January 29, 2026
Longest Serving Police Chief Would Live His Life of Service All Over Again

By Cynthia McFarland
Longest Serving Police Chief Would Live His Life of Service All Over Again

Thomas Richard “Tommy” Merrill
Call to service: I quit high school in March 1959 to join the Air Force. I was a nuclear weapons specialist and was in from 1959 to 1963. I got my GED in the Air Force but took the Florida GED after I got out to get my diploma from Umatilla High School.
Who inspired me: The state trooper teaching Driver’s Ed. in high school and trooper Johnny Cox from Clermont, who always gassed up at the station I ran in Umatilla.
Greatest accomplishment: I received the Distinguished Service Award from Florida Peace Officers’ Association and was recognized as the longest-serving police chief in the United States.
If I had to do it over again: I’d do it the same way. I loved my job and enjoyed going to work. I liked putting bad people in jail and helping good people.
I’m most proud of: The people I hired. You’re only as good as the people who work under you. I trained a lot of police officers who worked all over the state after they worked for me.
Impactful experience: In March 1969, I got in a bad shootout during an arrest and had to shoot a man. Back in those days, you didn’t go to a therapist when you shot somebody. You just had to work it out. I talked to other officers who’d been through it, so that’s what helped me. I quit for a while and went to work at a Ford dealership, but that wasn’t what I liked to do.
Since retiring: I have a John Deere tractor, so I stay busy taking care of our place in Mabel and helping my neighbors.
Favorite meal: Ribeye steak cooked medium rare with baked potato and banana pudding for dessert.
On my bucket list: My mother was 93 when she died and I turned 82 in December, so I’d like to live as long as she did.
FUN FACT: Chief Among Chiefs: America’s Longest-Serving Police Chief: Biography of Chief Tommy Merrill (by Buddy Haack and Gayle Beck) was released in August 2025 and is available on Amazon.
Photos: Provided
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"I fell in love with words early on and knew from fourth grade that I wanted to be a writer,” says Cynthia McFarland. A full-time freelancer since 1993 and the author of nine non-fiction books, her writing has earned regional and national awards. Cynthia lives on a small farm north of Ocala; her kids have fur and four legs








