Farida Dawkins is a blogger, video content creator and staff writer at Face2Face Africa. She enjoys writing about relatable and controversial lifestyle issues that pertain to women in Africa and the African diaspora.

April 3, 1948, marks the day that the Atlanta Police Department first instated black men on the force. Using a strategic tactic to garner more votes from the black community, then-Mayor William B. Hartsfield assented to blacks joining the police force in Atlanta.

In 1947, it was estimated that one-quarter of the police force in Atlanta were members of the Ku Klux Klan.

Claude Dixon, Henry Hooks, Johnnie Jones, Ernest Lyons, Robert McKibbens, John Sanders, Willard Strickland and Willie Elkins made up the first African-American division of the Atlanta Police Department.

The eight policemen operated out of a local Y.M.C.A to avoid confrontations with their white counterparts, only patrolled neighborhoods with a heavy black population, could not arrest affluent white people but were allowed to intersect when crimes committed by whites were in progress and were not allowed to use patrol cars. The Y.M.C.A also doubled as a meeting point for Atlanta’s black leaders and served as the headquarters for the Atlanta Negro Voters League.

The black officers were constantly harassed by white policemen; the white policemen tried to run the black officers over with their vehicles, reported them for drinking alcohol which was prohibited at the time. One officer proposed a $200 bounty to anyone who would kill a black cop.

Though they were issued guns and badges, they could not use their weapons.

“On the one hand, they’re second-class citizens as black men in the Jim Crow South: They couldn’t ride in the front of the bus, they couldn’t eat in most restaurants,” he says. “But at the same time, they’re also authority figures, and they have to enforce the laws of the city of Atlanta and the state of Georgia.”

In 1953, the police officers were able to use the same headquarters as white policemen; but were still required to use the basement.

In January 1961, Officer Claude Mundy, the 12th black cop hired, in 1950 was shot and killed in the line of duty.

It wasn’t until 1962 when black officers were given the right to arrest whites regardless of their social status.

In 1971, Linnie Hollowman became the first black woman to be hired as a police officer in Atlanta.

All eight original black police officers have since died.