Monday, 30 October 2017

Fallen SC trooper laid to rest after he ‘accomplished his mission’

The South Carolina Department of Public Safety mourned the death of trooper Daniel Keith Rebman, Jr. who was buried Sunday in Greenville.

The funeral services were held at Bob Jones University, and graveside services were held at Woodlawn Cemetery.

Rebman died after his patrol vehicle was struck early in the morning on Oct. 24. He is the 51st state trooper to die serving the state of South Carolina, according to the SCDPS.

A sincere thank you @NCSHP for providing your caisson for Trooper Rebman’s funeral. #Handsalute #Honor pic.twitter.com/hsXdKZEjUF

— Trooper Bob_SCHP (@TrooperBob_SCHP) October 29, 2017

“Tuesday was a reminder that while – yes, we are strong – we are not invincible,” SCDPS director Leroy Smith said in a news release. “We too are subject to the same forces of nature, accidents and violence – just like those we protect. I believe that is why ‘Blessed Are the Peacemakers’ is such a comforting verse at a time like this. It is these special people – the peacemakers – who are so blessed because they risk their lives for you, and me and for strangers. Trooper Rebman was doing just that on October 24, 2017.”

Rebman, 31, died from injuries sustained in a line-of-duty collision. Rebman was stationary in his Patrol vehicle in the emergency lane of I-385 near Bridges Road when his Ford Taurus Patrol car was struck from behind by a pick-up truck around 12:23 a.m., according to the SCDPS.

Private visitation services were held Saturday for family and friends of Rebman, who is survived by his wife, Michelle, and three young daughters – Olivia, Charlee, and Kennedy.

Rebman always desired to serve his community, and shortly after moving to Greenville in 2011 he began to pursue a career in law enforcement, according to his obituary posted by the Mackey Mortuary. After serving as a dispatcher for the Highway Patrol for 4 years, he graduated from the South Carolina Criminal Justice Academy in 2016, at which time he was awarded the Captain Cecil Dilworth Marksmanship Award.

Rebman joined South Carolina Highway Patrol in September 2016. The Orlando, Fla. native began his career in Troop Six/Charleston/Berkeley before being transferred to Troop Three/Greenville.

“He believed in his mission and he accomplished his mission,” Smith said of Rebman, who was given full honors by the South Carolina Highway Patrol. “And for that, the state of South Carolina says a humble and grateful ‘job well done, Trooper Rebman.’ ”

Members from more than 15 state patrols from as far away as California came to pay their respects along with hundreds of state and local officers.

“Trooper Rebman died as he lived – a quiet hero – to his family, to his fellow troopers, to his church, and to his community,” SCHP Col. Chris Williamson said in a news release. “Trooper Rebman’s death was a cruel reminder that this job doesn’t come with promises or reassurances. But I want to remind our men and women in uniform that even through this sense of tremendous heartache and loss, we must continue to lean on each other and assume the watch from this point forward.”

Michelle Rebman shared an example of law enforcement rallying around the family of their fallen brother. She posted a picture on Facebook Saturday of a fellow trooper sitting on the grass with one of Rebman’s daughters.

In addition to his wife and children, Rebman is survived by his parents, Daniel and Theresa Rebman, of Georgia, a sister and many extended family.

Related stories from The State

SC trooper who died in the line of duty to be laid to rest Sunday

SC trooper dies after being struck in vehicle while on duty

Gamecocks pay tribute to SC trooper killed on duty

Another example of the support the Rebman family and his brothers in blue have received is by the amount of money raised on a gofundme page. In five days of donations to help support Rebman’s family, $43,897 of $50,000 goal has been reached.

In addition to the donations, which can still be made at https://www.gofundme.com/trooper-daniel-rebman, donations can also be made to the Trooper Keith Rebman Memorial Fund. Those should be made out to: LECSC – Trooper Keith Rebman Memorial Fund, can be given at First Citizens Bank branches in South Carolina, North Carolina and Georgia.

Rebman, who lived in Taylors, died of blunt force trauma, Greenville County Coroner Parks Evans said.

The Greenville County Sheriff’s Office is investigating the collision.

Law enforcement gathered from far and wide in the Upstate as family and friends say goodbye to @SCDPS_PIO Trooper Daniel Rebman Jr. #LESM pic.twitter.com/nXioFIKIsK

— Lexington Sheriff (@LCSD_News) October 29, 2017
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Thursday, 19 October 2017

Concrete manufacturer adds 100 jobs in Greenville

Courtesy Metromont Corporation website

GREENVILLE (WSPA) – A concrete materials manufacturing company plans to expand it’s operations in Greenville and add 100 new jobs.

Metromont Corporation plans to invest $8.8 million into it’s facility at 2802 White Horse Road. The new jobs will be added over the next five years.

The company manufactures precast concrete materials that are used in the construction of facilities including schools, office buildings and parking decks to industrial plants and stadiums.

Metromont says it has completed projects at more than 50 stadiums and more than 1,000 parking decks.

Hiring in Greenville is expected to begin in early 2018. You can learn more about applying by clicking here.

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Saturday, 7 October 2017

Greenville officials coveted federal courthouse in 1930s

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On Sept. 27, 1937, Postmaster General James Farley dedicated Greenville’s $525,000 post office on East Washington Street. Federal buildings were sought after plums in the midst of the Great Depression, and local officials had been angling for Greenville’s for more than six years.

In 1932, about $300,000 had been allocated for a building, which included a federal courtroom, but had omitted site costs. And the site was a problem: four alternatives, including expanding the current post office at the corner of Broad and Main Streets, were being considered. In 1934, after some old-fashioned bartering, City Council traded the site of their current city hall on West McBee and Laurens Street for the East Washington site for the post office, and the government traded the old post office to the city.

The building’s cornerstone was laid in November 1936. Farley credited former Greenville Representative J.J. McSwain for securing the funds. The post office served as both the central post office and the county’s federal courthouse until 1962, when the new main post office was built on West Washington Street.

In May 1983, it was named in honor of federal judge Clement F. Haynsworth, Jr., and a year later had a million dollar renovation.

Ask LaFleur: Where is the new federal courthouse we’ve heard about?

Editor’s note: For more than 140 years, The Greenville News has told the story of our community and the people who live here. Each day this year we are publishing a brief piece of our history – Greenville’s story.

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