Relations of the primary Kent Police officer to be killed on obligation greater than 150 years in the past have attended a rededication of his grave.
Israel Might died on 24 August 1873 after being overwhelmed along with his personal truncheon in Snodland.
Tommy Atkins, a well known adversary of PC Might’s, was sentenced to twenty years for killing him.
Richard Weeks, PC Might’s great-great-great-nephew, was the visitor of honour on the ceremony on the All-Saints Church in Snodland.
“It is all the time a good suggestion to recollect the previous – each the unhappy and the triumphant,” he advised the BBC.
“He was the primary of many law enforcement officials who’ve given their lives in the midst of obligation.”
The grave has been restored by means of funding from the Kent Police Benevolent Fund.
Pam Mills, a volunteer on the Kent Police Museum and police historian, mentioned that she sought funds from the power after noticing PC Might’s grave had turn out to be “actually soiled and unkempt”.
She mentioned the grave now seemed “completely lovely”.
“It is fully humbling to see folks come out right now to pay their respects,” she added.
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