Thursday, February 13, 2025

Could St. Johns County's Old Jail, where MLK and several rabbis were jailed in 1964, be demolished? (Lucia Viti, SAR, Febuary 12, 2025)

"Several rabbis?"  It was sixteen (16) Rabbis. I spoke to the Sheriff last year and advised him to meet with the Cultural Resources Review Board.  He did not. This was unforced error.  County Administrator JOY Q. ANDREWS and SJC Growth Management (sic) Director MICHAEL ROBERSON applied for demolition permit sub silentio.  That was so wrong, The Monson Motel and its restaurant were demolished at the behest of greedy holier KANTI PATEL Now the County wants to destroy the only place in Florida where Dr. King was incarcerated?  Just say NO to mediocrity, mendacity and SJC's Demolition Derby. My father would have recommended a picket line.  It takes a village to preserve our precious cultural heritage. Thanks to Trey Alexander Asner, David Nolan and Rabbi Merrill Shapiro!  Yes we can! From St. Augustine Record, February 12 print edition (February 10, 2025 electronic version: 


Could St. Johns County's Old Jail, where MLK and several rabbis were jailed in 1964, be demolished?

To preserve or demolish the Old County Jail, the site where Dr. Martin Luther King and the largest arrest of Jewish rabbis left open for discussion

Lucia Viti
St. Augustine Record
St. Augustine Detention Center, built in 1952, once served as the county jail. The St. Johns County Jail is the only place where Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested in Florida. The jail also serves as the site of the largest mass arrest of Jewish Rabbis.
  • The future of a former jail in St. Augustine, Florida, that once held Martin Luther King Jr. is uncertain as officials weigh demolition requests.
  • Local historians and activists are petitioning to save the building, citing its significance to the Civil Rights Movement.
  • St. Johns County officials say they are considering the building's historical value and will explore all options before making a decision.

The future of St. Johns County's Old Jail has created a firestorm in America’s oldest city.

On Feb. 2, local historian David Nolan and Rabbi Merrill Shapiro, president of the St. Augustine Jewish Historical Society, told the St. Augustine Record via email that the St. Johns County Cultural Resource Review Board planned to discuss demolishing the old jail, 4025 Lewis Speedway, at its meeting on Feb. 10.

Both said the jail's historical significance dates to 1964, when according to Nolan, President Lyndon B. Johnson was told that if “he wanted to keep an eye on the leaders of the civil rights movement, he should just look at the St. Johns County Jail because that's where they all were incarcerated.”

Historical records show that on June 12, 1964, the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. was arrested while attempting to eat at St. Augustine’s bayfront Monson Motor Lodge, a “whites only” restaurant. During his incarceration, King telegrammed his friend, Rabbi Israel Dresner, requesting assistance in the form of the presence of Jewish rabbis, and Dresner complied.

On June 18, 16 rabbis were arrested and incarcerated with King in the St. Johns County jail. Members of the largest mass arrest of rabbis in America composed the famous, “Why We Went Letter,” which is publicly read at the site of their St. Augustine arrest every June.

Nolan and Shapiro said a petition is circulating to cease the demolition of the now vacant historical landmark graced with a Freedom Trail Marker.  

The St. Augustine Record reached out to County Administrator Joy Andrews, who confirmed the information. However, the agenda item had been removed already because the consultants' Cultural Review Management Plan, received just that day, had yet to be reviewed.

Andrews shared a copy of a memo she sent to the Board of County Commissioners that included an overview of the Land Development Code and the County’s Development Review Manual in reference to the jail.

“This is not going to be a quick turnaround, which I think is the way it should be,” she told the St. Augustine Record.

Andrews said that in November 2024, the St. Johns County Sheriff’s Office applied for a development permit to demolish the Detention Center Annex, formerly known as the Old Jail.

“Originally constructed in 1952, the building was renovated over 15 years ago to serve as office space for SJSO employees,” the memo said. “However, due to ongoing maintenance challenges, SJSO vacated the facility about two years ago and it remains unoccupied.”

The memo outlined "community engagement efforts led by the sheriff's office” to preserve the cultural heritage.

“Prior to submitting the application, the sheriff conducted extensive community outreach and facilitated several meetings as well as tours of the building with community stakeholders and leaders, including but not limited to the West Augustine CRA steering committee leaders,” the memo said. “These key community members and the sheriff agreed that, if the permit was approved, any artifacts that could be salvaged from the building would be preserved and protected properly.”

Andrews and Nolan said several of the jail’s artifacts used by King – a bench and his fingerprint card – are already housed at the Lincolnville Museum and Cultural Center.  

The presence of asbestos was another component up for discussion. Andrews underscored that demolition would not occur until a thorough review was conducted and adequate cultural resource protection was in place.

“Additionally, I immediately reached out to the CEO of the Lincolnville Museum and the St. Augustine Historical Society for their input,” she said in the memo. “As we move forward with this thorough review process, we will continue to engage the community to ensure the highest level of protection of our historical resources and assets. I will provide further updates following review of the Cultural Resources Management Plan and future CRRB meeting.”

In the memo, Andrews confirmed the site's historical relevance.

"A Florida Master Site File references the Civil Rights Movement locally and nationally," she wrote. "The file states that Martin Luther King, Jr. and St. Augustine Foot Soldiers and associates were jailed there. The site is potentially eligible for listing as a National Register of Historic Places, however, it is not currently listed as such."

The presence of asbestos was another component up for discussion. Andrews underscored that demolition would not occur until a thorough review was conducted and adequate cultural resource protection was in place.

“Additionally, I immediately reached out to the CEO of the Lincolnville Museum and the St. Augustine Historical Society for their input,” she said in the memo. “As we move forward with this thorough review process, we will continue to engage the community to ensure the highest level of protection of our historical resources and assets. I will provide further updates following review of the Cultural Resources Management Plan and future CRRB meeting.”

In the memo, Andrews confirmed the site's historical relevance.

"A Florida Master Site File references the Civil Rights Movement locally and nationally," she wrote. "The file states that Martin Luther King, Jr. and St. Augustine Foot Soldiers and associates were jailed there. The site is potentially eligible for listing as a National Register of Historic Places, however, it is not currently listed as such."

The memo confirmed the presence of building's two interpretive plaques, one detailing the Freedom Trail, and the other memorializing the building's dedication along with a stair railing and the jail's cell bars.

"The largest mass arrest of Jewish Rabbis in U.S. history occurred in St. Augustine in 1964, and they were detained at this facility," she wrote.

According to Andrews, the impact of the proposed demolition was conducted concurrently with a Historic Architectural Building Survey and the Cultural Resources Management Plan.

"Due to potential cultural significance, staff requested that the applicant hire a professional consultant to complete a Cultural Resources Management Plan," Andrews wrote. "In January, staff toured the site with the consultant, Paul Weaver of Historic Property Associates, Inc., and his photographer to document the site. Mr. Weaver has not submitted his review as of this date."

The memo also said there would be flexibility in how historic associations interpreted or documented the site to "mitigate the Adverse Effect of demolition, if permitted. The CRMP documents those alternatives."

Reviews to authorize or terminate the permit, or leave the application open are pending "comments and further review." Andrews confirmed that as the regulatory agency, the BOCC will make the final decision.

“Should the permit by authorized by staff, it would appear before the Board of County Commissioners as an agenda item for final approval,” the memo said.

'Where there's a will, there's a way'

In learning of the removal of the item for discussion, Nolan detailed the building’s historical significance.

“This can’t be demolition by mistake,” he said. “It’s the government’s responsibility to maintain the historic buildings they own. Discussions must focus on preservation. Where there’s a will, there’s a way.”

Nolan likened the building’s demolition to a breakdown of social consciousness.

“The building offers a historical educational value, while serving as an important function for tourism,” he said. “St. Augustine is a history teacher to America at large and we must show America's children something more than ghosts, and pirates and Ripley's Believe It Or Not Museum. We must show historical places where real things happened.”

“The entire building is much more than the sum of its parts,” Shapiro said. “The Old Jail gives meaning to St. Augustine’s history of the civil rights movement that serves as an intersection between the Jewish community and the African American community on a national scale. Once it's gone, it's gone. There's no going back.”


St. Augustine's Old County Jail is graced with a historical marker. The site is an agenda item up for discussion to preserve or demolish the building.

Sheriff Robert Hardwick Weighs In

As accusations and insults were hurled at county commissioners and staff, specifically at Andrews, St. Johns County Sheriff Robert Hardwick weighed in.

On Feb. 4, prior to the County Commission meeting, Hardwick sent an email to the commissioners and county staff claiming responsibility for "catching anyone off guard" regarding the jail's possible demolition. Hardwick noted that issues regarding the old jail annex have been addressed "literally for years."

Hardwick confirmed that the annex had been repurposed "at least 20 times to include ... undercover narcotics, youth resources, school crossing guards, public service assistants, work release, real time intelligence, criminal investigations, internal affairs, motors, traffic, and different task forces," among other things.

"I could go on and on," he said in the memo.

Hardwick said that three years ago staff complained of unhealthy working conditions, "especially on the second floor," listing coughing, headaches, and respiratory issues. The employees were removed from the building and the issues were addressed with the county's former administrator, Hunter Conrad.

Because Hardwick and Hunter were not satisfied with the findings, which included a cost analysis for building renovations, "we all agreed to not waste any more money in the annex."

In the memo, Hardwick said that, based on photos from June 1964 "when Dr. MLK Jr. was in the facility," the area of historical value was a "very small, generalized area on the bottom floor, literally in the front door," followed by a booking area and a "small general population area."

"I’m probably exaggerating if I say the total area where all of this occurred is approximately 200 square feet, again based off the photos," he said.

Hardwick said that in July last year, he met with members of West Augustine's Community Redevelopment Agency, including Greg White, Robert Nimmons, and Dwala Willis to tour and discuss the annex.

"We believed they were in support," he wrote.

"In closing, I’ll accept complete full responsibility for this, and the building can stay up as long as you want," Hardwick said. "This is not a must, but significant funding will have to reallocated in order for our agency to put full time staff back in the annex, reminding you it’s almost 75 years old. As you know I have a very strong relationship with the African American and Jewish Communities, there was absolutely no hidden agenda by me or my staff, just trying to do the right thing."

For a week in June 1964, St. Augustine was the center of America's civil rights movement.

On June 12, King was arrested while attempting to eat at St. Augustine’s bayfront Monson Motor Lodge, a whites-only restaurant. Documents show that while locked in the county jail, King telegrammed his friend, Dresner – a Freedom Rider from the 1961 interfaith clergy Freedom Ride – requesting assistance in the form of the presence of Jewish rabbis. The plan was one of distraction for a wade-in scheduled simultaneously in the pool of the Monson Motor Lodge.

Dresner read the telegram on June 16, as rabbis gathered for the 75th Central Conference of American Rabbis. Dresner not only heeded the call but was joined by Rabbis Eugene Borowitz, Balfour Brickner, Daniel Fogel, Jerrold Goldstein, Joel Goor, Joseph Herzog, Norman Hirsch, Leon Jick, Richard Levy, Eugene Lipman, Michael Robinson, B.T. Rubenstein, Murray Saltzman, Allen Secher and layman Clyde T. Sills.

Two days later, on June 18, Dresner, Sills and the rabbis were arrested for praying at the entrance of the Monson Motor Lodge. Two rabbis were also arrested for sitting with three Black students in the restaurant. 

Within minutes on the same Thursday, the motel's manager, James Brock, was photographed pouring two jugs of muriatic acid into the motel's whites-only pool to force out Black students during their wade in. The students were able to gain access into the pool as the rabbis were arrested for praying in the courtyard. Although no one was hurt, the images sparked national public outrage.

While in jail, the rabbis wrote a letter to the Jewish community explaining why they heeded King’s call.

"We came because we realized that injustice in St. Augustine, as anywhere else, diminishes the humanity of each of us," they wrote.

We came because we know that, second only to silence, the greatest danger to man is loss of faith in man’s capacity to act,” they wrote. “.... We could not say no to Martin Luther King, whom we always respected and admired and whose loyal friends we hope we shall be in the days to come. We could not pass by the opportunity to achieve a moral goal by moral means – a rare modern privilege – which has been the glory of the non-violent struggle for civil rights.

The rabbis shared how they relied on each other while sweltering in the hot jail, writing by the light of one naked lightbulb that hung in the corridor.

Never have the bonds of Judaism and the fellowship of the rabbinate been more clearly expressed to us all or more deeply felt by each of us,” they wrote.

"We hope we have strengthened the morale of St. Augustine Negroes as they strive to claim their dignity and humanity; we know they have strengthened ours," they wrote.

Ironically,” they said, their three-page letter was composed on the back of the mimeographed report of the bloody assaults made by the KKK in St. Augustine.

Documents show that the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People bailed out the rabbis for $900 each the following morning. The men were charged with trespassing, conspiracy and disturbing the peace.

The story made national headlines including The New York Times which touted “16 Rabbis Arrested as Pool Dive-In Sets off St. Augustine Rights Clash” on its front page.

As St. Augustine’s drama unfolded center stage, the U.S. Senate, who could no longer feign its ignorance of the civil rights argument, ended its 83-day filibuster and signed the Civil Rights Act into law two weeks later.



4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Put an end to the building where so much harm was done. That's justice. Tear down that wall!

Ed Slavin said...

Misguided comment. We preserve history so we can learn from it. It's why Germany preserved the concentration camps. It's why America preserved the places where Japanese-Americans were interned during WWII, as national parks.

Anonymous said...

We have books, it isn't Auschwitz, let's get some modern, functional architecture going. This place looks like something out of the Stone Age.

Ed Slavin said...

I don't understand. Please explain it to me.