-date equipment, transportation and facilities. The courthouses in which the Sheriff's Office and jail were located kept burning down.

The Sheriff's Office was moved from place to place over the years, from old courthouses to the City Hall basement, to the courthouse annex, to the N Fourth Street location, and to the present facility located at 3950 Juvenile Center Road, occupied in 2004.

The present-day Sheriff's Office has over 400 personnel. Ed McMahon has been sheriff from 2009 to the present.

Sidney Causey

2002 to 2009

Sidney Causey

Joseph Lanier

2000 to 2002

Joseph Lanier

Joseph McQueen Jr.

1982 to 2000

Joseph McQueen Jr

Thomas Radewicz

1978 to 1982

Thomas A Radewicz

H.G. Grohman

1973 to 1978

H G Grohman


Marion Millis

1958 to 1973

Marion Millis

Marvin Register

1951 to 1958

Marvin Register

F. Porter Davis

1947 to 1951

Porter Davis

C. David Jones

1932 to 1947

C. David Jones

John Morris

1930 to 1932

John Morris

George Jackson

1916 to 1930

George Jackson

Elijah Hewlett

1894 to 1898

Elijah Hewlett