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Reuben M. Greenberg Municipal Building
180-B Lockwood Boulevard
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This portion of the Charleston’s Police Department is named after Reuben Greenberg (1943–2014), the city’s renowned Jewish African-American police chief, who served from 1982 to 2005. Born in Texas and raised as a Methodist, Greenberg converted to Judaism, the religion of his Ukranian paternal grandfather, in 1965. As chief of police, he acted as a change agent, ratcheting up the department’s professionalism, while decreasing crime. Not without controversy, Greenberg gained national attention and publicity, including a 1983 Los Angeles Times story titled, “A Black, Jewish, Roller-Skating Cop Brings A New Way to Fight Crime to the Old South.” Greenberg was a member of Synagogue Emanu-El.

Reuben M. Greenberg Municipal Building
Reuben M. Greenberg Municipal Building

Reuben M. Greenberg Municipal Building
Reuben M. Greenberg Municipal Building

Reuben M. Greenberg Municipal Building
Reuben M. Greenberg Municipal Building

Reuben M. Greenberg Municipal Building