Community Corner
South Kingstown Police Hosting First-Ever National Night Out
The department will hold the community celebration at Hazard Field from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Aug. 3.

SOUTH KINGSTON, RI — The South Kingstown Police Department will host its first ever National Night Out community celebration Aug. 3.
The nationwide event “promotes police-community partnerships and neighborhood camaraderie to make our neighborhoods safer,” according to the National Association of Town Watch, the organization that founded the annual early August event in 1984.
The department will hold the event at Hazard Field on School Street from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. It will feature touch-a-truck, free food, games, dunk-a-cop, local vendors, K9 demonstrations, face painting, a rock climbing wall and more.
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The is the department's first National Night Out celebration, hosted in conjunction with the town's fire department and EMS.
Since 1984, communities across the country have held National Night Out events on the first Tuesday of August. Block parties, festivals, parades, cookouts and other community events have been popular ways to celebrate the outreach-focused event.
Find out what's happening in Narragansett-South Kingstownfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
More than 2 million Americans took part in the first National Night Out. Now, the event is celebrated in more than 16,000 communities across all 50 states, according to the National Association of Town Watch.
Many National Night Out events are back in 2021 after widespread cancellations last summer due to the coronavirus pandemic.
For example, businesses in Marple Township, Pennsylvania, are donating goods to be used during a night of music, games and demonstrations. In Palos Hills, Illinois, kids can play in large inflatable toys, and a face-painter will be on hand at a local park.
Tim McCarthy, a retired Orland Park, Illinois, police chief, has called National Night Out “a great way for kids to meet their local police officers in a relaxed, comfortable atmosphere unlike an emergency setting.”
McCarthy, a former Secret Service member best known for taking a bullet for President Ronald Reagan in a 1983 assassination attempt, told Patch in 2019 that police officers “enjoy seeing everyone come back each year to see all that’s happening with the police department, and to have a fun evening.”
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