Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Rogers man wants constable killed in 1924 listed on memorial

- TRACY M. NEAL

ROGERS — Brian Culpepper wants to honor a constable killed in the line of duty almost 100 years ago when a horse and buggy crashed into his vehicle.

“Edward Allen should be remembered,” said Culpepper, the crime scene technician for the Rogers Police Department. “He deserves to be honored.”

Culpepper had never heard of Allen, who died March 16, 1924, until November.

He wants Allen’s name added to the National Law Enforcemen­t Officers Memorial

in Washington.

The memorial is the nation’s monument to law enforcemen­t officers who have died in the line of duty, according to its website. The memorial features two curving, 304-foot-long bluegray marble walls on which are carved the names of more than 21,000 officers dating back to the first known death in 1787, according to the website.

Culpepper collects historical documents, especially those involving statutes and laws. He bought a small, 1905 booklet with the rules of the Rogers Cemetery.

Informatio­n about Allen was in the package with the booklet.

He researched and learned Allen died in the line of duty.

Allen, the constable for Esculapia Township in the Rogers area, was returning from a raid on suspected gamblers and bootlegger­s when his car was hit by a runaway horse and buggy, according to a news story in the Rogers Democrat.

Benton County currently has constables elected from five townships.

Constables in Benton County used to play an important role in law enforcemen­t, said Keith Brummett, the constable of Township 2 and the first vice president of the Arkansas Constable Associatio­n.

Rural areas didn’t have police department­s, so constables served that role, Brummett said.

Most of the smaller cities in the county now have police department­s.

Brummett said the role of the constable has changed and he sees it as one to assist police and deputies and be an extra set of ears and eyes.

Allen was described in the news story as a hard-working, energetic person and business man and had been making good as constable.

“He did not know the meaning of the word fear and was held in respect by every law breaker in this part of the country,” the story read.

Culpepper described Allen as an old-time policeman.

Keith Foster, spokesman for the Police Department, said the agency supports adding Allen’s name to the monument.

“The holdup is that one of the requiremen­ts is a family member or descendant has to be known/available,” Foster said.

Culpepper hasn’t found a family member. He was able to add Allen’s name to the Officer Down Memorial Page, but his goal is to find a relative so the name will be on the memorial.

“That’s the ultimate recognitio­n,” he said. “I’ve done everything possible to find a family member. I can’t get him on the wall without one. I have to have a family member.”

Allen was married, and he and his wife had three sons and two daughters, according to the news story. His wife, Ora, died in 1926, and they are buried in Rogers Cemetery.

Brummett wasn’t aware of Allen’s case, and the constable’s associatio­n doesn’t have any informatio­n about Allen’s death.

“It will mean a lot to me to have his name on the wall, but I hope it means more for the family,” Culpepper said.

Allen’s name would join two local constables, according to the memorial’s website.

Will Dalton, a Esculapia Township constable, was shot and killed Jan. 20, 1891, while trying to search a house for two fugitives.

Lester Setser, a constable in Decatur, and was killed June 5, 1951. He took a drunk man home, and as he was leaving the man shot Setser four times in the back.

Tracy M. Neal can be reached by email at tneal@nwaonline.com or Twitter @NWATracy.

“I’ve done everything possible to find a family member. I can’t get him on the wall without one. I have to have a family member.” — Brian Culpepper, Rogers crime scene technician

 ?? (NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) ?? Brian Culpepper, a crime scene technician at the Rogers Police Department, speaks Friday at the gravesite of Ed Allen at a cemetery in Rogers. Go to nwaonline.com/200720Dail­y/ for today’s photo gallery.
(NWA Democrat-Gazette/Charlie Kaijo) Brian Culpepper, a crime scene technician at the Rogers Police Department, speaks Friday at the gravesite of Ed Allen at a cemetery in Rogers. Go to nwaonline.com/200720Dail­y/ for today’s photo gallery.

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