309 12 68MB
English Pages [520] Year 1995
THE
OXFORD
HISTORY PRISON
The Practice of Punishment
in
Western Society
EDITED BY
NORVAL MORRIS AND DAVID
J.
ROTHMAN
'
immediat
Prison
images: forbidding
watchtowers;
cramped
These images seem
inma.>
to
armed guards.
of
eyes
confined
s
hours on end; the
cells for
suspicious
stark,
es
spiked with
wall
and per-
to be the inevitable
manent marks of confinement,
though the
as
prison were a timeless institution stretching from the age of stone dungeons to the current era of steel
it
—
But centuries of development and
boxes.
debate
lie
behind the prison
crime and
practices
we now know
as
a rich history that reveals
how our
of
ideas
of punishment have changed
over time. In The Oxford History of
the
Prison, a
team of
dis-
tinguished scholars offers a vivid account of the rise
and development of
this critical institution.
Beginning with biblical antiquity, the volume
first
examines the punishments that were once much
more common than
incarceration
Roman
bizarre death sentences as the
drowning convicts
in sacks filled
the medieval reliance
— from
such
practice of
with animals to
on the scaffold and on to
other forms of public shaming,
Not
stocks of colonial America.
including
the
until the first
decades of the nineteenth century did full-blown prison systems
prison reform
— and —
along with them, the idea ot
take shape. (In fact, Alexis de
Tocqueville originally came to America to write a report on
The
its
new and widely acclaimed
authors
trace
prisons).
persistent
the
tension
between the desire to punish and the hope for rehabilitation, recounting the institution's evolu-
tion
from the rowdy and squalid English
jails
of
the 1700s, in which prisoners and visitors ate and
drank together; to the sober and stark nineteenthcentury penitentiaries, whose inmates were forbid-
den to speak or even to see one another; and finally to the "big
houses" of the current Ameri-
can prison system, in which
whelmed by
intense be
;
i
soners are as over-
by the threat of
i"
APR 1 9
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OXF
The Oxford History of the Prison
he Oxford History of the Prison The Practice of Punishment
Western Society
in
Edited by
Norval Morris and David J. Rothman
ECIA Chapter
2
Property of
FREMONT UNION Loaned
H. S.
DIST
to
ARCHBISHOP MITTY H
S
Archbishop Mifty High School '
Library
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•
Oxford
Oxford University Press
•
1995
Frontispiece:
The
an imaginary prison from Careen d'lnvenzione
interior of
by
(circa 1745), a series of etchings
Italian artist Giambattista Piranesi_
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Copyright
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1995 by Oxford University
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No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior permission of Oxford University Press.
All rights reserved.
Library of Congress Cataloging-m-Publication Data
The Oxford
history of the prison
/
edited by Norval Morris, David p.
J.
Rothman.
cm.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
1.
Prisons
—
ISBN 0-19-506153-5 History.
I
Morris, Norval.
II.
Rothman, David J.
HV8501.094 1995 365'.
The
editors
would
like to
9—dc20
95-6280 CIP
extend their thanks to the following scholars for their review of the manuscript for this volume Michael D Coogan, Anthony N. Doob, Eric Gruen, Roger G. Hood, James R. Hugunin,
at various stages: Paul S. Boyer,
Sean McConville, Michael H. Tonry, Nigel Walker, and Franklin Zimring.
The following publishers have granted permission
to reprint previously
published material:
Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc.: From "Western European Perspectives on the Treatment of Young Offenders" by Gordon Hawkins and Franklin E. Zimring from Intervention Strategies for Chronic Juvenile Offenders, edited by Peter Greenwood. Copyright 1986. Reprinted with permission of Greenwood Publishing Group, Inc., Westport, CT. University of Michigan Press:
Lattimore Copyright
From The Works and
©
Days, Theogony, The Shield of Hcrakles by Hesiod, translated by
Richmond
1959, 1986 by the University of Michigan. Reprinted by permission of the publisher.
135798642 Printed in the United States of America on acid-free paper
Content;
INTRODUCTION Norval Morris and David]. Rothman
Jrart Is .Prisons in JHlisfory
CHAPTER ONE Prison Before the Prison:
Edward M.
The Ancient and Medieval Worlds 3
Peters
CHAPTER TWO The Body and the
State: Early
Modern Europe 49
Pieter Spierenburg
CHAPTER THREE The Well-Ordered Randall
Prison: England,
1780-1865
McGowen
79
CHAPTER FOUR Perfecting the Prison: United States,
1789-1865
David J. Rothman
Ill
CHAPTER FIVE The Victorian
Prison: England,
1865-1965
Sean McConville
131
CHAPTER SIX The
Failure of Reform: United States,
1865-1965
Edgardo Rotman
169
CHAPTER SEVEN The Prison on the Continent: Europe, 1865-1965 199
Patricia O'Brien
CHAPTER EIGHT The Contemporary Norval Morris
Prison: 1965-Present
227
Jrart lis
1 Iheimes
am4 Variations
CHAPTER NINE The Australian Experience: The Convict Colony 263
John Hirst
CHAPTER TEN Local Justice: The
Jail
297
Sean McConville
CHAPTER ELEVEN Wayward Sisters: The
Prison for
Women 329
Lucia Zedner
CHAPTER TWELVE Delinquent Children: The Juvenile Reform School 363
Steven Schlossman
CHAPTER THIRTEEN Confining Dissent: The
Political Prison
Aryeh Neier
391
CHAPTER FOURTEEN The
Literature of
Confinement
W.B. Carnochan
427
CONTRIBUTORS
457
PICTURE CREDITS
461
INDEX
463
Introduction
r^
many readers, the most novel contribution of The Oxford History of the Prison may well be its demonstration that prisons do have a history. In the popular imor
H.
agination, institutions of incarceration appear so
so intrinsic to the criminal justice system that
permanent and
fixed features of
and
buildings, with their walls
Western
it is
monumental
societies.
The massive
turrets jutting out of the landscape
distances, conveys immutability.
in design
and
quality of the
visible over great
Meting out punishment by a calculus of time
seems so commonsensical today, that
becomes
it
difficult to
and
tempting to think of them as
conceive of a
to
be served
moment when
prisons were not at the core of criminal justice. In fact, the history of incarceration
contents to this
book
is
marked by extraordinary changes. As
indicates, before the eighteenth century the prison
and by no means the most essential
part, of the
the table of
was only one
part,
system of punishment. Moreover, once
in-
vented and implemented, the prison underwent fundamental alterations in appearance and organization. In the 1830s prisons larity
and hence
were organized around the principles of order and regu-
isolated each prisoner in a cell
and enforced
rules of total silence.
By the early
1900s the institutions modeled themselves on the outside community, affording inmates the opportunity to mix in the yard and
work
in groups; the prison thus
became
ground
a testing
forjudging readiness for release. All the while, over the course of the nineteenth century prisons began to specialize, so that juveniles entered one type of institution, the mentally
ill still
another.
eventually confined to
The process continued
minimum-, medium-, maximum-, or
security prisons according to the severity of their offense record. Thus, the English prison of
mon with tine, the
the prisons of
amount
women another,
into the twentieth century, with inmates lately,
maximum-maximum-
and the extent of
their criminal
1790 or the American prison of 1830 had
1900 or 1990, regardless of whether the yardstick
of time served, the
methods
of release, or as
understanding of the purposes of confinement. In
brief,
we
is
little
in
com-
the daily rou-
shall see, the public's
prisons not only have a history, but
a rich history.
Uncovering the History of the Prison It is
To
a tribute to recent scholarship that the contours of these developments are so well
create this
book
as recently as twenty-five years ago
cally all of the contributors to this
volume
mapped.
would have been impossible.
are pioneers in the field,
and the
Practi-
results of their
research began to appear only in the 1970s. Indeed, the historians' attention to the prison so
new
that
one has
to ask
why
they were inspired to take up this subject in the
first
is
place.
viii
/
Introduction
Part of the
answer
rests in the
emergence of a keen
and a
interest in social history
deter-
mination to understand the organization of a society in terms not only of the activities of
diplomacy and business) but
the elite (the leaders of government,
also of the role of
women, minorities, and even those who ended up jails, prisons, and reformatories. Some of the inspiration for this analysis came from one the founders of modem sociology, Emile Durkheim. Durkheim first demonstrated that ordinary people, including workers,
expose the fundamental norms of
and unarticulated,
it
was useful
a society, often so
in
of to
fundamental as to remain hidden
to investigate the fate of those
who
openly violated the
norms. The history of the deviant became a way to understand the history of the normal, or in our terms, the history of the prison serves to illuminate the history of
all
social
institutions.
Theory
aside,
it
was almost
work and church, they would
inevitable that once historians
also follow
them
began
to follow
people to
—which,
and outings
to public festivals
as
contributor Pieter Spierenburg discovered, in the seventeenth century included the public execution. At
first,
the execution spectacle
his subordinates zealously
was scary and
used the occasion
intimidating,
and the monarch and
to bolster the authority of royal
But in time, executions became the occasion for rowdiness and disgust
crowd had begun had become
became
to the gallows.
the
with the victim, not the executioner, and because the spectacle
to identify
revolting, offending a
desirable to
government.
—both because
new
about pain and bodily
sensibility
mete out punishment away from the public gaze and
So the historian
who opened an
integrity.
Thus,
it
to find alternatives
inquiry into public gatherings ended
up
writing a critical chapter in the history of the prison.
The
historians'
engagement with the prison
To
this end,
ment
punishment becomes not a detour on the
in evaluating the exercise of authority.
in the
also builds
on the
fact that social history
has
how societies and governments maintain social order.
joined with political history to explore
Thus
historical landscape but a critical ele-
in the
American
case,
1820s and 1830s, when democratic principles were receiving
it is
their
no accident
most
that
positive sup-
port and ordinary citizens were participating in politics to an unprecedented degree, incarceration
became
the core feature of criminal justice. In effect, those
the special features of Jacksonian America
must grapple with the
who want
origins
to
understand
and development of
the prison.
Perhaps no one better demonstrated the value of
this
approach than the French moral
philosopher Michel Foucault. Not by training or temperament a historian, Foucault used history as a text
on which
to
ground
a discussion of
power and authority in Western
As exemplified by
little
appreciation for the nuances of time and place.
rated
his
by decades were one and
as
though
all
He wrote
for the surveillance or the
however serious these
as
though phenomena sepa-
the universe were France.
frequently conflated official rhetoric and daily realities;
gram
civiliza-
book Discipline and Punish, he eschewed archival research and had
tion.
let
reform of criminals, and he presumed
flaws, Foucault
endowed
Most important, he
public officials announce a proits
realization.
But
the history of incarceration with a special
meaning. The prison became the representative institution of industrial society, the perfect realization of the
modern
state.
ticing formulation inspired a
Study the prison and understand bourgeois
number
of historians.
society: this en-
Introduction
That prisons captured the attention of historians
macy
and
of the institutions both in Europe
1970s.
Once
become
established organizations
United
ately stimulated. In the
State Prison in
same time, the
New
States, for
the result, too, of the declining legiti-
is
United States throughout the 1960s and
litigation
had given deference
geoning
spirit of
riots, particularly the
movement equated confinement with
on behalf
immediat Attica
to
cruel
and unusual
of prisoners successfully persuaded federal judges to
and
to
abandon
a hands-off policy
wardens' expertise. These developments prompted historians to
question the heretofore accepted explanation of the that the prison, in
is
one
suspect, the curiosity of historians
example, prison
intervene directly in the administration of the institutions that
ix
York, highlighted the wretchedness of institutional conditions. At the
prisoners' rights
punishment, and
in the
/
of the prison, an explanation stating
rise
comparison with the gallows and the whipping post, represented
benevolence and humanitarianism.
place, historians asked,
had turned
the prison
If
a bur-
into so grim a
why was it invented in the first place? As Randall McGowen and Sean
McConville explain in chapters three and
reformers such as John
five,
Howard
in
England
did play an important role in provoking changes in the system of punishment. Nevertheless, the history of the prison
which made
must be framed
social, administrative,
and
in the context of
political
developments in the larger
society,
concerns even more determinative than be-
nign philanthropy.
Why Even while studying the prison have asked
many of the same
the Prison?
in a variety of places
questions.
What are
and periods, historians of the
institution
What purposes do
they serve?
prisons for?
What purposes should they serve? In what conditions should the prisoners be held? What are prisoners obliged to do,
and
to forfeit?
These themes resonate throughout the history of the
prison and, thus, throughout this volume.
To read
this
book
is
to discover that
whatever the current
realities of the
however the prison has been used, each of these questions generated debate.
Over the years these topics
of their generations
attracted the leading philosophers
— Kant, Bentham,
justification of the prison
and
Mill, Hart,
and many
for the definition of its
others.
a full
and
prison and
and elaborate
political scientists
The serious search
for a
purposes has continued through the
centuries.
Applying the American distinction between prison and jail helps into the purposes of the prison. Oversimplifying, jails hold
to
launch the inquiry
mainly those awaiting
awaiting punishment; prisons hold convicted offenders as a punishment. alleged criminals have to be held secure until brought to
ment. In
and
if
this sense the
we do
killed or
not
the prison
and,
if
else to
exiled yet
who
do with
a convicted offender
trial
course,
and
some
convicted, until punish-
system of trials presupposes the existence of the jail.
know what
whipped or
his crime,
trial
Of
who
If
the cage exists,
does not need to be
cannot be allowed to escape adverse consequences
for
why not continue the caging? So, we are suggesting, the original justification for may well have been incapacitation. Whatever else, incarceration serves to remove
a potential offender
from the community.
The conventional contemporary answer ter crime, to
to
"Why the
prison?" includes the desire to de-
express society's urge for retribution, and to reform the deviant, but adds as well
x
Introduction
/
the desire to incapacitate dangerous criminals.
which the prison manages
the extent to
the broad state of current
knowledge about
harm on
reduce crime. But
the efficacy of each of
during which a prisoner
Incapacitation: At least for the period
to inflict criminal
We will not canvass the libraries of studies on
those outside the walls.
may
this effect
but some
to fulfill these four purposes,
To
not be very great;
them
in prison, he
is
depends on the natural history of
it all
life
cycle: a
tendency toward violence
wanes
flourishes in males aged fifteen or sixteen, stays high in their twenties, virtually disappears at
tence simply occupies of maturating
some
in their thirties,
whether the prison sen-
merely defers the experiential processes
The criminal justice system as a whole appears to have
on criminal behavior, but
not
it is
effect at
all.
at all clear
So
changes in
its
crime rates
—and,
and reduc-
a deterrent
whether marginal changes
far, at least, it
in
any one
has proved impossible causally
similarly, impossible causally to relate
time between the two. Likely, the prison deters
but equally
likely,
it
The
talionic
citizens
changes over
and some prisoners from crime,
law originated as a restraint on punishment.
best understood not as an eye for an eye, a
(not torture
some
confirms other prisoners in their criminality.
Retribution or Expiation:
life
it
is
changes in the quality of conditions of imprisonment or in the length of imprison-
to relate
to
The question, then,
of this time or whether
element of that system has any
ment
thirty-five.
away from criminal behavior.
Deterrence: tive effect
about
unlikely
is
this extent, the prison clearly helps to
criminal careers. Most serious crime fluctuates with the
and
comment on
useful.
is
and then death)
for a
life.
for a
life
life,
It is
but as only an eye for an eye, only a
But the quantum of punishment deserved
not
is
easy to assess. Much depends on whose measure of appropriate vengeance governs the equation. Indeed, the victim's sense of what constitutes appropriate suffering for the criminal may
change between the time of the
loss
and
a few
months
of vengeance that should control the assessment?
The
later.
And,
the victims sentiment
is it
an
social justification for retribution as
appropriate purpose of imprisonment states that otherwise, individuals who had been wronged
would take the law
into their
own hands and
under the aegis of the law, and not
blood feuds. But in modern society
who
should go to prison and
for
exact retribution. Historically, punishment
that of the victim, prevents lasting this
how
much
in deciding
long and under what conditions of incarceration. All
one can say about public sentiment on these issues a society at
and socially debilitating
understanding does not help very
is
that
whatever practices are followed in
any time, the majority of citizens perceive these practices
as too lenient
toward the
criminal.
Reformation:
It is
entirely sensible that, so far as
prison should be devoted to fitting
reformation
is
him
is
practicable, the prisoner's time in
to live a law-abiding
life
an unexceptionable purpose of incarceration. But
it
on
release.
To
this extent,
does not justify the prison.
Indeed, the prison turns out to be an ineffective and undesirable venue for reformative
—
forts
be they educative, psychological, social adaptive, or whatever.
freedom
It is
hard
in a cage.
These four conventional justifications of the prison are so routinely put forward
punishment under the they provide
one
ef-
to train for
little
aegis of the criminal law
insight at
feels that suffering
all
into the
—any punishment,
all
to justify
punishments
—
that
"why" of the particular punishment of the prison.
should be imposed on whoever has
inflicted suffering
If
on another (he
Introduction
made another many.
If
suffer, let
him
suffer too) then the prison
one's guiding belief
that
is
tion,
may be
or by imprisonment for
only one possible means
is
no longer allowed
Without simplifying or condensing the answers, typically carry expectations of the prison that are unreal
why
Her Majesty's Prison Service
prisons,
It is
and
member
be a
of our
opt for the prison?
is
it
Why
apparent that Western societies
and contradictory.
administrators to seek to define their purposes, but sometimes they
and Wales.
to
and walls?
invest in cells
effort.
among
achieved by capital punishment, by exile or transporta-
or for a period of time. So
life
is
42,870 prisoners.
Its
down
It is
rare for prison
Consider one recent
on March
1,
1993, of 38,233
"Statement of Purpose" declares that
humanity and help them lead law-abiding and useful purposes are then broken
try.
responsible for providing prison services in England
a substantial organization, consisting
by keeping in custody those committed by the courts."
Its
lives in
duty
is
it
to "look after
custody and
staff,
128
"serves the public
them with
after release."
These
into a series of principal goals, namely, to:
•
keep prisoners in custody
•
maintain order, control, discipline and a safe environment
•
provide decent conditions for prisoners and meet their needs, including health care
•
provide positive regimes which help prisoners address their offending behavior and
•
help prisoners prepare for their return to the community.
allow them as
full
and responsible
a
life
These are clear and modest goals, but
The
often met.
Nowhere
xi
an offender must be banished, either permanently or
temporarily (because of what he has done he
group) such a banishment
is
/
rhetoric of imprisonment
is
this
more obvious than
throughout
this
book. The expectation
it
as possible
is
not surprising that such expectations are not
and the
cage are often in stark contrast.
reality of the
in the issue of prison labor, is
that prisoners will
an issue that also resonates
do hard and punitive
productive, and help to meet the costs of their incarceration but, at the
compete unfairly with
free labor or
same
labor, be
time, will not
with entrepreneurship. The tensions here are obvious and
troublesome, and they have generated sometimes brutal and generally uneven results. There is
a
grim history of prisoners being intentionally worked
to
death
quarries of the ancient world, in the galleys of the Mediterranean,
—
in the salt
and
mines and
in the Soviet Gulag.
But nowhere was this brutal purpose more clearly realized than in the Nazi concentration
camps, with their cruelly cynical and mendacious motto Arbeit Macht Frei (Work Makes You Free).
But one must confront the contrast. the leading purpose of the prison, there prisoner, labor.
temporary banishment from the community were
would seem
to be
no reason
that the
community, the
and those who are dependent on him should be denied the product of the prisoner's
Hence one model
countries,
by
If
is
of imprisonment, developed
a full-wage prison
a chief justice of the U.S.
would were he
free
and from
—
a "factory
with
most adequately
a fence," as
in the Scandinavian
described with approval
Supreme Court. The prisoner earns roughly his earnings
as
much
as
he
meets the cost of his board and keep in prison,
compensates the victims of his crime, supports his dependents, and saves
However, these sensible purposes are rarely
realized,
and there
is
for his release.
frequently abuse in the
xii
Introduction
/
exploitation of prison labor tration
—
than in the brutal lethality of the Gulag and the concen-
far less
camp, but abuse enough. There
a history of the exploitation of prison labor in the
is
and chain gangs of the pre-Civil War South and
fields
in the labor
camps and
factories of
contemporary China. Today, in more advanced countries, there that
is little
deadening idleness deepens the pangs and
of course, from the opposition of organized labor
compete with prison
labor.
productive
work
inefficiencies of prison
The most common
for prisoners to do, so life.
This lack springs,
and of organized business
to
having to
resolution, or amelioration, of this
has been to confine prison production to "state use," thereby
at least
concealing
if
problem
not elimi-
nating the continuing and obvious conflict with free labor and enterprise. But the paradox
work and
remains: the prisoner should describe the
seems
to
many
different
have reached
yet he
is
denied work. The essays in
arrangements that have been made
compromise
a satisfactory
to
make
this
volume
for prison labor; not
one
the prison a place of useful
and
profitable production.
The Expectations of the Prison, Past and Present This brief survey of the difficulty of defining the proper role of labor in the prison provides a clue to the basic dysfunction of the prison
come
to the conclusion that
itself.
Most students of the prison have increasingly
imprisonment should be used
as the sanction of last resort, to
imposed only when other measures of controlling the criminal have been failed or in situations in
which those other measures
response to such a proposition or certainly too
little,
is
that
it
could be
are clearly inadequate.
be
and have
The usual public
made only by someone who
for citizens' safety. This reaction
tried
cared not
at all,
not surprising: as this book shows,
is
the public has always overwhelmingly supported whatever punishments were inflicted as a
means
of either reducing or preventing an increase in crime. However, research into the use
of imprisonment over time correlation It is
and
in different countries has failed to demonstrate
between increasing the
rate of
any positive
rate of crime.
also true that countries with very similar crime rates have startlingly different rates
of imprisonment.
How can this be? Certainly, while prisoners are in prison they cannot (with
very few exceptions)
commit crimes
effect of their caging.
So
question
imprisonment and reducing the
is
why don't
in the
community; there must be some incapacitative
crime rates decline as imprisonment rates increase? This
made more pointed by the observable
fact that
some prisoners do indeed use
time in prison (or that time uses them) so that they do not offend again. The answer
found in the criminogenic force of imprisonment
itself,
their
may be
or the idea that prison serves as, in
nineteenth-century language, "a school for criminals." Possibly the self-image that the prison generates for
its
rehabilitation,
inhabitants outweighs the crime-reducing influence of deterrence, efforts at
and
biological influences of the passage of time
tedly, this idea is speculative,
truly
do lower the crime
Another
line of
change him from
is
on human behavior. Admit-
the opposing view that incapacitation
and deterrence
rate.
argument
a social
but so
insists that the
duty of the prison
danger and an economic
The small group of prisoners who, by
liability into a
their past behavior
strated their dangerousness should receive
all
is
to
reform the criminal, to
peaceful and useful citizen.
and recent crimes, have demon-
the forces of reform, coercively
if
necessary,
Introduction
and not be released
have demonstrated their
until they
fitness to live in society
xiii
/
without com-
mitting criminal acts. For them, at least, prison should be an indeterminate sentence to be
served until their fitness for complete release
is
confirmed.
To
should
this end, release itself
be a gradual and closely controlled process, with expanding degrees of freedom in which the fitness of the
inmate
for
complete freedom can be
tested. If the prisoners fail the tests, they
should remain confined.
These are the seductive ideas that underlay the movement toward the indeterminate sentence, parole release decision, conditional release
and supervision, and habitual criminal
laws. In their literary incarnation, the ideas are excellently presented as the "Ludovici Tech-
nique" in Anthony Burgess's A Clockwork Orange and in other less-compelling science fiction. Their defect
is
that they grossly exaggerate the present capacity of the social sciences
and
to
change
predict
that follow,
modesty
human
behavior. But, as
in rhetoric
is
we
shall see time
What prisoners?
The inmates tin
both
to
in the chapters
not a standard feature in the prison literature.
of the Prisoners?
So much, then, for what the community and the prison
What of the
and again
staff
can properly expect of the prison.
Who are they, and what can they reasonably expect of the institution?
are the best
and the worst among us. They include Mahatma Gandhi, Mar-
Thomas More, Oscar Wilde, Bertrand Russell
Luther King, Nelson Mandela,
group but not lacking in virtue
—and
a long
list
—
a very
mixed
of highly principled dissenters. There
is
no
point in cataloguing the worst. Prisoners are ourselves writ large or small. And, as such, they
should not be subjected to suffering exceeding
fair
expiation for the crimes for which they
have been convicted. Below that admittedly vague ceiling of suffering, they are entitled to a reasonably
safe,
clean environment.
violations of their bodily their
punishment. There
They must be spared
and psychological is
integrities
legitimate necessities of
one theme, however, that has complicated
appropriate prison conditions
—
being defined as
cruelty, cruelty
beyond the
this
the alleged principle of "less eligibility."
whole analysis of
It is
dates back at least to the nineteenth century, that the prisoner's conditions particular be preferable,
members
of the
more comfortable,
community who have
gested, a positive incentive
improve
is
not
their conditions. This
been convicted of
is
a daft idea,
the largest
One
power
last
we did not
it
is
struck
the scope
and
its
a crime. Otherwise,
it
commit crime
captures men's minds. Happily,
prisoners. In the end, the prison
is
sug-
so as to it is
not
it is
not likely to go
far
wrong
is
we have had to make hard choices. Thus, camps because
between
elsewhere.
limits of this book: the history of the prison
include a chapter on the concentration
at the
embodies
citizens in time of peace. If the balance
fairly here,
that inevitably, as editors,
any
in
know that if they are not to operate death camps,
power lies with the
the state exercises over
autonomy
word on
and diverse
but
which
of the worst-off
must be run by consent. The administrators hold the ultimate power
periphery, but within the walls
authority and
more adequate than those
created for those worst-off citizens to
taken seriously by prison administrators who their prisons
or
the idea,
must not
so extensive for
in their design
example,
and horror
xiv
/
Introduction
they are outside the history of the prison. The genocidal practices that went on within the
camps did not take
their inspiration
the violations to dignity
from the conduct of criminal punishment; however gross
and decency within the prison, they do not match up
to the
Nazi
experience.
Moreover, to keep the book to manageable proportions, we limited ourselves to Western countries,
and even there we focused our attention on the Anglo-American
dared to venture more Australia,
fully outside
it,
we would have had to create a second volume. Our hope we have compensated for in depth. And we do
sacrificed in coverage
will explore the history of the prison in
new
story.
Had we
excepting the chapters on the European continent and
still
is
that
what we have
anticipate that others
other places, and, in so doing, take the story in
directions.
—Norval Morris and David
J.
Rothman
PARTI
Prisons in History
CHAPTER ONE
Prison before the
Pri;
The Ancient and Medieval Worlds
Edward M.
yW-
y
Peters
-uniiM
he prisons of the ancient world have disappeared. Those of late antiquity and medieval Europe have fallen into ruin, have been recycled into other uses, or
have been preserved as museums, their varied history usually explained only in terms of modern concepts of penology. Like the buildings that
J.
them, the sources for the early history of prisons are also
mentary, or otherwise lologists,
and
difficult to interpret.
historians has
been required
The
collaborative
work
once housed
lost, diverse, frag-
of archaeologists, phi-
to illuminate the character of the
Babylonian
bit
and the "Great Prison" of the Egyptian Middle Kingdom. For the prisons of ancient
asiri
Athens,
we must
turn to the Greek oratorical literature and the writings of Plato. For the
prisons of the ancient Hebrews,
And
if
we want
we must
consult the central Jewish religious text, the Bible.
properly to understand these and other ancient and medieval prisons,
must approach them from Imprisonment of any
a
broad cultural perspective.
sort
and
for
whatever purpose
of involuntary physical confinement. In the
the Greek
we
Western
myths and the Book of Genesis, and
is
in essence the public imposition
tradition the practice occurs as early as
it is
usually classified as part of the wider
category of physical punishments that restrict an individual's freedom of movement. In the
broadest sense, this category includes practices foreign to
such as public to public
lages
sale into slavery or publicly
shame
—and
—
exile
imposed forced
modern
ideas of imprisonment,
labor, the exhibition of offenders
seen in reconstructed American colonial
like the stocks that are often
and deportation (banishment
to a
vil-
remote place). Imprisonment included
temporary custodial detention pending
trial
or the infliction of some other punishment.
The
abandonment
and
left
shaded into another
cat-
of an offender, confined
to starve to death,
egory of physical punishment: the punishment of the body by death, mutilation, or beating.
An examination of these
ancient practices will assist our understanding of the past functions
A fifteenth-century
of imprisonment.
This chapter will describe the role of prisons and related ideas of crime and punish-
ment in early Greece, ancient Egypt,
Persia
and
Israel,
Rome, and medieval Europe
(the latter
manuscript illustration of Margaret of York visiting prisoners.
— 4
/
M
Edward
Peters
including both the law and practices of the Latin Christian Church and the learned law and practices of England
view of
and the Continent). Each of these cultures
and
social
its
legal history, a description
crime and punishment,
—source
or most striking
and
specific use of prisons,
its
and
of information about prisons.
is
introduced by a brief over-
analysis of
its
ideas
and
a discussion of its single
practices of
important
Each section concludes with
a discus-
sion of the uses of prison imagery in religious, philosophical, and literary works produced by
each of the cultures; that
prisons and imprisonment are considered as part of the imagina-
is,
tion as well as the penal practices of past cultures.
The chapter
as a
whole deals with prisons
as part of a broader
spectrum of modes of
physical punishment, including confinement, well before the large-scale period of prison
building and imprisonment that began in seventeenth-century Europe.
Our
subject
is
pris-
ons in the ages before the prison.
Criminal Law Writing around 700 living according to
Here for
is
B.C.,
the
Greek poet Hesiod made an eloquent claim
that the capacity for
law and justice was what made humans uniquely human:
the law, as Zeus established
it
human beings;
as for fish,
and wild animals, and the
flying birds,
they feed on each other, since there
but to
is
no idea
among them;
of justice
is
Ancient Athens
in
men he
gave justice, and she in the end
proved the best thing
they have.
For Hesiod, justice meant a
set of dispute-settling
procedures that reduced the inequalities of
wealth, power, or status between contestants and allowed for a decision based solely on the issue in dispute
between them.
In the century after Hesiod, the polis, the tive,
autonomous Greek
and created the category of crime. From the law on homicide
620
city-state, created a collec-
public authority that controlled the settlement of private disputes, issued written laws,
b.c.
attributed to
through the more extensive laws of Solon around 594
sions in the later sixth
and
fifth
centuries, the polis claimed a
regulation of dispute settlement,
b.c.
Drakon around
and additions and
revi-
monopoly over written laws,
and the punishment of criminals. At the end
the
of the great age
of independent city-states, in the middle of the fourth century b.c, the philosopher Aristotle offered yet another definition of human nature:
animals by living in the society of the phrase,
"man
punishment
Of
all
is
a political animal."
in the
the
Western
Greek
—
Greek
tradition
city-states,
polis
city-states
—and
Athens
man is an animal differentiated from all other
the original
is
meaning of the often misunderstood
provide the earliest evidence for public
for its roots in ideas of
the best
law and justice.
documented. Athenian documentation
ranges from the writings of orators and philosophers to the tragedies of the Greek dramatists.
The is
identification,
first,
of law with justice and, second, of law
and justice with the
city-state
expressed dramatically in the plays of Aeschylus (525-456 b.c). In one of these, the issue
of involuntary confinement
is
central.
Hesiod had told the story of the anger of Zeus
at the
Prison before the Prison
Prometheus because Prometheus had stolen
titan
humans. Zeus had Prometheus chained
up
torments. Aeschylus took
ment
of Prometheus
—
in the
the
fire
from heaven and given
mountain and subjected
to a great
theme of Zeus's anger and power
but to his audience in the language of their
titans
Even the Greek
title
own
of the prison in Athens
was
the desmoterion
The most concise statement concerning Greece
is
found not in the
as a gift to
it
to insufferable
the epic confine-
at the
legal literature
—
mythical level of gods
understanding and experience.
of the play, Prometheus desmotes, reflects a term
porary with Aeschylus and his audiences: desmotes meant,
names
5
drama Prometheus Bound. There, as in his other dramas, Aeschylus
explored the relationship between power and justice, ostensibly
and
—and
/
and
a practice
contem-
"chained," and one of the
literally,
"the place of chains."
a rationale for the
punishment of criminals
in
but in a remark of the philosopher Plato. In the
dialogue Gorgias (525A-B), Plato has Socrates observe:
Now the proper office of all punishment is twofold: he who is rightly punished ought either better and profit by it, or he ought to be made an example to his fellows, that may see what he suffers, and fear to suffer the like, and become better. Those who are improved when they are punished by gods and men, are those whose sins are curable; and to
become
they
they are improved, as in this world so also in another, by pain and suffering; for there
is
no other way in which they can be delivered from their evil. But they who have been guilty of the worst crimes,
and are incurable by reason of their crimes, are made examples; as they
are incurable, they get
no good themselves, but others
enduring forever the most
—
sins
terrible
there they are, hanging
and warning
a spectacle
up
to all
Socrates' sharp analogy
and painful and
men who come
between punishments is
inflicted
life, if
we
can,
no
less stern
by
civil authorities in this life
than those of the
for
life
such
to
the result of ignorance
those offenders
his
and
argument
that
for correction,
[terrible]
come." a
commonplace
based on his ideas that
in ancient
evil acts are
punishment should consist of instruction and correction of
unheeded
until the
European Middle Ages
—and then was viewed
in a very different
Although Plato rejected the idea of retribution, or vengeance, his
language in dealing with terrible crimes and uncurable criminals is
crimes here in this
who are capable of being reformed (Protagoras 324B-D, and below), remained
cultural context.
there
and
in Plato's writings, notably in
argument on behalf of exemplary deterrence became
and medieval thought. But
largely
thither.
echoed elsewhere
Laws (88 IB): "Hence we must make the punishments
Plato's
world below just as examples,
in the prison-house of the
unrighteous
those administered by the gods after death
present
good when they behold them
get
fearful sufferings as the penalty of their
is
own Greek
extremely violent, and
evidence that a considerable aspect of Athenian criminal justice did focus on retribu-
tion as well as deterrence.
Athenian flicted:
ing
procedure also determined the forms of punishment that could be in-
legal
stoning to death (lapidation); throwing the offender from a
him
to a stake so that
cliff
(precipitation); bind-
he suffered a slow death and public abuse while dying (apotym-
panismos, an early form of crucifixion); or the formal dedication of the offender to the gods,
by
a ritual cursing
tion to the
gods
him
or forbidding
all
from any
reflects the religious sanction that
to invoke. In other instances, the
might be destroyed.
social
communication with him. Dedica-
homicide and other crimes were thought
dishonored dead might be forbidden burial, and their houses
6
M
Edward
/
Peters
Besides these physical punishments, Athens and a
ognized and used "patrimonial" punishments struction of the
condemned
offenders' houses.
—
number of other ancient
societies rec-
confiscation of property, fines,
The
free citizen,
and
the de-
Demosthenes the orator once
observed, was usually punished in his property, the slave in his body. But the distinction
was not
categorical; the range of
foreigners,
and
citizens alike.
punishments described here could be applied
Athens and other ancient
societies also
to slaves,
used "moral" punish-
ments: the public exposition of the offender, the infliction of posthumous punishments, the publicly imposed status of shamefulness (atimia, "with severe civil disabilities"), and public
denunciation.
The well-known case of Socrates of punishment. Charged in
399
b.c.
illustrates a
number
of aspects of the Athenian system
—
with the offense of impiety
in Socrates' case, of corrupt-
ing youthful minds and of believing in "new" gods instead of the gods recognized by the city
—Socrates was
dialogue Apology.
—
in a trial that,
was the long speech attributed
Found guilty of impiety by a slim
propose his penalty
right to
hundred members
tried before a jury of five
law, lasted only a single day. Socrates' defense
by Athenian
him in Plato's
to
majority of thirty jurors, Socrates had the
proposed the
as did the prosecution. Socrates' prosecutors
death penalty, and Socrates himself considered, but rejected, imprisonment (Apology 37C): Shall
I
[propose] imprisonment?
And why should spend my I
—
slave of the magistrates [elected for just one] year
penalty be a fine, and imprisonment until the fine
should have to
in prison, for
paid? There
is
the
Or
same
money have none, and cannot pay. And if I
I
shall the
objection.
I
say exile (and
may possibly be the penalty which you will affix) I must indeed be blinded by the love am so irrational as to expect that when you, who are my own [fellow] citizens,
this
of
lie
is
days in prison, and be the
a slave of the Eleven?
,
life, if
I
cannot endure my discourses and arguments, and have found them so grievous and odious that
you
will
have no more of them,
[that]
others are likely to endure them.
Probably because Socrates himself rejected the alternatives, the jury condemned him to death. Because of a delay
Socrates
imposed by the Athenian
was confined in prison
— from which
religious calendar (Plato, Phaedo 58B),
his friends
urged him to escape
—
until
he drank
poison in a form of execution that was also an Athenian penalty: compulsory suicide. The case of Socrates offers a spectrum of early fourth-century Athenian criminal law
punishment
—not only
and modes of
the death penalty but also the possibility of a fine with prison until
it
was paid and of exile. Sixth-century Athens instituted a
Among
these
was The Eleven,
described as kakourgoi
whom
a
number of different bodies
board of public
(literally, "evildoers").
all
These were the annually elected magistrates
arrested people, maintained several prisons,
removal of chains to some classes of prisoners duties were opening
and announcing
and closing the prison
to the
condemned
and
(Plato,
for visiting
The Eleven assumed cus-
and supervised the application and
Phaedo 59E).
Among
hours
Phaedo 59D, Crito 43A)
(Plato,
the magistrates'
the day of their execution (Plato, Phaedo 59E). Prisons
also, as in the case of Socrates, often the
slaves
to enforce its criminal law.
charged with dealing with those
Socrates brusquely dismissed as tyrants ruling over slaves.
tody of
were
officials
scenes of executions, as well as the torture of
of citizens accused of certain serious crimes.
The general term
for prison
was
Prison before the Prison
/
7
Ruins of the subterra-
nean chambers oj the Prison of Socrates in
Athens.
phylake, although the
used for the prison
word
itself
for the place of chaining, desmoterion,
was sometimes
generically
Athens and elsewhere in Greece.
in
own
Socrates' speech in his
defense also suggests
some
of the range of functions that
Athenian prisons served. Plato's Apology implies that punitive imprisonment was legitimate possibility in 399, as case,
was imprisonment
an unpaid and perhaps unpayable
demned
to
and
in the case of the detention of those con-
death until the sentence was carried out. Other sources indicate that The Eleven
were responsible
for receiving
crime, especially those slaves,
fine)
at least a
in cases of debt to the state (in Socrates'
whose
who
legal status in
and securing
all
those accused of certain kinds of flagrant
denied guilt and always in the cases of foreigners and
initially
much of the
Athens, as in
rest of the ancient
world, was consid-
erably inferior to that of free citizens.
Besides these uses of imprisonment illustrated in the case of Socrates, other offenses also entailed short or long terms in prison. All foreigners accused of a public or private offense
were
was
jailed
also
if
they could provide no sureties, in order to prevent their
used
to coerce a debtor to
Some evidence vals,
meet
indicates that prisoners
flight.
Imprisonment
his obligations, especially obligations to the state.
were temporarily paroled during certain
civic festi-
although they remained under the supervision of The Eleven. Within the prison-
desmoterion
itself,
prisoners might have freedom of movement, or again as in the case of Socrates,
they might be chained, fettered, or put into the stocks, head or neck braces, or
beams or blocks
restricting leg or
Lysias in the late fourth century
confined in the stocks for Lysias says that in his
own
arm movement. For example,
B.C. refers
back
five days, if the
day, this
was
to
a passage in a
one of Solon's laws: "He
court shall
make such
shall
wooden
speech by
have his foot
addition to the sentence."
called "confinement in the
wood."
Plato devoted considerable thought to the reform of such punishment, particularly in
Laws, in which he describes the Utopian
commonwealth
of Magnesia. Laws considers various
8
Edward M. Peters
/
offenses against piety
and morals and proposes three
ketplace,
was
and was expected
for general offenders for longer
was
who had committed more
to
mar-
hold a large number of these,
serious offenses but
with no contact with other citizens except for civil police,
depending on
a public building near the
al-
had done so because they were
than intrinsically bad. They were to be confined for no
foolish, rather
moral and
first,
than two years. The second elass of prison, called a reform center,
though none for those
distinct kinds of prison
The
the reformability or incorrigibility of the offender.
less
than
five years,
from the Nocturnal Council,
visits
near whose meeting place the'prison was located. These
a
kind of
visits
were
intended to improve their moral character. The third kind of prison was for incorrigibles and
was
to
be located
far
When
city in the wildest part of the commonwealth. No visitors were who were to be imprisoned for life, were guarded and fed by slaves.
from the
allowed, and the inmates,
a prisoner died, his
body was
to be cast out
beyond the
frontiers of the state
and
left
unburied.
These notions of prisons
punishment
much of Plato's
reflect
as instruction, but they also
tell
view of crime as error and of
distinctive
us about
some
of the functions of actual Athe-
nian (and perhaps other Greek) prisons. Prisons as places of temporary custody for those
about to be tried or those sentenced to punishment, as structures for coercive detention for certain kinds of debtors, as sites of torture
perhaps even
lifelong,
punishment
all
and execution, and
as institutions for long-term,
find echoes in Laws. Prisons did not play the largest
punitive role in Athenian penology, since capital punishment, fines, and exile were
more
frequently used. But they were regularly used in a variety of instances, and their existence and
conditions were well-known. Prisons and images of confinement exercised the Athenian imagination, not only in
Aeschylus's depiction of the torment of Prometheus but also in Plato's account of Socrates and of his
own idealized Magnesia. They also supplied metaphors for philosophical discussions of human condition. In Plato's Cratylus (400C), Socrates observed that
significant aspects of the
some philosophers regard
the
body
as a prison in
whichthe
thinkers argued that the kosmos (the orderly universe) for
human
beings.
As
and
institution
place in Athenian civilization.
The
as familiar
case of Socrates.
literary
Other
kind of prison (desmoterion)
metaphor, the prison occupied a significant
later influence of
continuous history than in their use in
spirit is incarcerated.
itself is a
Athenian prisons lay
imagery and philosophical
As such, they created images and scenes
that
less in their
literature, as in the
have influenced the Western
imagination ever since.
Ancient Egypt, Mesopotamia, and Assyria The
earliest records of prisons in
1786
b.c).
Egypt date from the period of the Middle Kingdom (2050-
The pharaohs of the Middle Kingdom acknowledged
a sacred duty to preserve
public order. Every injury inflicted on (or by) an Egyptian troubled the sacred order, which the pharaohs were
ishments.
On
bound
to reestablish
pended the equilibrium of the nor
cruel,
through their judiciary,
universe. Pharaohs
and
and Middle Kingdom pharaohs appear
prisonment
legal procedures,
and pun-
these principles, expressed in the concept of maat ("justice" or "order"), de-
to the
death penalty.
to
their servants
could be neither arbitrary
have preferred public beatings and im-
Prison before the Prison
/
9
Wooden
sculpture,
from Middle Kingdom Egypt, of a prisoner grinding corn.
One
of the
most useful accounts of prisons
in ancient
Genesis (39:20-40:5) describing the confinement of the
Egypt
is
Hebrew
the passage in the slave
tian royal official Potiphar. Pharaoh's prison in Genesis appears to
housed foreign offenders, who performed forced labor while of this kind could be lengthy.
One
Book
of
Joseph by the Egyp-
have been a granary that
in confinement.
Imprisonment
rabbinic tradition says that Joseph remained in prison for
as long as twelve years. Genesis states that
he rose to the position of supervisor of other
prisoners and was finally freed only because Pharaoh heard that he had a knack for interpret-
ing dreams.
Joseph's fellow inmates included royal servants temporarily confined for dereliction of
duty and frequently foreigners captured in war or thought to be spies. Joseph's
were arrested and confined in prison spies. All of these instances
imprisonment
in the
for three
own brothers
days because they were suspected of being
appear to be consistent with what
else is
known of the
practice of
Egypt of the Middle Kingdom.
Joseph's prison was the "Great Prison," the hurt wr at Thebes, present-day Luxor, existence
is
whose
unrecorded before the period of the Middle Kingdom. The Egyptian word hurt
derives from the verb hnr, "to restrain," hence hnri, "prisoner" or "one
who is restrained." The
prisons of Egypt (the prisons of places other than Thebes were generally designated
ith,
generic term for any place of confinement) might have resembled fortresses with cells
dungeons or
institutions like a
a
and
workhouse or labor camp, since Egyptian prisoners appear to
have been expected to work during their time of confinement. This practice was not unique to Egypt.
prison
When Samson was
work grinding
captured by the Philistines (Judges 16:22) he too was put to
corn.
There seems to have been no classification of prisoners according to their offenses. oners
who were
awaiting the disposition of their cases, those
who were
Pris-
being held for
10
Edward M. Peters
/
execution after conviction, and those the order of a royal official were
who
—
like
Joseph
suspected spies like Joseph's brothers, and disgraced
was an additional
long
to
serious
—
crime.
officials
after the
age of the pharaohs and were
kept,
and prisons themselves
still
in existence, together with forced labor
and Euphrates
rivers
between 3000 and 400
produced codes of law very
Hammurabi (1792-1750). Hammurabi and destroy
by
Common Era.
In another area, the series of civilizations that arose the Tigris
tice
of the state. Escape from prison
have housed the criminal courts. Such institutions appear to have survived in Egypt
prisoners, at the beginning of the
of
indefinitely at
The prisons were directed by an overseer with
and guards. Prison records were meticulously
a staff of scribes
seem
—and very
—had been confined
confined together with deserters from state labor forces,
all
stated that his law
b.c.
known
early, the best
was intended
to
between
being that
maintain jus-
so that the strong did not oppress the weak. These early Babylonian
evil
codes provided for several kinds of punishment, including various forms of capital punish-
ment and such
lesser
punishments as mutilation. The
early laws speak
sources in other literature indicate their use in cases of debt,
Kingdom
rebellious slaves and, as in Middle
The Assyrian empire (746-539 service, tax evaders,
and
b.c.)
theft,
and
little
of prisons, but
bribery, as well as for
Egypt, for foreign captives.
imprisoned smugglers, thieves, deserters from royal
like its predecessors in the ancient
Near
East, foreign captives, often
on a very large scale and often involving forced labor. The Old Babylonian term bit asiri seems
Samson among the
to refer specifically to the forced labor of foreign captives. Like
(and Hebrews and others labored
at
among the Egyptians),
foreign prisoners
grinding flour, and their prisons were close to or inside granaries.
were confined in dry
cisterns that
were otherwise used
other Babylonian term for prison, appears to have had a
Philistines
among the Assyrians largely Some
prisoners
for the storage of grain. Bit
Mi, an-
somewhat broader meaning,
indicat-
ing any location used to confine criminals, hostages, rebels, or those detained for any other reason.
These practices extended from Hammurabi through the period of Assyrian domination
down
to the Persian
empire that succeeded Assyria in 539
b.c.
We know of them both from
internal Mesopotamian sources and from the observations and narratives of those people
who experienced
firsthand the penal practices of Middle
Kingdom Egypt, Assyria, and Persia:
the Hebrews.
Ancient Israel Between the floodplain
civilizations of
Egypt and Mesopotamia, small, largely nomadic, clan-
based societies of shepherds and traders, led by patriarchal chieftains, arose. These Semiticspeaking peoples drew on the cultures of neighboring great cities itself as
the descendants of Abraham, fled Egypt
leadership of Moses and
moved
but they rejected both the
around the thirteenth century b.c. under the
east into Palestine
The memory of the exodus from Egypt and Palestine
civilizations,
and the gods of the Egyptians and Babylonians. One of these groups, identifying and
Syria.
the experience of establishing themselves in
shaped the refugees into a new people possessed of
a
powerful
new
religion.
That
Prison before the Prison
religion
The
covenant between
God and
the
Hebrew history is the
chief source of ancient
lawbook.
ent times for
a
Hebrew people and was
1
1
spelled out
law attributed to Moses.
in the
a
was based on
/
consists of literary
It
and
works belonging to
for different purposes. Its
Bible,
components
ing"; in
modem Jewish
law)
Greek, Pentateuch, the
is
"five
Deuteronomy). At the heart of Torah
Torah
(in
is
also far
more than
are not always accurately datable,
purposes of historical description they are not always
law (as well as
but the Bible
different literary genres, written at differ-
clear.
and
The core of ancient Hebrew
Hebrew, meaning
"law," "wisdom," "teach-
books" of Genesis, Exodus, Leviticus, Numbers, and is
the covenant between
God and Moses on behalf of the
Hebrew people (Exodus 19-34, Deuteronomy 4-10), expressed in the Ten Command-
entire
ments (Exodus 20:1-17, Deuteronomy 5:6-21) and subsequent the Bible originally consisted of
two other kinds of
text, "the
legal
commands. The
rest of
prophets" and "the writings,"
both of which are also of considerable historical and legal importance.
The
Bible describes the law
and
civilization of the
Hebrew people and many
other civilizations in the ancient Near East, including criminal law and penology.
aspects of It is
worth
noting, for example, that of the seventeen instances of imprisonment in the narrative parts of the Bible, twelve are described as taking place outside
Hebrew society proper, and they show
various types and functions of imprisonment in societies as different as Egypt and Assyria.
The
God
recorded offense in Jewish history,
first
punished by
exile.
Adam and
himself, in Cain's case with the addition of a protective or
Cain. Jewish law
God, was
Eve's disobedience to
So was the second, Cain's killing of Abel. Both offenses were punished by
itself
shaming "mark" placed on
can be traced only from the thirteenth century
During the period of the judges (thirteenth
b.c.
to eleventh centuries), local councils of elders
appear to have administered the law of each village (Ruth 4:2), law that was customary and unwritten.
The inhabitants witnessed
the deliberations
and participated
sentences. Besides the elders, exceptional individuals might also give
in the execution of
judgment
(1
Samuel
2:18-21). In the period of the early monarchy (David [1000-961] and Solomon [961-922]), kings began to assert authority throughout the kingdom, accepting appeals from village courts.
During the period of divided kingship (Judah in the south,
Israel in the north,
871-609; the
term "Jew" derives from the descendants of the kingdom of Judah), royal rule in Judah grew
more
assertive: royal
judges were appointed for each
village;
and
a high court at Jerusalem
heard appeals and formulated jurisprudence. In addition, during the reign of Josiah (640-
609) a lawbook was discovered during the restoration of the Temple (2 Chronicles 34:14-
book now recognized
as the original
form of the Book of Deuteronomy. Josiah's
acceptance of the book and his declaration of a
new covenant provided the kingdom of Judah
33), a
with a written law for the
The
last
first
time.
years of the Judean
in the east, the destruction of the
The conquest protectorate Exilic period later
monarchy were marked by
kingdom
of Israel in 722,
led to the period of Jewish exile in Babylon
kingdom under
later Persian,
the growing threat from Assyria
and the conquest of Judah
in 586.
and the slow restoration of a Jewish
Egyptian, and Syrian domination during the post-
(537-142), until the resurgence of the monarchy under the Maccabees and the
dependence on the Roman Empire. In the post-Exilic period, judicial authority among
12
Edward M. Peters
/
the
Jews was held by the
priestly class
and was centered
at
the seventy-one-member court of
the Sanhedrin, presided over by the high priest in Jerusalem.
The
history of criminal law in the Bible
Crime was regarded categorical
commandments. Because
cipal early
punishments were death and
The
earliest references to
colored by the precepts of Deuteronomy.
is
covenant with God, as deliberate disobedience to
as a violation of the
the covenant created the exile,
Hebrews
as a people, the prin-
both forms of removal from the community.
confinement (Leviticus 24:10-23, Numbers 15:32-36) indicate
simply that offenders were placed in temporary custody until capital sentences could be carried out.
Like exile, the death penalty was used to remove those whose offenses disrupted public
order and purity and threatened to bring
(Deuteronomy 17:12, which
ment
in favor of using
punishment
should be taken on a
the wrath of
as a deterrent
also states that exact reprisal, "life for foot,"
down
God on
also suggests a theory of deterrence,
false
life,
is
made
in
the whole
and Joshua
community
7).
The argu-
Deuteronomy 19:16-21, which
eye for eye, tooth for tooth, hand for hand, foot for
witness precisely as the witness had intended his opponent
to suffer.
The principal forms of the death penalty were lapidation (dramatic instances
are
Num-
bers 15:32-36 and Joshua 7:25-26, which echo the earlier form of community participation in village trials),
burning (which consisted of forcing the mouth open and pouring molten
lead into the stomach), decapitation
(Deuteronomy 13:13-17), and
punishments included beating and mutilation. Compensation, could also be ordered. There
fices
is
strangulation. Corporal
fines,
and compulsory
an interesting tendency in post-Exilic Judaism
sacri-
to miti-
gate the harsher punishments, including the death penalty, in favor of other forms of
punishment, several of which appear
to
have originated outside
The Deuteronomic laws say nothing
ment mentioned above
of prisons,
and the few
are obviously custodial, although
Israel.
early instances of confine-
Hebrew writers
certainly noted the
among other peoples, as in the story of Joseph in Egypt. Prisons first appeared among the Hebrews during the monarchy, when King Ahab ordered the imprisonment of the prophet
practice
Michiah on a diet of bread and water until the king returned from
battle (1
Kings 22:26-28,
2 Chronicles 18:25-27). In another incident, King Asa put the "seer" Hanani in stocks (2
Chronicles 16:10). Neither king had any religious warrant for such an action, but imprison-
ment,
like other
forms of bodily punishment, appears to have been introduced by the early
kings, perhaps in imitation of the practices of neighboring states, Egypt to the west or the great empires of the east.
In terms of legal
and
religious history,
one of the most
influential
books of the Bible has
been the Book of Ezra. The work was composed around 400 and recorded the
ment
of the Jewish
Artaxerxes
II
community
in Palestine after the Babylonian captivity.
retained political control of the territory,
which Ezra recorded,
that laid
down
and
it
let
judgment be rigorously executed upon him, be
erty, or
was Artaxerxes' permission,
the enforceability of religious regulations
dures of criminal law: "Whoever will not obey the law of your it
reestablish-
The Persian king
God and
and proce-
the law of the king,
death, banishment, confiscation of prop-
imprisonment" (Ezra 7:26). These forms, two of which
—imprisonment and
the con-
Prison before the Prison
fiscation of
—had not before
existed in Jewish law, were adopted
property
enforcement
and were retained
officials
was long remembered
until well into the
in post-Exilic Jewish society
—
by
/
13
later Jewish
law
Common Era. The power of Assyria
both ordinary Jews and Jewish kings
for
had endured the hardships of Assyrian imprisonment, including
kings of Judah (2
five
Chronicles 35:11, 2 Chronicles 36:6, 2 Kings 17:4, 2 Kings 25:7, 2 Kings 25:27).
The most informative instance of imprisonment
in Jewish society
Jeremiah. The prophets, claiming divine inspiration and tating to
both kings and
of divine vengeance
priests,
and Jeremiah was one of the
on Judah so
irritated Pashur,
is
the case of the prophet
command, proved
particularly
greatest irritants. His
son of Immer the
priest, that
irri-
prophecy
Pashur had
Jeremiah flogged and then confined overnight in stocks, "in the prison in the Upper Gate of
Benjamin" (Jeremiah 20: 1-2). Shemaiah the Nehelamite complained that be jailed (Jeremiah 29:24-29) and that this was the duty of the self later
priests.
all
prophets should
King Zedekiah (him-
imprisoned in Assyria: 2 Kings 25:27) also imprisoned Jeremiah "in the court of the
guardhouse attached a royal officer
to the royal palace" (Jeremiah 32:2-5). Later, Jeremiah
which they had converted the house,
was arrested by
who had him flogged "and imprisoned him in the house of Jonathan the Scribe, into a prison; for Jeremiah
and here he remained
for a
had been put
into a vaulted pit beneath
long time" (Jeremiah 37:13-16). Interrogated by
Zedekiah, Jeremiah was transferred to the court of the guardhouse, where he again remained for
some time (Jeremiah
37:21). But the soldiers, infuriated
king's permission, took Jeremiah,
had
and
by
him down with ropes
let
his prophecies, received the
into a water cistern that
still
mud and slime at its bottom (Jeremiah 37:6-13). Rescued by a friend's petition, Jeremiah
returned to the court of the guardhouse until the
The conventions such a way that
it is
fall
of Jerusalem.
of biblical translation require that the text of the Bible be rendered in
understandable to contemporary readers. But in the case of imprison-
ment, such translation rules prove to be misleading. The description of the places and uses of
imprisonment
in the case of Jeremiah alone suggests a far greater variety of types of confine-
ment than what fact,
the simple
modern terms
"prison"
and
"stocks" can adequately convey. In
the trials of Jeremiah illustrate a collection of practices that are consistent with
probably derivative from
The functions the writing of the ridical
—others
in
of imprisonment that
Book
had been adopted by Jewish society by the time of
of Jeremiah survived through the
importance of the Sanhedrin
found in the Christian
Bible.
(Acts of the Apostles 4:3)
down
Saul's
Maccabean monarchy and the ju-
Roman world. Some
to the
The overnight detention
and of the apostles by
by an angel (Acts 5:18-19),
—and
non-Jewish societies in the ancient world.
of Peter
echoes of them can be
and John by the Sanhedrin
the high priest, from
imprisonment of Christians (Acts
which they were
8:3, 9:2),
freed
and the now-
converted Paul's reminder to fellow Christians that some of them had been imprisoned and
had had
their possessions confiscated
(Hebrews 10:34)
are
all
early Christian testimonies to
the continuing practice of imprisonment in Jewish penology.
Like the case of Socrates and the Greek uses of images of imprisonment as literary metaphors, the Jewish legacy was also one of images.
turn of the Platonist
Common
image of the
Era, interpreted the soul's
The Jewish philosopher
imprisonment of Joseph
in
Philo,
around the
Egypt in terms of the
imprisonment in the body. But the greatest influence of Jewish
14
Edward M. Peters
/
images of imprisonment was religious rather than philosophical. The influence of the Jewish Bible reached a far wider audience than Plato or the particular attention to its
its
vivid expressions of
human
Greek
orators,
and
and
helplessness
that audience paid
terror, particularly in
language of confinement and release, of captives ransomed by God, of refuge and sanctu-
ary,
and of
exile
and
return.
Psalms 40, 69, and 107 use the imagery of God's drawing a prisoner "up out of the
muddy
out of the mire and clay," echoing the next-to-last imprisonment of Jeremiah.
pit,
Psalm 102
Lord
states that the
will hear the
groaning qf prisoners; Psalm 105
me
of Joseph as prisoner; Psalm 142 requests, "Set
name." Psalm 146 says that the Lord
The Books of Job, Psalms,
release those in prison."
abound
The eloquence of the
in prison images.
from prison
will set the prisoner free,
Lord has commanded the prophet
states that the
free
"to
third legacy, that of
retells the story
may
praise thy
Isaiah (61:1)
proclaim liberty to the captives and
Isaiah, Lamentations,
religious
and Zechariah
also
imagery of the Jewish Bible joined
and
Mediterranean antiquity. But neither of these traditions focused on
The
I
and the Book of
the philosophical imagery of the Athenians as part of the historical
or law.
that
intellectual legacy of
scientific
jurisprudence
Rome, addressed both.
The Law of Rome The
city-state of
was 753
Rome was built
b.c,
and from
established, at
some
whom,
of
Roman government, throughout economic of a
Italy
on
a series of
it
was ruled by
kings. In
509
a republic
the expansion of
Italy
Roman
military power,
flooded
and the Mediterranean and Near Eastern worlds and
Rome with enormous wealth, and made
of civil wars.
By the
was
and eventually
and Central Europe. The expansion of Roman authority created
strains,
number
b.c.
magistrates, called consuls, as well as various subordi-
the praetors, performed the chief legal functions of the
The Republic directed
into Southern
509
that date until
whose head were two
nate magistrates, magistracy.
farmsteaded countryside of central
in the
convenient crossing-points of the Tiber River. The legendary date of its founding
hills close to
last
quarter of the
first
political
social
power
and
the object
century b.c, the Republic was
re-
placed by the rule of a single man, the emperor, and by a large imperial bureaucracy and
army.
were a.d.
From
all
the reign of Constantine
Christians.
476 and
much In
on
The Roman Empire
is
(a.d.
312-37), the emperors, with one exception,
conventionally said to have lasted in the
in the East until a.d. 1453. Its influence, particularly
its
West until
legal influence, lasted
longer.
451
b.c.
the Twelve Tables, the
chiefly with private disputes
against the
Roman
state
—
first
written laws of
Rome, were
issued. These dealt
between individuals, and even the few instances of offenses
receiving bribes and aiding an
enemy
of
Rome
—had
to
be pros-
ecuted privately before the assembly of the people. Such offenses as physical assault, insult, the theft or destruction of crops,
and perjury were
private persons (delict) to be prosecuted
by the offended individual
all
theft,
considered offenses against in the presence of the
appropriate magistrates and before the assembly of citizens.
Conviction for some offenses required the payment of compensation, but the most
quent penalty was death.
Among the
forms of capital punishment in
effect
were burning
fre-
(for
— Prison before the Prison
/
1
5
conviction of arson), precipitation from the Tarpeian Cliff (for perjury), clubbing to death (for
composers of scurrilous songs about a
apparently a form of punitive
though not mentioned also
used
in early
ape, a dog,
and
in the
Rome. The
a serpent
human
citizen),
hanging
sacrifice to the
(for theft of the
crops of others,
goddess Cebes), and decapitation. Al-
Twelve Tables, several other forms of capital punishment were culleus, the practice of
killed close relatives. Vestal virgins
confining the offender in a sack with an
was used for those who had who violated their oaths of chastity were buried alive. The
and throwing the sack
into the sea,
powerful features of the laws of delict suggest that these punishments emerged originally as although
a substitute for private revenge. In addition,
it
was not
a formal punishment, exile
might be chosen by a convicted offender as an alternative to execution. Those
go into
exile in these
and could be
killed
circumstances
by any
citizen
if
who
cessive
market days, on the
the city. Narrative sources the male heads of discipline
and were
last
of
to
have their debts publicly announced on three suc-
member
for
of the household. This
confinement
any infraction of household
The Twelve Tables were never
officially
were military command, holding public
at the
own
fifth to
b.c),
was
who made
in discussing
and accepted
offered his
own
by
members
legal experts
greatly wid-
obliga-
—and managing
one's
achieved considerable fame, and procedure. Cicero (106-43
reputation as an orator in the law courts, noted the intense interest
its
office of praetor
who held the highest
on
particular questions of law.
b.c.
some jurists had
Other amateurs, Cicero
on behalf of defendants
specialized in speaking against or
offices in the
they were able to influence the law
By the end of the second century
application.
to write specialized treatises
among them,
b.c.
was both an
of the ruling class (the others
judicial office
even minor points of law on the part of those
their right to control
legal advice
at all stages of a litigation
Roman state. When legal experts held the begun
cell to
for recal-
law, but changes in the
the second century
—including
Although technically amateurs,
estates).
their advice
work cell
pleasure of the father for any
Roman
abolished as
roles for
office
powers of
discipline.
ened the range and expanded the procedures used. To give
and one of the few acceptable public
limitless
maintain a domestic prison
to
the ergastulum, could be a
cell,
administration and application of law from the
tion
into slavery outside
add one further category of imprisonment. The
Roman households included the right
members
in the laws concerning
to be held in private confinement by
which they might be executed or sold
citrant or rebellious slaves or a place of
family
Twelve Tables occurs
in the
could not or would not pay were
their creditors for sixty days
chose to
they returned to Rome.
The only instance of imprisonment debt. Debtors
who
freedom, and immovable property
lost their citizenship,
in court
—
further
developing the Greek genre of forensic oratory.
From
the
mid-second century
b.c.
the
Roman state began to
quaestiones perpetuae, to try particular offenses. These courts
although accusation and prosecution were ties inflicted
still
—
by these courts were statutory
and there was no appeal from
conducted by private individuals. The penal-
there
their verdicts.
establish specific courts, the
were presided over by a praetor,
The
Roman criminal law. aspects of Roman culture also
was no discretion on the
part of the court
quaestiones perpetuae represented the next
stage in the formation of
Several other strata of
contributed to this process. For the bottom
Roman society there appears to have been a summary police procedure
exercised by
— 16
—
Edward M. Peters
/
the lower magistrates, notably
by the
tresviri capitales.
Only
the consuls, the assembly of citizens, occasional dictators,
—held what
ranks
the
Romans
called imperium, the
Roman magistrates military command and death over Roman citi-
the highest
and the highest
power
of
life
zens. But even magistrates like the tresviri capitales possessed the right of coercitio, the author-
punish violations of their
ity to
commands and
instances of public disorder
by
a
number
of
means short of capital punishment. References in Roman literature, including the comic drama, indicate that the tresviri capitales could imprison offenders temporarily, although of these
known.
empire
governors and their
staffs
had
great latitude in the administration of the law, including criminal law. Military courts too
had
prisons
little is
In the provinces of the
considerable power over those
who came before
procedure used by lesser magistrates in the
by
them.
city of
local
It is
possible that the
Rome, by governors
summary police
in the provinces,
and
military courts constituted something closer to a true criminal legal system than the
quaestiones perpetuae.
At the end of the of the
Roman
222/224)
is
state.
first
century
b.c. a series
of revolutions placed Augustus at the head
The period between Augustus and
termed the
classical
the death of the jurist Ulpian (a.d.
period of Roman law. Although the emperor himself became
and most of
the chief source of law, Augustus
his successors relied
on the advice
of legal
not only in their legal administration but in the composition of the very laws
specialists,
they issued. Besides the increasingly prominent role of jurists and imperial
officials in the
administration of the law, particularly the criminal law, the other distinguishing feature of the classical period
is
the imperial jurists, a
During the
last
the flowering of a technical literature of jurisprudence
body of
legal literature that has
no counterpart
produced by
in the ancient world.
century of the Republic, the social upheavals and internal violence that
characterized the period had led to the expansion of the sphere of public law (including constitutional
of the state
and criminal law), law
itself.
that dealt with the
The emperors, with
endangering of the order or authority
the advice of the jurists, greatly
expanded the sphere
of criminal law.
Emperors and perpetuae,
their legal advisers
and they created
perially delegated officials
cases
on the
their
own
still
added new offenses
other
new
offenses
edict. In
assumed the functions of the older
basis either of charges brought
investigation
competence of the quaestiones
to the
by imperial
inquisitio.
that the older conception of
instances im-
private citizens or of charges generated
by
In both instances the central role of the state indicates
many offenses
conception of some of these,
by
some
quaestiones perpetuae, trying
at least, as
as private injuries
—
delicts
—was giving way
to a
crimes, to be treated under public law by public
authorities.
Under
common,
the
new imperial
system, a
number
of hitherto infrequent practices
became more
notably the use of torture. Torture had always been required in the testimony of
slaves, since they
were assumed
to
have no honor and no reason to
tell
the truth except
when
compelled. The application of torture to others gradually expanded to defendants of low social status
greatly
The
made
and even
to witnesses in
some
cases, particularly treason, a category that itself
expanded under the emperors. increasingly public character of offenses that
social status
more important,
especially while
had once been prosecuted
it still
privately
served to determine the
way an
— Prison before the Prison
offense might be tried pire given
way
and punished. Older Roman
to the social distinction
sign of the difference
between
between these two
social distinctions
had by the and
strata called honestiores
levels
was
1
7
EmOne
early
humiliores.
punishments
the nature of
/
were
that
normally inflicted on members of each. This difference became more important during the
when punishments themselves became more and more
imperial period,
Under the emperors, exile became an
—
punishment, either as
inflicted
severe.
formerly a choice enabling one to avoid capital punishment relegatio (exile
from Rome) or as deportatio (ban-
ishment to a particular place, often remote and harsh). Emperors also condemned some offenders to forced labor at public works for a specific period of time, to the mines, or to gladiatorial
combat. The
last
two of
these, usually inflicted
sentences, as was, of course, the other
new punishment
on
humiliores,
of being
were
thrown
public games, another punishment chiefly inflicted on humiliores but under
used on anyone
who
death
really
to the beasts in
some emperors
displeased or offended them.
Roman form known as the
Being thrown to the beasts, being publicly burned to death, or suffering the of apotympanismos (crucifixion) belonged to a class of spectacular punishments
summa supplicia,
These were reserved
"the highest punishments."
offenses that were thought to be horrendous),
of exemplary deterrence through spectacular the limitless
horrendous offenses (or
and aggravated executions, which demonstrated
power of the emperors. These punishments began under the
reached a peak during the third and early fourth centuries, ferocity that
for
and they were aspects of the increasing pursuit
had
rarely, if ever,
literature describing Christian
when
early
emperors and
they reached a level of
been equaled in the ancient world. During
period the
this
martyrs (see below) offers graphic depictions of large numbers
of examples of such forms of execution.
The
later fourth-
and
fifth-century emperors, however,
and the
severity of capital
stage in
Roman legal history,
imperial patronage. In
(533), the
438
first
to
reduce both the variety last
major
the compilation of extensive collections of legal literature
under
the
emperor Theodosius
imperial edicts from the fourth and early Institutes
began
punishment. This process occurred in the context of the
introductory
fifth
book
for
II
issued the Theodosian Code, containing
centuries.
A century later, Justinian issued
beginning law students, the Code (534), a
the
new
compilation of imperial legislation from the second century through the early sixth, and the
by the
Digest (533), a rich collection of legal science written
period. These texts,
known
great jurists of the imperial
since the thirteenth century as Corpus luris Civilis ("Body of Civil
Law"), influenced the law of Europe and the Americas until the end of the eighteenth century
and
are
Roman
still
the basis for learned law in countries with civil law systems.
criminals in
Book 9
of Justinian's Code
though Justinian himself termed them "the forms of execution in the
late
and
in
The treatment
Books 47 and 48 of the
terrifying books,"
was considerably
Digest,
of
even
closer to the
Republic and early Empire than to those of more recent
Roman
history.
Aside from the references in the Twelve Tables to imprisonment for debt and for the practice of the domestic ergastulum, sources for the history of the early use of prisons in are largely the narratives of historians. that
had taken place
in
385
B.C.,
The
first-century historian Livy described
Rome
an episode
suggesting an early use of prison other than for debt or the
domestic ergastulum. After an attempt to
free a
number
of imprisoned debtors, the military
18
Edward M. Peters
/
The Tullianum, an underground prison
chamber built on the Roman jorum in the third century b.c.
hero Marcus Manlius was hauled before the dictator of
appointed during
draw
political crises in the
two terms
Rome
(dictators
were occasionally
Republic) and put into prison in chains, "to
mercy of the executioner."
his breath in darkness, at the
Livy's Latin uses
Roman
for the action against Manlius: vinculum (chaining)
Latin writers translated the Greek terms they used the Latin vinculum and career.
Manlius and several others from the fourth to the second centuries the instances of imprisonment but
Roman writer Aulus Soothsayer
leading
and The
men
Rome by
little
Lion,
when by
of the city, after the
the triumvirs."
coercive: he
otherwise
satirist:
manner
The triumvirs
C. Cornelius
the tresviri capitales placed
him
The
cases of
suggest something of
"He wrote two plays
of the Greek poets, he
The
in prison, The
reason of his constant abuse and insults aimed
at the
had been imprisoned
at
in Gellius's story of Naevius are the tresviri capitales,
power
was released when he promised
unknown
b.c.
of the character of prisons in the early Republic.
Gellius mentions Naevius the
the lower-ranking magistrates possessing the
was
and career
These correspond exactly to the Greek terms desmoterion and phylake, and when
(prison).
of coercitio. Naevius's imprisonment
to stop insulting
important people. The
was convicted of sexually corrupting
in prison,
where he
either
remained
a
young boy. One of
until
he died or was
executed.
One
of the earliest references to the prison at
After the successful suppression of a revolt
Rome
occurs in another passage by Livy.
by Carthaginian prisoners of war
consuls ordered the lower magistrates to double their prison precautions. "So
men
patroled the streets, the minor magistrates were ordered to
make
three officials in charge of the quarry-prisons to increase their vigilance, letters
around
to the Latin confederacy, that the hostages kept
custody, with no opportunity to
come out
in at
198 b.c, the
Rome watch-
inspections,
and the
and the praetors sent
should be placed in close
into public places, the prisoners loaded with chains
of not less than ten pounds' weight, and guarded only in a public prison."
Prison before the Prison
The quarry-prisons and
known as latumiae. The of the Capitoline Hill,
at the
survives today
was
is
and the
courts. In the late
second century
under-
Roman forum, in an area known as the Comitium, much of their judicial business. The prison that
probably as a convenient place of confinement close to the b.c.
room was added above
a
the Tullianum proper,
below the surface of the ground.
.
.
.
there
It is
is
enclosed on
Lentulus was
this place
a.d. historian Sallust
a place called the Tullianum, all
a vaulted roof of stone. Neglect, darkness,
fearsome to behold. Into
let
and the
have been used indifferently as both
to
confinement and an execution chamber. The second-century
described the chamber: "In the prison
chamber with
to the
Mamertinus, the Mamertine prison.
of
site
The lower chamber appears
latumiae stood close by.
feet
and the prisons
tresviri capitales
below the present-day church of San Giuseppe dei Falegnami. The Tullianum
built in the third century B.C.,
a place of
later called the career
northwest comer of the
the seat of the magistrates
19
complex located on the southern slope
where rock had once been quarried. They were adjacent
ground chamber called the Tullianum, This stood
were the
their three officials
latumiae were part of a prison
/
sides
by
walls,
about twelve
and above
and stench make
it
it is
a
hideous and
down, and the executioners then carried
out their orders and strangled him." Sallust
wrote around the middle of the
a relatively small
number
of subordinates,
Rome. The rapid growth
force in
first still
century b.c,
seem
to
of the city, however,
when
the tresviri capitales, with
have constituted the
effective police
and the needs of the emperors
at the
end of that century began the development of other forms of policing and probably the building of other prisons. Juvenal, the second-century a.d.
longed for the days the
Empire
century,
if
when
Roman
complained
satirist,
that
he
only a single prison had met the needs of the city of Rome. Under
too, provincial governors certainly built prisons, so that
not considerably
earlier, the
by the end of the second
number of prisons within the
and the Empire had
city
increased considerably.
Even under the Republic there were prisons outside Rome. In the b.c, Perseus, king of Macedonia,
Rome rian
with his family in a prison
early
second century
was captured by a Roman army and placed by the praetor of at
Alba Fucens in central
Italy.
The
first-century b.c. histo-
Diodorus Siculus described the prison:
The prison is a deep underground dungeon, no larger than nine people] place,
,
dark and noisome from the large numbers
who were men under condemnation on
were incarcerated there
at this period.
poor wretches were reduced
to the
With
so
[a
dining-room that could hold
[of people]
capital charges, for
many
committed
most
to the
in this category
shut up in such close quarters, the
appearance of brutes, and since their food and
everything pertaining to their other needs was all so foully commingled, a stench so terrible assailed
anyone
who drew
Many of Perseus's
near
it
to a
which he refused to
more comfortable
guards undertook to
As
it
could scarcely be endured.
fellow inmates were awaiting execution, but
was. Nevertheless, his jailers threw suicide,
that
do.
down a sword and a noose
to
it is
not clear that Perseus
him, urging him to commit
He had nearly died from mistreatment when he was removed
place of confinement. Perseus lasted there for
kill
him by depriving him
a prisoner of war, Perseus
was
two
years, until his
of sleep.
in a special category.
Elsewhere Livy wrote of the
confinement and chaining of prisoners of war (some of them in the latumiae in Rome) and of
20
Edward M. Peters
/
hostages, a custom seen elsewhere in the ancient world.
The
details the
preserves about the prison at Alba Fucens are important.
The
cell
its
stench and
execution
—
ground, and in
filth,
the invitation to suicide,
and the
account of Perseus
below ground
possibility of the
chamber
level
indicates a variety of functions. Perseus's prison at Alba Fucens too it
—with
as a place of
was below
echoes the water cistern into which Jeremiah was thrown, as well as the Tullianum
Rome. difficult to see the Tullianum, at least, as a
It is
imprisonment, since to see the
its
prison intended for long-term punitive
and dangerous. But
physical conditions were so terrible
chamber above
it
and the latumiae
it is
more than temporary
as places of
possible
custodial
confinement, not only in the indefinite detention of prisoners of war but also in the detention of others
were
who might
have been imprisoned
for
long terms or for
life.
Such
and although we know considerably more about the prison
rare,
example, that
at
at
cases,
however,
Rome
than, for
Athens, punitive imprisonment for any length of time seems to have been
infrequent.
By the
early fourth century, imperial edicts indicated a general concern for at least the
minimal physical well-being of inmates. An edict of Constantine
320
referred to
anyone held
in custody awaiting the
in the Theodosian
Code dated
appearance of his accuser: "[He] shall not
be put in manacles of iron that cleave to the bones, but in looser chains, so that there
no
torture
and yet the custody may remain secure.
may be
When incarcerated he must not suffer the
darkness of an inner prison, but he must be kept in good health by the enjoyment of
and when night doubles the necessity of the prison
with
and into healthful
out into the
let
common
places. light of
for his guard,
When day returns, day so
that
light,
he shall be taken back to the vestibules
he
may
at early sunrise,
he shall be forth-
not perish from the torments of
prison."
Constantine's edict and other sources, notably those concerning the imprisonment of
Roman prisons. They appear to have had differOne was an inner (or deeper), mOre obscure chamber in which the
Christians, reveal other important features of
ent sections, for example.
accused might be shut up in darkness, locked into stocks or tightly chained, unattended unfed, suffering from heat or cold and
Such sections
prison.
filth,
are referred to in another passage of the Theodosian
crimes "that deserve prison barriers and squalid custody." St.
Code in reference
to
A century after Constantine's edict,
Augustine, in a passage in one of his Tractates on the Gospel of John, also mentioned the
different parts of a
Roman
prison:
"And
it
makes
a difference for
brought before the judge with what kind of guard he
is
a
humane and mild duty and more
who
is later
cases. Lictors are
to
itself
not
all,
be
under
ordered to guard
appropriate to a citizen; others are handed over to
Others are sent into prison; and in the prison
merits of
each one
taken. For, in fact, detentions
guard are exercised in accordance with the merits of the
some, ers.
to,
abused by jailers, or otherwise tortured while in
jail-
but in accordance with the
serious cases, [some] are thrust into the lowest parts of the prison."
The
Theodosian Code also directed judges to inspect prisons every Sunday to see that the guards
had not accepted bribes from prisoners, food
at
that the prisoners
were provided with
a ration of
public expense, and that the prisoners were conducted to the baths under guard. The
prison registrar was responsible for any escapes and for any excessive brutality toward the prisoners.
Prison before the Prison
Emperors sometimes performed gratuitous between two
the distinction
of
367 announced the emptying of the prisons
in
and the treatment of criminals. An
honor of Easter, except
guilty of treason, crimes against the dead, sorcery, adultery, rape,
which merited the summa
supplicia as
21
one such case we can see
acts of mercy. In
different kinds of crime
/
edict
for those prisoners
and homicide. These crimes,
punishment, were generally termed crimina excepta
—
crimes so awful that ordinary criminal procedures were suspended in their prosecution.
The category tions that first
had
marked Roman forms
century of the Empire, those
executed
if
not
who came
earlier, honestiores
supplicia in the case of the
The
and
of the erosion of the status distinc-
of punishment. In the Republic to
and during the
be termed honestiores either were quickly
—usually by decapitation—or were allowed
century on,
summa
some
of crimen exception also explains
earlier
to flee into exile.
humiliores alike
underwent
But from the third
and suffered the
torture
excepted crimes.
Empire and the increase
actual policing practices of the
in the size of the imperial
administration, including the administration of justice, appear to have outrun the doctrines of the jurists.
The jurists of the
classical
period preserved the older categories of offenses tried
by the Republican
quaestiones perpetuae, even
with the
imperial
rise of the
early fourth centuries, the
civil service
combination of the
vants and their arbitrary use of difficult, if
for
from the
all
made
legal procedures.
fallen into disuse
During the third and
power of the emperors and
limitless
the formulation of a doctrine of criminal justice very
and
Digest nonetheless offer a
classical
number
of ideas concerning imprison-
period and one of which became extremely influential. The Code,
who stated his
example, contained an edict from the second-century emperor Antoninus,
position
on
life
imprisonment: "Your statement that a
prisonment in chains
upon
a
their ser-
not irrelevant.
Justinian's Code
ment,
it
though these had long since
and criminal
free
man
for life is incredible, for this penalty
person of servile condition." The
has been
condemned
to im-
can scarcely be imposed [even]
later jurist Callistratus indicated that
an even
second-century emperor, Hadrian, had issued an edict specifically forbidding
life
earlier
imprison-
ment by provincial governors.
Among
whose work on criminal law does
the jurists
was Ulpian, whose death
Roman
in
law. In the matter of prison, Ulpian
centuries
and came
to
survive, the
most
222/224 conventionally marks the end of the left
influential of all
classical
period of
one phrase that resonated through many
be understood (erroneously) as the sole doctrine of imprisonment in
Roman law: "Governors are in the habit of condemning men to be kept in prison or in chains, but they ought not to do to
this, for
punishments of
this type are forbidden. Prison indeed ought
be employed for confining men, not for punishing them." In matters of criminal law, the Code
the later
Roman emperors
and the
Digest of Justinian represent an attempt
to mitigate the arbitrary harshness of the third-century
by
Empire by
recovering the laws of such moderate second-century emperors as Hadrian and Antoninus
and the opinions of the
classical jurists.
also reflected a mitigating of the
The life
in
largest single
Roman
The laws of the Christian emperors
after
Constantine
most ferocious aspects of Roman criminal procedure.
group of Roman prisoners whose sources provide extensive
detail for
prisons are the Christians, not only from accounts in the gospels, the epistles,
and the Acts of the Apostles,
all
parts of the Christian
New Testament, but also
from a group
ARCHBISHOP MiTTY HIGH SCHOOL LIBRAE San
Joss, California
22
/
Edward M. Peters
known generally as the "Acts of the Christian Martyrs." Although the exact legal basis Roman prosecution of Christians is still a matter of scholarly debate, accounts from
of texts for the
Empire are
different parts of the
in considerable
agreement concerning the prisons in which
the Christians were held.
Like other accused criminals, Christians were remanded to prison for custodial purposes, to await the arrival of a competent judicial official or the attention of the local magis-
execution of a capital sentence (Acts of the Apostles 22-26), sometimes
trate or to await the
one
for years. In at least
account states that
case, that of Ptolemaeus, the
when Ptolemaeus
admitted to being a Christian, an officer "put him in chains and punished him for a long time
The
in prison (desmoterion) ."
whether the imprisonment was
text is not clear
for the
purposes
of aggravated physical punishment such as torture or for punitive confinement, since
Ptolemaeus was
later executed. In general,
however, Christians do not seem
imprisoned as a punishment. In spite of formidable crowding, and
whim,
as the
filth,
prisons were certainly not the harshest punishments
summa
The "Acts of tions.
One was
tained
were
less terrible.
the other prisoners.
The more
jailers, as
the third-century account of the
became angry
Visitors
at
Among
(Matthew 25:36), and by other
St.
martyrdom of Pionius, gifts
Perpetua in Carthage in
gifts
from friends outside the prison.
It
was recognized
would be counted among
(Hebrews
13:3), as
a palace to
me, and of
I
would
Rome
soon as the
rather have been there than
to the history of criminal
that
the righteous
would those who
suffered
brief time, St. Perpetua
permitted to have her newborn baby with her in prison. She noted, "And
The contribution
as
was inspired by Jesus' prediction
imprisonment during the persecutions (Hebrews 10:34). For a
became
many jailers
also be arbitrarily refused access to the
visited prisons
scriptural texts
clear that
it is
given to prisoners in their charge, since the
Christians, the duty of visiting prisoners
who had
his small ration
by means of magic.
Pionius for refusing to accept
Judgment, those
several sec-
in the inner part of the prison because
first
persecutions began in earnest in the second century. at the Last
and share
fast
did the friends of
were sometimes permitted, but they could
prisoners.
had
by both Constantine and Augustine. Other
may have been routinely placed at
could expect to extort a percentage of the jailers
to imperial
desirable parts of the prison could sometimes be ob-
of their jailers' fear that they might escape
From
have been
Some had windows. There were policies, at least, concern-
by purchasing them from the
202. Christians
known
the Christian Martyrs" corroborate the point that prisons
ing minimal food rations, although one martyr preferred to
among
to
measures, over-
supplicia testify.
the inner chamber, cited above
parts of the prison
gates, walls, security
was
my prison suddenly
anywhere
else."
law and prisons was the jurispru-
dence of the Code and the Digest and the moving narratives of the Christian martyrs. The acts of the martyrs were read tions, Isaiah,
by
later Christians,
along with the books of Job, Psalms, Lamenta-
and Zechariah, and these shaped
later Christian attitudes
toward both the use of
prisons and the needs of prisoners. The earliest Christian literature urged charity and for-
bearance toward offending fellow Christians (Romans
thew 18:15), but the expansion of Christianity
and
or fraternal
admonishment (Mat-
the Christianization of the entire
Empire by the end of the fourth century made such difficult to
2: 1),
Roman
attitudes ethically compelling but very
adopt as criminal policy. Although Christianity did mitigate some of the savage
Prison before the Prison
23
/
summa supplicia and although churchmen such as St. Augustine did urge mercy for the condemned whenever possible, the texts of the Code and the Digest remained the measure of Roman and later learned criminal law. Those texts of scripture and the "Acts of the Chris-
—
—
tian Martyrs" offered a religious
and moral framework
for
understanding prisons and crimi-
nal justice in general.
Early Medieval Europe Justinian's
Code and Digest did not find a ready home in Western Europe until the twelfth
From
century.
the late fifth century on, imperial rule in Italy
Roman Empire was
provinces of the
largely
and
in the
Western European
swept away by the migrations of Germanic and
other peoples and the internal collapse of the administrative, political, and financial appara-
had long provided
tus that
for the
governance of the
state
and the administration of the
laws.
In 554, Justinian successfully reconquered Italy from one such people, the Ostrogoths,
had occupied
since 491,
it
and sent
to Italy the
invaded
—and much
in 565,
and there was no immediate need
of it
was conquered
The Germanic kingdoms
that
—the kingdoms of the Visigoths
man
or
woman had
This practice
is
to
be judged by
known
law of a
lost
empire.
in the Iberian peninsula, the Franks in Gaul, the in Britain
Roman subjects.
—
all
the law of the people of
as that of the personality of law.
far less
to a large extent, to
each
is,
which he or she was
free
member.
a
Even "Roman" law, including the
who were
church personnel and property. The Germanic laws were
complex than Roman learned law had been, and they contained only rudimentary
ideas of public law. his
Italy
Lombards
produced written bodies of law,
But these laws were personal; that
surviving Theodosian Code, was applicable only to those subjects of Germanic kings
Romans and,
was
Lombards three years after Justinian's death
for the learned
and the Angles, Saxons, and others
usually with the help of their
the
who
Italy
were carved out of the old imperial provinces and
itself
in Italy,
—by
newly codified Roman law. But
The laws were
chiefly devoted to establishing the rights of the king
and
household and regulating the settlement of private disputes.
Between the
fifth
and the twelfth centuries
yet another legal system
Europe, that of the Latin Christian Church. In theory, the religious practice of the
church were applicable
common
to all Christians,
grew up
in
Western
doctrines of belief
and
but until the twelfth century
they remained extremely localized. Only from the ninth century on, chiefly under the influ-
ence of Charlemagne (747-814) and his successors, was there an effective
from the personality cable to tical
all
to the territoriality of law, that
to
make
law effectively binding on
all
to shift
and
to
make
ecclesias-
Christians everywhere.
Prisons are occasionally mentioned rarely. In
movement
a single legal system appli-
inhabitants of a territory regardless of their political origin
manic laws, but very a
is,
Lombard
among
the few punishments indicated in the Ger-
Italy the early
eighth-century king Liutprand issued
law stating that an apprehended thief had
to
compound
and then spend two or three years
in
an underground prison, which each Lombard
its
value)
judge was ordered to have constructed in his
district.
oj the Lombards, written in the late eighth century,
discovered a
man in chains in a
for his theft
(pay some multiple of
In Paul the deacon's narrative History
some Lombards invading Gaul
in
570
tower whose entrances were sealed. Although the "prisoner"
24
Edward M. Peters
/
turned out to be
St.
Hospitius,
who
chose to
prisons served other purposes
among
the
fashion as an act of penance, the
live in this
Lombards' assumption that chained confinement was
punishment
a
for
murder suggests
Lombards besides punishing
that
theft.
The use of prisons for private purposes is also reflected in the narrative sources for Frankish
Of these, Gregory
Gaul.
mistook St. Hospitius
and the
of Tours's History oj the Franks
of saints' lives are the most important. Gregory also for a
tells
condemned murderer (VI. 6), but
suggest that imprisonment for ransom was far
narratives of a large
for the
most part narrative sources
more prevalent among
the Franks than
any form of judicial imprisonment. Kings sometimes used monasteries as prisons tured rebels, as Chilperic used
ment of his
St.
Calais in the diocese of le
The monasteries of
rebellious son Merovech.
number
the story of how the invading Lombards
Mans
576
in
for the
was
for cap-
imprison-
Denis and Fulda were used as
St.
prisons by later kings of the Franks. But for the most part, prisons were used infrequently.
Like the Lombards, the Franks used fines, enslavement, mutilation, and capital punishment far
more
often than they used prisons.
There are two exceptions to
this general statement.
The laws of Visigothic Spain
distin-
guished sharply between private injury and crime, although royal judges supervised the adjudication of both. Visigothic judges used a other procedural rules, in such a
way
number
of legal practices, including torture
as to indicate a strong influence
and
from Roman criminal
law. Visigothic laws indicate certainly the use of custodial confinement, including private
custodial confinement
and imprisonment pending the execution of a
these laws discuss the crimes of escaping from prison
There there
is
also
is little
mention of the amount of money
more in either the laws or the
and aiding
capital sentence, since
in the escape of prisoners.
from prisoners. But
that jailers could accept
narrative sources indicating the extent or character
of imprisonment.
A
second exception
is
the case of Ostrogothic Italy before
to Justinian's armies in
it fell
554. The Ostrogothic king Theoderic (491-526) attempted to rule his Ostrogothic and Ro-
man subjects separately, as king of the Ostrogoths and as military leader of Italy. But Theoderic's rule was never secure, and in 524 Theoderic imprisoned his Roman servant, the scholar, diplomat, and theologian Boethius, on a charge of treason. While in prison in Pavia, Boethius
wrote his moving work in prose and verse, The Consolation the imprisoned author
The work, smuggled out
of prison
Among its
I.
for later readers the last Christian
The strong Roman not in
were freed by
and
it
between
family,
became one
of the
has remained immensely popular
most
down
been King Alfred the Great, Geoffrey
Boethius's imprisonment, torture,
and execution became
martyrdom of the ancient world.
tinge to Ostrogothic
European society
human justice
literature,
translators into English have
Chaucer, and Queen Elizabeth
the rest of
,
by members of Boethius's
widely read works of Latin Christian to the present.
oj Philosophy a dialogue
and Lady Philosophy on the nature of human fortune and misfortune.
and Visigothic
until the ninth century.
For
legal practice did not characterize
many
prisoners, the only
hope was
but in divine. Boethius was tortured and executed in prison, but others
saintly intervention.
An important role of churchmen in early medieval Europe they belonged, was that
men often had
,
regardless of the folk to
which
of peacemaker between enemies, both private and public. Church-
few resources or material powers in these
affairs,
but they had one advantage
Prison before the Prison
25
/
Boethius in prison, as depicted
in
a twelfth-
century manuscript of The Consolation of
Philosophy.
that violent layfolk did not: they
could invoke supernatural powers.
both churchmen and laypeople turned were those saints
known
to
whom
miraculous
ability
Among those
for their
to liberate prisoners.
Few early
Christian martyrs were released from prison by divine or saintly intervention,
although the apocryphal literature did depict a few miraculous escapes. But in Gaul the liberator-saint
had appeared by the
sixth century
and remained popular
for centuries after-
ward. In his History of the Franks (V.8), Gregory of Tours recounts the story of how the body of the recently deceased part of Paris)
St.
Germanus
became heavier
(the St.
Germanus
about the people liberated from prison by Frankish
who had
saints,
but
it
seems
that
who used imprisonment
means
as a
Gregory also notes the liberating function of St. Eparchius intervention freed Bishop Aetherius of Lisieux (VI. 36).
when the saint approached fell off.
(VI. 8)
The
and
narrative
the prison in Bourges, the gates
St.
Leonard, whose cult began
Of
all
among
St.
Germanus,
states that direct divine life
of
St.
Eligius notes
opened miraculously and the
All the miracles attributed to St. Gaugericus of
freeing of prisoners, often against the will of officials.
popular was probably
the
of coercing the weak, of
obtaining ransoms, and of punishing personal enemies. Besides the relics of
prisoners' chains
many were
run afoul not of public law and public authority but of private
holders of public authority
that
and
We know little else
then became miraculously lighter to carry after the prisoners were freed.
powerless, those
now
of Saint-Germain-des-Pres,
to its pallbearers as his funeral procession passed a prison
Cambrai concern the
the liberating saints, the the
most
weak but appealed more
to
26
Edward
/
the knightly
M
and
Peters
aristocratic social strata in the later
Middle Ages, indicating
and powerless were not the only people who had reason the
need
that the
weak
who had
imprisonment and
to seek saintly assistance.
Other kinds of liberators were
less saintly.
mercy in pardoning prisoners, often
acts of
to fear
Medieval kings often performed gratuitous
at the
urging of churchmen, but royal mercy was
not to be routinely expected. Other moral obligations, however, were more regularly prac-
The
ticed.
early Christian conviction that aiding prisoners with alms
well as praying for them,
groups
was
a
and other
services, as
proper work of Christian charity led pious individuals and
to contribute to the aid
and occasionally the ransom of prisoners throughout the
Middle Ages.
From
the eleventh century on, significant
religious associations called confraternities
the sick, the lepers, the pilgrims,
numbers
began
of hospitals, religious orders,
and the abandoned children and the old people of medieval
—
Europe. By the twelfth century, prisoners came to be included in this category
termed "the poor of Christ"
endowments
—and donations
poor became
to aid the
and
to devote themselves to aiding the poor,
in private wills in the
generally
form of bequests and
a standard part of the general obligation of charity.
Occasionally entire religious orders devoted themselves to the ransom of prisoners
—includ-
ing prisoners captured in wars or in conflicts across the religious divide between Christendom
and the Islamic world. One of the most
active of these
was the Order of
St.
Mary
of
Merced
in Barcelona.
churchmen and
If
acts of charity
on the
ease the lot of prisoners, the charitable of clergy
and
laity
should not be neglected.
also the legal system that
part of ordinary Christians could only slightly
component It
of behavior toward prisoners
inspired not only individuals
on the part
and groups but
grew up alongside the secular laws of the Germanic and
later king-
doms: the canon law of the Latin Christian Church.
The Discipline and Law of the Latin Church, 550-1550 Ecclesiastical Discipline Scriptural references to relations
by the charismatic and
2:1),
offenses
and
to exercise fraternal
nity in a case of incest. Authority
The
1
cases,
however, scriptural
texts allow for a
more
Corinthians 5:1-13 permits exclusion from the
had been given by God
in matters
by the community's
6:37), to act with forbearance (Ro-
admonition (Matthew 18:15) and forgiveness of personal
(Matthew 18:21-35). In some
and loose" (Matthew 18:18)
communities. Christians were admon-
on fellow Christians (Luke
vere response to sinful conduct:
ticularly
and Canon Law
Christians in the earliest communities were shaped
fraternal character of those
ished not to pass judgment
mans
among
among
to the Christian
community
themselves. That authority
se-
commuto "bind
was assumed par-
leaders, the bishops.
legalization of Christianity in the
Roman Empire and
the legal privileges given to
Christian communities and their leaders beginning in the fourth century helped to create a hierarchy of authority
among
Christians.
Emperors recognized the
bishops in matters of maintaining discipline and establishing
dogma
spiritual authority of
in the
communities
— Prison before the Prison
ruled by the bishops,
and
in
many
27
/
instances they also recognized the bishops' authority in
civil affairs.
Bishops assumed judicial responsibility for
all
matters concerning Christian clergy and
church property and for immoral behavior within their communities. Assemblies of bishops
—
the church councils
dividual
—
increasingly legislated for
churchmen and respected and
also contained advisory
From
Christian world.
more
legislative acts that
material between the eighth of Bologna
around 1140
come
to be
were accepted throughout most of the
liturgical
Many scholars attempted
legal materials.
collection
The writings of in-
of Christianity.
the sixth century on, local ecclesiastical assemblies, the rulings of
Germanic kings, private handbooks of penance, still
all
individual bishops, particularly those of the city of Rome,
and the twelfth
books, and other texts produced
to collect
and
rationalize this vast
body
of
centuries, but not until the collection of Gratian
The Concordance of Discordant Canons, or Decretum
widely accepted as the starting point for
all
—did
a single
study of ecclesiastical, or
canon, law. Gratian's collection was the basis for later laws and legal collections issued by
popes and councils and
for the Liber Extra of
Pope Boniface VIII
in 1298,
also recognized in
all
Pope Gregory IX in 1234, the Liber Sextus of
and the Extravagantes of Pope John XXII
of the territorial monarchies, principalities,
in 1317.
Canon law was
and independent
city-re-
publics of medieval Europe at least until the Reformations of the sixteenth century.
The
disciplinary aspects of
salvation of those he ruled
name
canon law were based on the bishop's responsibility
by the proper application of
"discipline"
and
for the
"correction." In the
and
of God, bishops were expected to determine the nature of spiritual offenses
to
apply the appropriate penances so that a sinner might be corrected and led to salvation by a
combination of discipline, correction, and mercy. Early Christian writers
had used some of the terminology of Roman criminal law
scribe spiritual offenses. These offenses
constituted spiritual superiors tial
punishment
discipline that
sins
—
acts against
to de-
God and
duly
who acted in God's name. Church courts rejected any peniten-
that resulted in death, mutilation, or the
might lead the offender
lead to salvation
were considered
and restoration
shedding of blood or any form of
to despair, thus preventing the
to the Christian
was an echo of one of Plato's justifications
for
community. Here,
punishment
penance
that
would
in a very different form,
in the Gorgias
—
the correction
and
improvement of wrongdoers.
The development of canon law
in the cases of
monks, secular
clergy,
and laypeople was
the earliest articulation of an institutionalized disciplinary system, one that based itself on the idea of sin
and
its
correction, penitential expiation. In this process the prison
emerged with
an entirely new function.
Monastic Prisons
Of all
Christian clergy, only
penitence.
Monks were considered
in preparation for the next.
cluded the
members
vow
Those
to
of monastic orders lived lives of continual prayer
have withdrawn from
who
this
world
and
to a life of penitence
entered monastic orders took special
vows
that in-
of obedience to the ruler of the monastery, the abbot. Different monastic
orders were governed not only by canon law but also by constitutions designed specifically
28
for
A monk and
a nun are
Edward M Peters
/
each order. By the twelfth century the most influential monastic rule was that of St. Benedict
of Nursia (d.547), a rule
supplemented by
by church councils,
later constitutions issued
confined in stocks in this illustration
from a
popes, and the orders themselves.
fourteenth-century
manuscript of the booh of canon law issued by
Pope Gregory
IX, the
In matters of discipline, the Rule of Benedict spoke only of the isolation of serious offenders,
banning them from the
stituted the center of monastic
common table and
life
Liber Extra (1234).
monk was made
other monks. The isolated
knowing
to labor, "persisting in the struggle of penitence;
that terrible sentence of the Apostle [Paul,
man was given over to the destruction of the day of the Lord"
The Rule
shall
he be blessed by anyone
at the
who
Pope
Siricius
(384-98)
monks and nuns should be
to
tional setting of the monastery.
made
Tribur,
and
became
part of
it
term career as
its
way
at
the
time the abbot shall appoint as suitable for him.
but an earlier canon law source,
for prison,
separated from their fellows and confined in an ergastulum, a
work
punitive domestic
said that such a
might be saved
Himerius, bishop of Tarragona, stated that delinquent
disciplinary cell within the monastery in
Roman
who
Corinthians 5:5]
passes by, nor shall any food be given to him."
The Benedictine Rule does not mention a term a letter of
1
flesh in order that his soul
of Benedict continued: "The refection of food, moreover,
he take alone, in the measure and
shall
Nor
(c.25).
the collective liturgical services that con-
and forbidding them both the company and the speech of
which forced labor took
cell for slaves
The
letter of Siricius
was reissued
into Gratian's Decretum in 1140.
canon law, but from the
place, thus
and household dependents
sixth century on, a
a designation of penitential confinement,
Not
all
number
895
in
moving
the old
into the institu-
Synod of
at the
monastic constitutions of
them used
and most of them agreed
the Latin that
such
confinement might continue solely at the discretion of the abbot, in the most severe cases entailing confinement for
life.
The systematization of canon law tended late twelfth
to
homogenize Latin monasteries, and by the
century each monastery was expected to contain a prison of one sort or another.
By the thirteenth century some instances of monastic penitential imprisonment were designated by the formal term "punishment," and
ment
for life for a
In monastic usage the
room
later legal writers
monastic offender was comparable
term murus
("a wall")
to the
came
pointed out that imprison-
death penalty in secular justice.
to be
used as
a designation for the
"appropriate for imprisonment" that the Benedictine Rule called
for.
Some
historians
Prison before the Prison
29
/
have suggested that the term indicates that monastic offenders were "walled up," but murus
common
simply seems to have been a
related terms (used in other clerical
confinement" and "more
("close
term for monastic imprisonment of any kind. The
and
liberal
murus
in lay instances)
strictus
and murus
largus
confinement") suggest two distinct aspects of con-
finement depending on the nature of the offense.
Monastic imprisonment was used in conjunction with other disciplinary measures,
in-
cluding restricted diet and beating with rods. In general, no form of monastic discipline differed qualitatively spiritual benefit.
from individual penances
that
monks might
voluntarily undertake for
But excessive punishment was occasionally inflicted in cases of monastic
imprisonment, although most of the sources that record
it
usually criticized excessiveness.
Peter the Venerable of Cluny, one of the most influential abbots of the twelfth century, told
disapprovingly of a prior life.
who
confined an offending
Other abbots imposed chains and
Toulouse,
fetters
monk
in a subterranean
on imprisoned monks.
chamber
for
In fourteenth-century
monks lodged a protest against a monastic prison called Vade in pace ("Go in peace"), to have been far more severe than the usual place of monastic confinement.
which seems
Monastic prisons and their severities survived into early modern times, and the great Benedictine
monk and
scholar Jean Mabillon criticized
them
around
in a short tract written
1690, "Reflections on the Prisons of the Monastic Orders."
The most severe examples of monastic imprisonment, however, cannot be taken norm. The horror teenth centuries
stories of
for the
monastic prisons that circulated during the eighteenth and nine-
must not be read back and assumed
to
be an accurate generalized portrait of
monastic confinement everywhere.
Nor were monks the only religious subject to confinement. The writer Ailred of Rievaulx told the story of the
nun
of Watton,
twelfth-century Cistercian
who, around 1160, became
pregnant by another religious, was discovered, and was chained by with only bread and water to
fetters
on each
leg
and
live on. After
her lover had been castrated, the
nun remained in prison, but through divine intervention all
traces of pregnancy miraculously
placed in a
cell
disappeared and her chains and called Vade in pace,
fetters fell off.
and the nun of Watton seem
were considered unusual, not because they sent,
The
stories of Peter the Venerable, the prison to
be memorable precisely because they
illustrated a
common
practice.
They do
however, a distinctive monastic contribution to the history of prisons: the
ces of confinement for specific periods
and occasionally
first
repreinstan-
purpose of moral
for life for the
correction.
Monastic prisons also served for the confinement of secular clergy under discipline by their bishops. tery"),
and
it
The process was known
might
as detrusio in monasterium ("confinement in a
entail either living as a
monk under normal
monas-
monastic discipline or being
held in a monastic prison. During the twelfth century, bishops were expected to have their
own diocesan prisons ment
as
for the
punishment of criminal
clergy.
punishment was regularized in an executive order
Pope Boniface
The episcopal use of imprison-
entitled
"Quamvis" and issued by
VIII in his lawbook, the Liber Sextus, in 1298. Addressing the
Roman law
doctrine that prisons should serve as places of confinement, not punishment, Boniface nevertheless permitted abbots
and bishops
to
punish offenders by the poena
ment of prison") either for periods of time or for life. Boniface VIII is the
first
carceris ("punish-
sovereign authority
— 30
Edward M Peters
/
in the
Western
imprisonment
tradition to determine that
punishment was
as
a legitimate
instrument of a universal legal system.
Clerical Discipline of the Laity
The
and popes were not
disciplinary obligations of bishops, councils,
restricted to clerical
personnel. Laypeople too sinned and required penance to expiate sin. The key to clerical jurisdiction over laypeople
—including,
was the necessity of penance on the impose penance. Lesser and secret vate penance
was imposed,
sins
since, as
in theory
part of
and often In
all sinners'.
in practice, nobles
and kings
cases, the clergy's
all
duty was to
might be privately confessed, and in most cases
canon lawyers
said,
pri-
"The Church does not judge hidden
things."
But in the case of sins that were publicly
known
or of such enormity that they required
public penance, the "internal forum" of conscience and private confession and penance gave
way
to the "external
forum" of
ecclesiastical
judgment. Such sins might be
knowledge
that injured the Christian
community and
intrinsically seri-
and caused scandalum, public
ous, or they might be serious offenses that were notorious
therefore
had to be
dealt with publicly.
"Criminal sins," as the most severe sins were called, required public exclusion from the church
and the sacraments, and they required public penance of various kinds, including
penitential
confinement, the same detrusio
in
monasterium that applied to secular clergy. For some par-
ticularly offensive criminal sins
—
incest, magic, divination
tury councils insisted
on
actual punitive incarceration,
—
several eighth-
and ninth-cen-
and the Latin sources
specifically use
the term career.
The extensive development of canon law
after the
work
of Gratian in the mid-twelfth
century tended to regularize ecclesiastical criminal procedure and formally extended the
competence of
(1198-1216) the
same
ecclesiastical courts, especially after the decretal Novit of
in 1204,
which asserted
time, Innocent
traditional
III
ecclesiastical jurisdiction in
established a
new
legal
procedure
Pope Innocent
any case involving
III
sin.
At
The
for ecclesiastical courts.
procedure had been accusatorial: a case required a private accuser in order to
begin a legal process. This procedure also operated in secular courts. Innocent revived an
method
older
man
of procedure, the inquisitorial procedure,
which had been developed
in
Ro-
imperial courts, had occasionally been used in the early Christian communities, but
since then
had only
rarely
been used,
chiefly
by bishops who were required
to visit the reli-
gious institutions in their dioceses and inquire into the moral conduct of those in the institutions.
The new
inquisitorial
procedure introduced by Innocent
laypeople, particularly in serious
III
applied to both clerics and
and publicly known matters.
The Prisons of the Inquisitors Perhaps the best-known instances of the of a
number
clerical discipline of the laity are
found
in the
work
of inquisitorial tribunals established in the early thirteenth century chiefly to
deal with cases of heterodoxy, that val of inquisitorial trial procedure
is,
active dissent
by Innocent
III
cases of criminal clergy. But with the perception dissent in religious matters in the twelfth
from
ecclesiastical doctrine.
appears to have been used
by churchmen and
and thirteenth
The
revi-
initially in
lay rulers of
the
widespread
centuries, the older doctrines of
Prison before the Prison
and the accusatorial procedure appeared
forbearance, pastoral admonition, protect Christian society against a
new and
both churchmen and lay rulers issued
who were
people
formidable enemy.
stiffer
From the
/
3
1
insufficient to
late twelfth
century,
laws regarding the discovery and punishment of
considered enemies of both
God and
Christian society. These laws also
contributed to the simultaneous development of secular criminal law, considered in the next section of this chapter. In the early thirteenth century the popes created the special office of "inquisitor of heretical depravity," an instance of papally delegated jurisdiction to a specific
individual to investigate the presence of heterodoxy in a particular place for a specified period of time. Inquisitorial investigations required time
the purpose of their
and
visit,
—
to notify
people of the inquisitors' arrival and
to establish contact with local ecclesiastical
to investigate matters that
were generally concealed and
and secular authorities,
difficult to establish
with
clarity.
Because the investigations often took a long time, inquisitors used prisons to hold those ac-
cused until the investigation was complete. Although inquisitors could not penalty, they were permitted to establish the orthodoxy or lack of it
and then
on the
"relax" the heretic to "the secular arm," the secular court that
victed heretic once heterodoxy
inflict
the death
part of the accused
could execute a con-
had been established by the appropriate
theological jurisdic-
tion, in this case, that of the inquisitor.
Only
in
extreme cases, however, were convicted heretics executed.
If
there
was hope of
changing the views of heretics or of inducing heretics to repent, they were often imprisoned,
some
for
The new work
life.
of the inquisitors at
first
greatly overloaded the capacity of exist-
ing prisons, and from the mid-thirteenth century on, both the confiscated property of convicted heretics
and grants from the
royal treasury, especially in France
and
Sicily, led to
the
construction of special inquisitorial prisons. These were expensive to maintain, however, and
thus proved to be a continuous source of dispute for
among the
different authorities responsible
them. The inquisitors and their secular counterparts were the
first
to discover the finan-
impact that even a modest system of prisons could have. The inquisitors' frequent use of
cial
imprisonment also increased century,
Pope Clement
V
officials'
sent a
awareness of prison conditions. Early in the fourteenth
commission of inspectors into the
inquisitorial prisons of
southern France; finding these prisons to be in great disrepair, the inspectors issued
and apparently successful orders torial
for
strict
improvement. From the fourteenth century on, inquisi-
prisons were probably the best-maintained prisons in Europe.
The authority of ecclesiastical and laypeople was not
clergy,
courts, including inquisitorial courts, over
substantially challenged in
most of Europe
monks, secular
until the various
Reformations of the sixteenth century and the movements for the secularization of ecclesiastical
property and the elimination of clerical privilege in the eighteenth and nineteenth cen-
turies.
As part of the associated polemic,
was used
"Inquisition"
people.
One
a largely mythical image of the
effectively against
of the most popular images
any manifestation of
rial
by them
terrible
over lay-
was the case of Joan of Arc. Fighting on behalf of the
king of France against the English and their Burgundian the Burgundians, sold
ominous and
clerical authority
to the English,
and
allies in
1430, Joan was captured by
tried as a heretic in
1431 by an inquisito-
court that the English established with French clerical collaboration. Promised leniency
by the
court,
Joan pleaded guilty
to a
reduced charge. But when she was sentenced to
life
32
Edward M. Peters
/
imprisonment because her judges believed
common
that she
had recanted only out of
fear of
death
(a
reason for sentences of life imprisonment in inquisitorial courts), Joan revoked her
confession and was burned at the stake. Another inquisitorial tribunal posthumously rehabilitated her in 1456.
For the most
were
part, the inquisitorial tribunals
more
far
regularized than the ad hoc
tribunal that tried Joan. In their extension of clerical authority to discipline the torial tribunals
and secular
brought a new kind of imprisonment, hitherto restricted
world of
clergy, into the
rule that prisons could indeed be
They
lay criminal justice.
used
for
to the
world of monks
also brought Boniface VIU's
temporary or perpetual punishment, regardless of
what Roman law said about the matter. The influence of ecclesiastical courts the twelfth century
on coincided with the revived study
criminal law in virtually
all
laity, inquisi-
of
in general
Roman law and
from
the reform of
the states of Europe.
Learned Law and Punishment
in
Europe, 1150-1550
The Revival of Roman Law and Local Law The
Institutes
key to
late
and Code of Justinian were known
Roman jurisprudence, was not.
the Digest surfaced in northern Italy,
in
Europe from 554 on. But the
Digest, the
Late in the eleventh century a single manuscript of
and from then on, Roman law was taught
of schools, especially at the great law university of Bologna.
From
at a
number
the twelfth century on,
learned law became the most popular subject of study in Europe, partly because
it
also served
the needs of rulers.
The formal study of learned law gave considerable impetus expand and
to
number ity
to efforts
legitimize their authority, especially their authority over wrongdoing.
of fronts
—academic
study, the design of
of lay courts throughout Europe
lawmaking bodies, and the
—learned law became
a
law was the formal subject of most study,
ily
it
was the learned and
law that most strongly influenced contemporary
become
identical with
Roman law
societies.
after.
learned law," of early it
with the English
Europe.
legal historians call the ius
trans-
scientific character of
A
and England,
mixture of
Roman
commune, the "common
the term used in Latin only so as not to confuse
the other major legal system of medieval
and
early
modern
A number of elements in the learned law influenced public law, particularly its criminal
law component. Prominent among these was the general
shift
from the accusatorial
inquisitorial legal procedure, the institution of written evidence,
The
social, political,
to the
and the use of specialized
professional personnel, including judges with wide discretion in admitting evidence tencing.
a
Although Roman
in France, Italy, the Iberian peninsula,
modern Europe, with
common law,
On
Learned law did not necessar-
but these places too increasingly invoked the principles of learned law.
law and local learned law shaped what
rulers
practical activ-
prominent part of a general
formation of European society and culture in the twelfth century and
that
by secular
and sen-
economic, and intellectual changes of the twelfth century have
long been regarded by historians as a turning point in European history. The growth and
development of ity,
cities,
many
of
them
asserting virtual independence of any superior author-
especially in northern Italy, the increasingly public character of kingship,
iarity
and
attractiveness of canon law transformed early medieval
and the
Europe into the
famil-
civilization
Prison before the Prison
One
/
33
of the earliest de-
pictions of
criminal
an English
trial, this il-
lustration dates from
about 1450. The defen-
dant
is
removed from a
group of chained
pris-
oners (bottom) and
arraigned (center).
Seated above are the
and
clerks of the court
the judges. left,
To
the jury
the
is
being
dynamics of the
of proto-modern Europe. Legal study occupied a prominent place in the
twelfth-century renaissance.
But European societies did not change everywhere
same pace or
ment
in the
sion
on
same ways. A survey of
among
different regions
The universal claims
at
once, nor did they
change
all
the doctrines that governed crime
and the
of learned
survival of older ideas
Roman law and canon law
and methods alongside
often
made
Prisons and the
witchcraft, but the
Europe
most
—mutilation, death,
Norman conquest impose
impres-
little
areas not prepared to receive or use them.
Common Law
of England
The Germanic law codes of Anglo-Saxon England record the use of imprisonment and
at the
and punish-
common law and the continental ius commune reflects
two systems of the English
the variances the new.
in the
common exile, or
1
(1066-87) and
his successors attempted to
throughout the kingdom, but a strong public law and administration
did not emerge until the second half of the twelfth century under Henry the steps toward a strengthened public law
William
I
as the
first
rest of
compensation. In the violent century following the
of England in 1066, William
their authority
for theft
forms of punishment were those used in the
was
the construction of the
II
(1
154-89).
Tower
of
Among
London by
royal prison in England, built to hold the king's enemies. Other early
34
Edward M Peters
/
The Tun prison Bristol,
in
England, ap-
pears in the top half of this illustration in the initial letter
of the
Bristol city charter of
1347.
royal prisons were the Fleet in
London justices as well as at
chiefly for the custody of those confined
by
and hostages, and the "baulk house"
Winchester, whose functions were similar. Instances of using prisons to hold private en-
emies, particularly in the II
London, used
for occasional prisoners of war
civil
wars of 1135-54, abound
issued the Assizes of Clarendon in
county
to
in narrative histories.
When Henry
166, he ordered that sheriffs should build jails in each
hold those accused of felonies until they could be tried by itinerant royal justices.
During the or the
1
Tower
later twelfth
and thirteenth
for debtors of the
centuries, coercive
crown became more common,
contumacious excommunicates, those
who
interfered with the
appellants, attainted jurors, perjurers, frauds,
reasons for confinement
fall
imprisonment in the as did the
Fleet
imprisonment of
working of the law,
and those who misinformed the
courts.
failed
These
generally within the conventional categories of custodial and
coercive imprisonment. In the early thirteenth century the great English jurist Ralegh-Bratton
could comfortably quote the
Roman jurist Ulpian to the effect that prisons were for custody Roman rule certainly seemed to apply in Ralegh-Bratton's
only, not for punishment. Ulpian's
England.
But from the 1270s on, the number of prisons in England and of imprisonable offenses increased rapidly. By 1520 there were 180 imprisonable offenses in the nificant
number of these new offenses
common law. A sig-
dealt with vagrancy, breaking the peace, infamy, illegal
bearing of arms, morals offenses, and other similar
acts.
Besides the proliferation of imprison-
able offenses, there also occurred in the thirteenth century a restriction of those devices that
permitted an offender to stay out of prison
—
bail,
There was a corresponding increase in offenses
for
frankpledge, and property attachment.
which no
bail
could be obtained
—
trea-
son, arson, jailbreaking, and arrest by the direct order of the king or the king's chief justice.
Prison before the Prison
The prison-building program begun by Henry
who had more
kingdom. Nobles
rooms
suites of
sold)
by the king
German
—
person
to a
that
who
is,
ors
the right to arrest
and hold
Some En-
man was
a free
given (or
money
derived an income from the difference between
money
received for their upkeep.
keeping the peace. London, for example, held not only the Tower
Fleet but also the following,
and
parts of houses, the
too were compelled by the king to build and maintain jails as part of their corpo-
rate responsibility for
and the
and
lands as well as parts of England.
spent maintaining the prison and the prisoners and
Towns
placed royal prisons throughout the
II
in the gatehouses of monasteries to castles, mills,
were franchisal
35
limited rights of justice also kept prisons, ranging from
"makeshift prisons" that are evident in glish prisons
/
state prisoners;
from the
Newgate, largely
late twelfth century:
for debt-
Ludgate, for freemen of the city confined for debt, trespass, con-
tempt, and other lesser offenses; the Marshalseas (prisons of the royal Marshall); the Counters (prisons for the sheriffs of
London and Middlesex County), and
delinquents. Other towns also
had prisons, and the
Bristol
the Tun, chiefly for moral
Tun
depicted in one of the
is
English drawings of a prison.
earliest
Punishment
in English criminal
law was intended to be quick and public to serve as a
punishment ranged from shaming display
deterrent to other crime. Thus, forms of
branding, public stocks, and ducking stools
lory, mutilation,
punishments
—hanging, drowning, burning,
—
to severe
burial alive, or decapitation
could be preceded by the infliction of torments before the execution
ons of London, there was also the
official
Tyburn
place of execution,
—
the pil-
and aggravated capital
—and any
itself.
of these
Besides the pris-
which was used
Hill,
for
several centuries.
The
increase in criminal legal business strained the capacity of the
thirteenth century, the
crown appointed
special
commissions
jails,
and during the
to clear, or "deliver," the jails.
These commissions of "gaol delivery" greatly speeded up the process of criminal justice and
emptied the prisons
—by convictions
could be assembled.
When
as well as releases
the system
worked
—so
that the next
group of prisoners
could clear jails two
efficiently, gaol delivery
or three times a year. In royal prisons the types of
accommodations varied from
foul to comfortable, the latter
usually reserved for high-ranking prisoners. Jailers charged fees for
and these
("gentle keeping"),
fees
were regulated by
a
what they termed suavitas
London ordinance
of 1346. Food, fuel,
bedding, and other items of comfort were sold to prisoners, and debts to
jailers
had
to
be
cleared before a prisoner could be freed. Irons were used inside prisons to confine dangerous prisoners, although a
number
confinement but rather dition. fees
for security. "Iron fees"
The prisoners thus bore much of the
might be paid
cost of their
to alleviate the prisoners con-
own confinement because of the low
allowed by the crown and because of the expenses and narrow profit margins of the
franchisal prisons. est,
of laws stated that these were not to be used for aggravating
some
of
The
whom
practice of private charity greatly aided prisoners, especially the poor-
depended on
it
for their
very survival.
At their worst, English prisons resembled those on the Continent and earlier
pnsons ers,
as well.
Below the comfortable rooms were
and below these were the
"Bolton's
Ward"
in the Fleet,
cells of
common chambers
for
Roman
groups of prison-
harshest confinement: "Juliansbourne" in Newgate,
and other notoriously named
cells in
other prisons.
36
Edward M Peters
/
Prisoner Gryffud ap Llewellyn jails to his
death
in
ajutile at-
escape from Tower of London. From Historia Anglorum by Matthew
tempt
to
the
Paris.
Jailers
were subject
to severe penalties for escapes. In the later
Middle Ages, convicted
who had escaped and been recaptured were treated as traitors. Boredom and despair drove many prisoners to escape. In 1244 the prisoner Gryffud ap Llewellyn fell to his
felons still
death while attempting to escape from the Tower of London, an attempt commemorated in
contemporary chronicle accounts and in England was a compact kingdom, of their claims to legitimacy
on
canon law, and the two laws
in
kingdom and
its
in law
a striking
the strength of the
England produced
and punishment,
manuscript
efficiently ruled
a
by
common
based
many
The English
legal
system
doctrines of criminal law spread throughout the later English colonies and the British legal
of the chief differences between the
mune
who
England also had courts of
remarkable homogeneity throughout the
systems of the modern world.
Prisons on the Continent and the Ius
law.
law.
as well as in the use of prisons.
Empire, constituting one of the major
One
illustration.
a series of kings
of the Continent
The
was the degree
to
common which
greatest centers of this influence
of northern Italy, eral, especially
much
Commune
law of England and the evolving
the latter
Sicily
and the city-republics
and the kingdoms of France and
from the thirteenth century. But not
all
com-
was strongly influenced by Roman
were the kingdom of
of southern France,
ius
Castile in gen-
of continental Europe
was equally
Prison before the Prison
influenced by
Roman and
influenced least and
Germany was
lier
advisable to begin with those areas
it is
latest.
the
most regionalized and fragmented of European kingdoms. Princes,
and
ecclesiastical rulers,
royal authority
other learned law, and
37
/
cities
—including
wielded virtually unchecked local power, and the scope of
royal justice
Germanic peoples and the laws of
—was
The older personal law codes of ear-
limited.
kings and emperors developed after the tenth
later
century into diffuse local usages. Regional accounts of legal custom appeared in the thirteenth century in Saxony legally binding.
ecclesiastical courts
man law
and Swabia, although these accounts were
Canon law
too operated in the
and had
did not enter
1532 did there emerge
German
its
and law
a
privately
made and not
remained
strictly in the
change outside these courts. Learned Ro-
German
and operated
lands rested
on
largely at the discretion of the local ruler.
Europe remained in the realm of private
in
judge appointed by the lord
lay in the conscience
and
local
And
not until
Emperor Charles
V.
custom, often followed
local
by tribunals of lay jurors who were merely the prominent men
and were directed by oral,
it
courts until the end of the fifteenth century.
in the
became criminal law elsewhere tried
legal
lands, but
a full-fledged criminal code, the Carolina of
Crime and punishment chaic legal procedures,
impact on
little
German
injury; cases
in the local
who controlled the court.
ar-
Much of what were
community
Procedure was
knowledge of jurors. Public law was
limited,
and
resources were few.
Custom
dictated both procedure
and punishment. Nobles were beheaded, and serious
offenders of lower social status were broken
on the wheel, burned, or hanged. These forms of
shameful execution, often accompanied by mutilation, were inflicted by the executioner in the service of the local holder of the rights of "high justice."
tence into the spheres of "high," "middle,"
and "low"
The
division of judicial
justice occurred
from the eleventh century on, originally by delegation from the king but
by any lord strong enough
to
do
so.
These rights were as
much
compe-
throughout Europe later
appropriated
financial as judicial
—
the
higher the justice one's court wielded, the greater the ruler's income in fines and confiscations.
On capital
the rare occasions
punishment or
as
when
prisons are mentioned, they serve either as a mitigation of
an alternative
to a fine
if
the offender
was
insolvent. Except for
mitigated death sentences, prison terms were usually short, although by the fifteenth century, particularly in the courts of cities, territories a visit
by
terms of imprisonment varied more widely. In some
the king customarily entailed the freeing of prisoners.
emperors themselves often used the
castle at Trifels to
The German king-
hold enemies and those charged with
crimes against them.
For the most
part, prisons in
German
tions of local fortifications, in the cellars of as Locher: the
lands consisted of rooms and holes in the founda-
town halls, and
Bornheimer Loch was a prison
in Frankfurt
in subterranean
chambers known
under the Bornheim
gate,
and the
Bruckenloch was located under the bridge tower in Mainz. Such ad hoc prisons were regulated only
by the
local authorities
who
administered them. Imprisonment in the
lands remained local and unreformed until well into the early
The Scandinavian loss, death,
countries, like
modern
Germany, favored punishments
German
period.
that entailed property
or mutilation and, occasionally in Iceland, penal servitude. Although imprison-
— 38
Edward M Peters
/
.
ment was used where
as
canon law courts
in
in
Northern Europe, and
in Iceland
temporary confinement in the sheriffs house pending
and probably
else-
and execution, there
trial
appears to have been no wider use of imprisonment in any Scandinavian law until the
when confinement
teenth century,
at
six-
Low
forced labor- was gradually introduced. In the
Countries too, canon law courts used prisons, but secular courts generally did not, except for preventive detention
—
as in Iceland
and elsewhere
—
growth of a widespread use of
until the
prisons throughout Europe in the late sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.
Like Germany, tenth-, eleventh-, and twelfth-century France consisted of territorial prin-
by warlords
cipalities created
in the
wake
of the
to superiority over the territorial princes,
fall
of the Carolingian
but for
much of the
period between 987 and
known
they effectively ruled only in the middle Seine Valley in the territory
The emergence of strong kings in the late twelfth century,
France.
monarchy
many
1
180
II
(Philip
of the territorial
through inheritance, marriage, and conquest led to the creation of a strong and
monarchy
centralized
the
as the Ile-de-
particularly Philip
Augustus, 1180-1223), and the extension of royal authority over principalities
monarchy and
The kings of "France" made extensive claims
invasions of the later ninth and tenth centuries.
that ruled a country of distinctive regions in the thirteenth century, a
best exemplified by the kings Louis IX (1226-70) and Philip IV (Philip the Fair,
1285-1314). The French monarchy survived the disasters of the long war with England during the fourteenth
with
its
and
The
and emerged
early fifteenth centuries
authority restored and
powers and governing
its
royal centralization of law
and justice
at the
end of the
fifteenth century
institutions increased.
that characterized
England by the second half
of the twelfth century did not occur in France until the mid-thirteenth century. In
Napoleon,
civil
and criminal law
in France
During the twelfth and thirteenth centuries
ally supervised.
ecclesiastical courts
and courtholders with
itself
as "high," "middle,"
by royal
By the
by
had become categorized
side.
—
as
By the thirteenth century the it
was
German
in
and
competence and very right to
lands and England
and "low" depending on the sphere of competence of the courtholder.
Part of the centralizing of royal justice
royal, lordly, municipal,
differing levels of judicial
different levels of legal science existed side
administer justice
fact, until
remained largely regionally based, although roy-
officials
power in
and courts
the thirteenth century
was the monopolizing of high
directly responsible to the kings of France.
thirteenth century the local customs
and
practices in the different regions of France
were written down in volumes called coutumieres, or customaries. In
these, offenses
and pun-
ishments were generally fixed, the accusatory process operated in both private and public matters,
and the
stricter rules of cialists in the
In
were vague. In royal courts, however, judges adopted the
rules of evidence
inquisitorial procedure, generally
termed Romano-canonical,
new
prisio,
derived from a Latin term meaning "to arrest" or "to
take custody of," acquired a variety of distinct meanings.
someone
It
might mean the
act of arrest, the
arrested, the right to arrest a free person, the state of privation of liberty,
or the actual place of detention
and more formal Latin term glish, "jail."
and
learned law.
Old French the Latin term
right to try
as well as written evidence
evidence generally, enjoyed broad judicial discretion, and became legal spe-
itself.
career
In French, Italian,
and English
and the medieval Latin term
geola,
it
displaced the older
which became,
in
En-
Prison before the Prison
Custodial imprisonment existed in France, as tain
kinds of crimes, for those whose
flight
it
/
39
did elsewhere, for those accused of cer-
was considered
likely, for
those
who were consid-
ered infamous, and for those without status or privilege. Imprisonment as a punishment also
developed in thirteenth-century France, not only in royal justice but in collections of regional
customary law as
The customary law written
well.
in thirteenth-century
Normandy (1248-
70) allowed for punitive imprisonment, and the fourteenth-century Ancient Customary of
imprisonment
Brittany included punitive
sulted those of higher estate.
Beaumanoir (1247-96) private collection but
routinely stated that
The
for the
for offenders of
low
estate
when
their offenses in-
greatest of the customaries, that written
by Philippe de
county of Clermont and the region around Beauvais, was a
was extremely wide-ranging and
Beaumanoir
virtually encyclopedic.
punishment should consist of death, punitive imprisonment, or
loss of
property. Beaumanoir echoed the Brittany customs regarding the insulting of a superior by
an inferior
—and he added an argument
well as for perjury
for deterrence.
He allowed imprisonment for debt, as
and conspiracy.
Throughout thirteenth-century France, blasphemy was punishable by imprisonment, close
confinement
at the
right to imprison, in
judge's discretion; imprisonment
some
instances of theft,
tion of capital punishment. In
was
and occasionally
also as
used
for the
an alternative to the execu-
1312 Perceval d'Aunay, convicted of breaking into a house
night for the purpose of robbery
in
misuse of the
and kidnapping, was sentenced
to
at
two years of close con-
finement on bread and water, to be followed by exile from the kingdom of France. In 1317
Simon
Braielez, implicated in the assassination of
sentenced to imprisonment for
The Chatelet of the Seine,
nor) of the
it
is
known
the best
came around 1200
city.
The prison
A
of the early French prisons.
to
Paris,
was
fortress
on
the nght
bank
house the court and prison of the provost (royal gover-
was
itself
an advocate of the Parlement of
in the Chatelet in Paris.
life
tower in the northeast comer of the
a
who
comfortable highest rooms were maintained for nobles
paid their
fortress.
own
The
expenses of
fourpence a night for a bed and twopence a night for a room.
On a lower level was
a single
room shared by prisoners of lower social status, and below this,
as in English prisons,
was the
fosse or oubliette, into
there prisoners
The
had
to
which prisoners were lowered from pay one penny per night
for their
the floor above, although even
room.
jurisdiction of the provost of Paris extended widely
eventually
came
to include
were compiled into the Custom of collections of customary law.
Paris, ultimately the
The records
of scholars have successfully used the Chatelet served
beyond the
city
proper and
most of northern France. The procedures of the provost's court
them
most frequently
and Simon Braielez indicate
most
influential of
French regional
of the Chatelet are far from complete, but a
in studies of criminality
as a custodial prison, the sentences of Perceval
that punitive
number
and punishment. Although d'Aunay
imprisonment was not unknown, although
it
was
infrequent.
In principle, royal prisons were to be regularly inspected
well as for the supervision of jailers structions stated, so that the
—and they were
to
—
for physical conditions as
be reasonable and
punishment of prison did not cause death or
were routinely separated, and
if
possible, female prisoners
were
to
airy, as royal in-
injury.
The sexes
have female jailers.
One
of
Joan of Arc's complaints was that she had not been given female guards while in prison.
40
/
Edward M Peters
With the addition of towers and dungeons, the fortress of Loches
near Tours was trans-
formed
into a royal
prison during the reign oj Louis
XI (1461-83).
Hardened criminals were ous. Jailers
were
to
food, at least bread
and water, although
better food or to have relatives
and
sional, or charitable associations
the goldsmiths' guild,
in
some
and
garment that was
friends bring food.
which gave an Easter dinner
easily identifiable
and helped
visitors either in the prisons or
for
providing their charges with
cases prisoners were permitted to pay for
On
donated food and wine
royal prisons, prisoners were deprived of their
mingling with
who were not thought to be danger-
be separated from offenders
also responsible for preventing escapes
to all the prisoners in the city of Paris. In
own to
occasion some fraternal, profes-
to prisoners at the Chatelet, as did
clothing and forced to wear a simple
mark escapees and
to identify prisoners
on those occasions when prisoners were per-
mitted briefly to be outside prisons.
Outside Paris, there was
little
systematization of prisons, except in the royal castles, where
provosts kept prisoners until they were transferred to the Chatelet. Royal prisons began to increase in
number during
the reign of Louis XI (1461-83),
who expanded
the fortress at
Loches, near Tours, with towers and dungeons and transformed the chateau at Vincennes into an elaborately secure fortress
and
prison.
The most famous royal
prison, the Bastille,
originally a gate in the fortifications constructed for the military defense of Paris. until the early fifteenth century the Bastille
was enlarged;
it
was
From 1370
had dungeons, eight towers with
places of confinement inside thick stone walls, and physically debilitating living conditions.
The system of prisons that emerged from French customary regional and until the
French Revolution
in 1789. In the late seventeenth
reformers, under the influence of Ulpian's old
confinement and not practices reformed.
introduced
for
maxim
and eighteenth
that prisons
royal law lasted centuries, penal
should be used only
for
punishment, insisted that prison conditions be improved and prison
By the eighteenth century, however, new forms of punishment had been
—including
the galleys
and the workhouses.
All of
Europe stood on the eve of a
Prison before the Prison
vast
program of
storming of the
political Bastille
and
one of the most symbolic
legal reform,
—by then an
occupy
to
French society and
in
local
and customary.
charter of settlement issued, (cartas de poblacion) or
and used by them
a district
by
on more
Its
Bastille illuminates the position that prisons
legitimacy usually
by
own
its
As
more
rulers
began
more
so detailed that at least
to those of other
impose
royal officials could
imprisonment
within
European
fines, confiscation, exile,
in the eleventh
and
early twelfth
appear in court and the practice of imprisoning plaintiff.
actively in the eleventh century, a
works appeared.
legislation of Alfonso
legislation
ruler to the inhabitants of
making legal practice uniform,
could not post bonds to the
to legislate
inclusive legal
and the
and
traces of
infliction for failure to
who
those defendants
reconquered Muslim lands
by a
were similar
centuries,
supervised by royally appointed judges, largely oral, and un-
and hanging. The only
centuries were
had
the existence of a local
Some fueros were
affairs.
a single fuero. Legal procedures
learned. In criminal cases the kings
mutilation,
and eleventh
depended on
a ruler, to Christian settlers of
to administer their
societies: privately initiated,
in the tenth
detailed fueros, charters given
they circulated widely within large regions, thus areas influenced
the
in the revolutionary imagination.
kingdoms of the Iberian peninsula
In the Christian
most law was
which was
insignificant prison that held few prisoners. But as a
symbol of the power of the Old Regime, the
come
acts of
41
/
Particularly important
IX of Leon-Castila
number of larger and
were the Usatges of Barcelona
end of the twelfth century. Royal
at the
and royally appointed, specialized judges considerably expanded criminal law,
affirming the king's right to inflict capital punishment (hanging, drowning, boiling alive) as well as mutilation (punitive amputation of hands in the case of women), blinding,
and
drew on the renewed study
Roman law
create
uniform
legal
their attempts often
of
fines
and
after the
encountered
the
lips, ears,
and breasts rulers also
mid-twelfth century and attempted to
local resistance,
stiff
legislative
lection called Las Siete Partidas ("The Collection in
work contains
and noses,
systems within the kingdoms of Aragon, Castile, and Portugal. Although
The most impressive and wide-ranging
shortly after 1265.
feet,
and imprisonment. Iberian scholars and
much
of their
work
in
Seven
Although the applicability of the
work was
successful.
medieval Iberia was the col-
Parts"), issued
Siete Partidas varied
by King Alfonso
X
within Castile, the
most extensive discussion of the uses of prison of any royal
legislation in
medieval Europe. Title
XXIX
of the seventh part of the Siete Partidas contains fifteen laws pertaining to
prisons and prisoners, ranging from the process of prison
and
for erecting
new
from males
is
for escape
emphasized, as
is
for fear of scandal, either
by
them in a convent or putting them in the custody of good women. The regulations
for
the insistence that female prisoners be segregated
placing
commitment to penalties
prisons without royal permission. Prison security
guarding prisoners are detailed: the chief jailer must report regularly to the judges about the condition of the prisons and prisoners and ,
oners
—was forbidden. The penalty
We
do not know the extent
prisons in Castile
—or elsewhere
to
—branding and mutilation
undue severity
for permitting or aiding prison
which the laws of the
in the peninsula
Siete Partidas
—nor do we know about
applied to actual the prison build-
ings themselves. But the breadth of Alfonso X's concerns with prisons suggests
mere imitation of Roman and French royal law.
of pris-
breaks was severe.
more than
a
— 42
M
Edward
/
Peters
France and Castile
rial
tried to
else in
Western Europe
Italy,
in Italy.
The Kingdom of Sicily,
the papal states,
—Venice, Florence, Milan, and Genoa—
ishingly ambitious address to the problems of crime
most developed, comes
large territo-
however, display a very different pattern.
the broad spectrum of legal innovations in the twelfth
is
and thirteenth centuries as evident as powerful city-republics of the north
royal authorities in the thirteenth
impose systematic criminal law on
monarchies. The numerous societies in
Nowhere
by
illustrate the difficulties faced
and fourteenth centuries when they
closest to later
offer
and the
an aston-
and criminal law. This approach,
at its
developments in criminal law and modes of punish-
ment. Italy
was the home not only of the
but also of the
From
first
first
major center of learned
the universities, legal specialists, rapidly creating a
reers in the church, royal
advocacies of the territorial
law
for
cities.
and princely chanceries and
They
work included
study
—Bologna
They
new
courts,
effected the reform of the older
profession,
and the
moved on
legal
to ca-
judgeships and
Lombard law
into a general
much of Italy. They contributed to the making and administration of canon
law, not only in the papal states (which in the cities.
legal
university created to serve the interests of a single state, that of Naples.
also
the
first
had
a separate
legal codes. Results of their
kingdom
of Sicily, the Constitutions of
learned written law code of the
Melfi of 1231, the written versions of regional
quickly by Brescia,
system of secular law as well) but also
shaped and administered the new urban
Como, and
Piacenza),
and urban customs
(at
Milan in 1216, followed
and the formal promulgation of urban
criminal law the legal specialists produced the
first
statutes. In
handbooks of criminal procedure, nota-
bly Albertus Gandinus's Treatise on Crimes of 1270 and, in the fourteenth century, the treatise specifically
devoted to penal law, the Treatise on
first
Prisons, attributed to the great jurist
Bartolus of Sassoferrato. In spite of the diversity of jurisdictions across the Italian peninsula, a
the influence of learned law
was
its
on local custom and practice here,
impact on the area of
legal
common
result of
as in the royal courts of France,
procedure and the rules of evidence. Most jurisdictions
adopted the inquisitorial procedure of
Roman
law and canon law, the rules of evidence in
learned law, the specialization of a legal profession, and the institutions of punishment for criminal offenses.
One
feature of the
new learned law that
did not derive from
Roman
prece-
dents or doctrine, however, was the use of punitive imprisonment.
Among
the variety of state-inflicted punishments, prison
ous. Fines, capital
frequent. In the Constitutions of Melfi, for year,
originally conspicu-
was prescribed only
for those
example, a period of imprisonment, usually
who
falsely
imprisonment was a supplementary punishment erty.
was not
punishments by various means, exile, and public shaming were far
more
for
one
claimed to be physicians. In this instance to the confiscation of the offender's
prop-
Like other tribunals that received convicted heretics from church courts, the Sicilian
kingdom also prescribed life imprisonment
for heretics
who had recanted out of fear of death.
In Sicily, as elsewhere in Italy, public authorities used as prisons whatever suitable space
was
available for the purpose.
dom of Sicily was
One
of the best-known instances of imprisonment in the king-
that of Pietro della Vigna, chancellor of the
author of the Constitutions of Melfi. In 1249 the chancellor
fell
king-emperor Frederick into the king's disfavor
blinded and put into prison, where, in despair, he committed suicide.
II
and
and was
He makes an eloquent
Prison before the Prison
and moving appearance rich source of
(Canto
in Dante's Inferno
imagery touching on criminal
XIII),
composed around 1310 and
justice, tortures,
43
/
itself
a
and imprisonment.
In Rome the famous Castel San Angelo, originally the tomb of the second-century Roman emperor Hadrian, seems to have been referred to as early as the seventh century as "The
Prison of Theoderic," although there
king ever used aristocrats
The
as such.
it
and popes, however, and
that the early-sixth-century Ostrogothic
was used frequently
as a fortified residence for
as a place of confinement for local criminals.
within
storiche ("historical prisons")
no evidence
is
Castel
it
are
still
shown
to visitors. In Florence, before the con-
struction of the official city prison, Le Stinche (1297-1304), the city vate buildings, although these
were used only
and those awaiting the execution of In the
century
Roman law
Italy,
that
hold those awaiting
government leased trial for
pri-
certain offenses
capital sentences.
much
guided
to
Roman
The prigione
of the law learning
and lawmaking
in thirteenth-
Ulpian's statement that prisons should be used for confinement, not for
punishment, was generally understood
to
be the formal doctrine on the subject. In other
learned law, however, notably canon law, prisons were certainly used for both punishment
and correction. This in very
many
conflict
was more apparent than
real.
Roman law by Roman law
itself
places in Italy or the rest of Europe. Moreover,
discretion to the presiding judge in criminal cases,
republics not only permitted
allowed judges to create
punish by analogy
—
them
did not hold
gave considerable
and the statutory authority of many
own
to establish their
city-
statutory punishments but also
new punishments when the occasion seemed to call for them and to is, to apply known punishments to offenses not specifically defined
that
which
punishments seemed inappropriate,
by
statute. Especially in cases in
for
one reason or another, imprisonment offered an appealing
was
that a prison sentence
reversible
the harshest of
if
new
alternative.
Judges also knew
evidence was forthcoming and that a capital
sentence was not. In preambles to collections of statute law, treatises
on crime and punishment,
the legal scholars, oaths of public office, instructions to magistrates,
lectures of
and opinions of practic-
ing jurists, criminal law was regarded as both a punishment for wickedness and a
—
reforming the offender
northern
Italian cities
in
modem
terms, both retribution and reform.
means
The growth of
was accompanied by increased crime and increased
of
the
official attention
paid to crime and criminals. During the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries the lawmakers of the cities
became
willing
and able
precision, including, in Italy
to
fit
punishments
and elsewhere,
to crimes with considerable rational
a reduction in the physical severity of
many
punishments.
Some historians have identified a sequence in styles of public punishment from the twelfth to the sixteenth centuries,
ceeded by
and
fines,
and
fifteenth centuries. In
ment suggests begun In
that
initially
harsh physical punishments were suc-
were combined with imprisonment during the fourteenth
both Venice and Florence the increased use of punitive imprison-
imprisonment represented a major aspect of the
in the twelfth
1297 the
according to which
fines often
and thirteenth
city of Florence
legal revolution that
had
centuries.
began the construction of its public prison, Le Stinche. The
construction of the prison shortly followed the publication of the Ordinances oj Justice in
1293. Florence revised
its
criminal statutes twice
more
in the fourteenth century, in
1322-23
44
and
M
Edward
/
Peters
and again
in 1355,
The
in the fifteenth century, in 1415.
statutes of criminal justice
and the prison both represented a considerable investment of communal energy and
and both
sources,
new interest
reflected a
in
making imprisonment
re-
a regular part of criminal
punishment. Le Stinche was sometimes used to incarcerate children for their correction and improve-
ment.
It
segregated
of the offense. So cities
—Siena and
its
inmates according to age, gender, degree of sanity, and the seriousness
well-known did Pistoia
it
among them
become
that the prisons that later
—although
fontially
appeared in other
known as careen di Comune ("pris-
ons of the Comune"), were also informally called Le Stinche. In 1559 the architect Antonio da Ponte was commissioned to construct a large public prison in Venice, containing four hun-
dred individual
cells in
been commuted
to
life
which would be incarcerated prisoners whose
The
legal learning
and innovative character of the northern
of the experience of
on the model
of contemporary
lost
European
on
the royal courts of France
and
in these cities
and
Castile or, eventually,
in
to the use of
certainly out
cities created.
canon law courts
on most other Western
societies.
In the age of the "birth of the prison" in the eighteenth
criminal law reformers,
knew
they
canon law and
lawmaking and law administering in the new societies the
The lessons about punitive imprisonment learned were not
Italian city-republics in
and fourteenth centuries overcame the objections of Roman law
punitive imprisonment, possibly
had
and the novelty of
and Venetian phenomenon.
the use of prisons did not constitute an isolated Florentine
the thirteenth
capital sentences
in prison, suggesting that the increasing visibility
artists, novelists,
of medieval European prisons with a
contempt. In terms of the
new purposes
and
early nineteenth centuries,
and polemicists looked back on what they thought
of
mixed
attitude of fascination, horror,
punishment and the immense
and
scale of prisons,
nothing in the ancient or medieval worlds seemed to resemble the institutions that followed
from Pentonville, Eastern cally
State, or
Auburn. Compared with the new,
managed and organized prisons
worlds looked
Romantic
like ghastly
artists like
of the
modern world,
dungeons of the
large-scale, scientifi-
those of the ancient and medieval
sort that eighteenth-
and nineteenth-century
Giambattista Piranesi and the illustrators of fantastic novels about the
Spanish Inquisition loved to draw. But long before the
new
penal institutions and the
mod-
ern age of penology heralded by these institutions, the small-scale societies of medieval Europe, working with what they could of cases,
Roman law and
driven by the conviction that in
however few, punitive confinement was preferable
to capital
punishment,
confiscation of property, created punitive imprisonment in both ecclesiastical
exile,
some or the
and secular
courts.
knew little about the prisons of Mediterranean antiquity Roman law and their echoes in scripture. But just as these Europeans carved out a new legal science and a new legal system for themselves, so they created a new system of punishment. At worst, the new criminal punishments indeed appeared to be what Richard van Dulmen has called "a theater of horror." Especially in the frequency of and Thirteenth-century Europeans
except for their treatment in
the mechanical use of torture the
summa
the offense
and
in aggravated executions, these
supplicia of third-century
and the
punishments came close
to
Rome. The body of the condemned became the map of
sole subject of legal vengeance.
/
45
later,
one
Prison before the Prison
But there
is
another side to the penal practices of the thirteenth century and
that is especially evident in the history of prisons. In
the
power of life and death chose
the confined
life
some
instances, at least, those
Some,
of prison.
like Boniface VIII, insti-
tuted punitive imprisonment statutorily, sweeping aside the conventional
Others
—
the independent city-republics of northern Italy
France, and Castile
—introduced imprisonment
who held
Roman objections.
and the kings of
Sicily,
England,
into traditional systems of criminal punish-
ment. After 1200, the criminal law practices of Europe resembled terranean antiquity and the earlier Middle Ages and
less
and less those of Medi-
more and more those
of later centuries.
Acknowledgments I
am
grateful to
Rowen
my
Mazo
colleagues Ruth
and
for their suggestions
Karras, Jeffrey Tigay,
Marvin Wolfgang, and Robert
L.
advice.
Bibliographic Note
A much fuller bibliography is available from the author. The references here follow the sequence of topics treated in the chapter.
The are the
best
and most recent general surveys of punishment in the ancient and medieval worlds
volumes
entitled
La Peine (Punishment), Recueils de
la
Societe Jean Bodin pour l'histoire
comparative des institutions, vols. 55-56 (Brussels: De Boeck Universite, 1988, 1991). The best introduction to law and justice in early Greece, as well as a remarkably successful placing of this
development within the framework of recent general scholarship on criminal practice in the twentieth century,
is
University of California Press, 1981).
Crime and Punishment
in the
Mary Margaret Mackenzie,
legal theory
and
Plato on Punishment (Berkeley:
A recent survey of the entire ancient world is Israel Drapkin,
Ancient World (Lexington, Mass: Lexington Books, 1989). Trevor
Saunders, Plato's Penal Code: Tradition, Controversy, and Reforms
Clarendon Press, 1991), focuses on
Plato's
thought in great
in
J.
Greek Penology (Oxford:
detail.
The best study of prisons in ancient Hebrew culture is the wide-ranging and indispensable work of
David Louis Blumenfeld, "The Terminology of Detention and Forced Imprisonment in the Bible"
(Ph.D. diss.,
New York University,
1977), which ranges across the ancient Near East and offers a rich
collection of comparative material. See also the articles
Dictionary oj the Bible
733-44, and
(New
by M. Greenberg in The
York: Abingdon Press, 1962), vol.
vol. 3, "Prisons,"
pp. 891-92. There
Interpreter's
is
"Crimes and Punishments," pp. a brief and stimulating treatment of Jewish 1,
criminal law in Drapkin, Crime and Punishment in the Ancient World, pp. 54-83, and an outline of
Talmudic teaching in Hermann L. Strack, Introduction
to the
Talmud and Midrash (reprint,
New York:
Atheneum, 1969), pp. 48-54, 183-87.
On ancient
Egypt, see William
C Hayes, A Papyrus of the Late Middle Kingdom in the Brooklyn
Museum [Papyrus Brooklyn 35.1446] (Brooklyn, NY., 1955; reprint, Brooklyn, NY.: Brooklyn Museum, 1972), pp. 34-43, 137-43, as well as Blumenfeld, "The Terminology of Detention." On Mesopotamia and
The (Dallas:
Assyria, see Blumenfeld.
history of
Roman law
is
efficiently laid
out in Alan Watson, The
Southern Methodist University Press, 1970), and
is
Law of the Ancient Romans
vividly described in
its
social context in
Law and Life of Rome, 90 b.c.-a.d. 212 (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1967). The fundamental work on Roman criminal law is still that of Theodor Mommsen, Romisches Strafrecht (Leipzig: Duncker and Humblot, 1899). There is a summary in Drapkin, Crime and Punishment in
J.
A. Crook,
the Ancient
World, pp. 213-43.
46
M
Edward
/
On
Peters
Edward
torture specifically, see
DuBois, Torture and Truth
On the
Tullianum, see
(New York:
Peters, Torture
Tenney Frank, "The Tullianum and
19 (1923-24): 495-98, and Tenney Frank, of the
American Academy
(New York:
in
Rome,
the Comitium, pp. 61-66. There
is
B.
Blackwell, 1985),
and Page
Routledge, 1991).
vol. 3
Sallust's Catiline," Classical Philology
Roman Buildings of the Republic, Papers and Monographs (Rome: American Academy, 1924), pp. 39-47, and for F. Robinson, Ancient
an important discussion of prisons in O.
Rome: City Planning and Administration (London: Routledge, 1992), especially pp. 175-79, 193-94. On the relation between social status and punishments, see Peter Garnsey, Social Status and Legal Privilege in the
Roman Empire (Oxford: Clarendon, 1970),
especially pp. 103-52.
A recent and reliable review of forced labor and penal slavery in the ancient and modern worlds is J.
Thorsten
On
Sellin, Slavery
and
the Penal
System
(New
York: Elsevier, 1976).
W.H.C. Frend, Martyrdom and Persecution in the Early Church (Oxford: Basil Blackwell, 1965). The relevant texts are in Eusebius, The History of the Church from Christ to Constantine, trans. G. A. Williamson (Baltimore: Penguin, 1965), and Herbert J. Musurillo, the Christian martyrs, see
The Acts of the Christian Martyrs (Oxford: Clarendon, 1972).
For the case of Boethius, see Margaret Gibson, ed., Boethius (Oxford: best general description of the transformations of is
O.
F.
Robinson, T. D. Fergus, and
European
W. M. Gordon, An
(Abingdon, England: Professional Books, 1985); Historical Introduction to Private
Basil Blackwell, 1991).
legal history
from Rome
The
to the present
Introduction to European Legal History
for private law, see R. C.
Law (Cambridge: Cambridge
Van Caenegem, An
University Press, 1992), and Manlio
Bellomo, The Common Legal PastojEurope, 1000-1800, trans. Lydia G. Cochrane (Washington, D.C.: Catholic University of America Press, 1995).
On Merovingian to Social Violence in
(1985): 219-40.
saints as liberators of prisoners, see Steven D. Sargent, "Religious
The best study of a ransoming
Ransoming Captives
in
Responses
Eleventh-Century Aquitaine," Historical Reflections/Reflexions Historiques 12 religious order
is
that of James
William Brodman,
Crusader Spain: The Order oj Merced on the Christian-Islamic Erontier (Philadel-
phia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 1986).
On
fraternal pious orders that served the spiritual
needs of prisoners, see Samuel Y. Edgerton, Jr., Pictures and Punishment: Art and Criminal Prosecution during the Elorentine Renaissance (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1985).
Monastic prisons are discussed extensively in Ralph
B.
Pugh, Imprisonment
in
Medieval England
(London: Cambridge University Press, 1968), ch. 18, "Monastic Prisons," and in Thorsten
"Dom Jean Mabillon: A Prison Reformer of the Seventeenth Century oj Criminal
On Watton:
Law and Criminology 17 (1927): 581-602. nun of Watton, see Giles Constable,
the case of the
An
Sellin,
"Journal ojthe American Institute
and the Nun of
"Ailred of Rievaulx
Episode in the Early History of the Gilbertine Order," in Medieval Women, ed. Derek
Baker (Oxford:
B.
England (Chapel
Blackwell, 1978), 205-26, Hill:
and Sharon
K. Elkins, Holy
Women oj Twelfth-Century
University of North Carolina Press, 1988), 106-11.
On
the nature of
Edward Peters, Inquisition (New York: Free Press, 1988), and Wakefield, "Inquisition," Dictionary ojthe Middle Ages (New York: Charles Scribner's Sons,
inquisitorial ecclesiastical tribunals, see
Walter
L.
1982), 6:483-89.
The
legal revolutions of the twelfth
century have generated a very large
literature,
much
of
it
conveniently summarized and noted in the essays by Stephan Kuttner, "The Revival of Jurisprudence," and Knut Wolfgang Norr, "Institutional Foundations of the Renaissance and Renewal D.
in the Tweljth
Lanham (Cambridge,
New Jurisprudence,"
both in
Century, ed. Robert L. Benson and Giles Constable, with Carol
Mass., 1982; reprint, Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1991),
323, 324-38; and the essays by R. C. Van Caenegem, Kenneth Pennington, and J.
P.
299-
Canning in The
Cambridge History ojMedieval Political Thought, c.350-c.M50, ed. J. H. Burns (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988).
On
the
emergence of
a criminal
law
literature, see
Richard Fraher,
Prison before the Prison
47
/
"Conviction According to Conscience: The Medieval Jurists Debate Concerning Judicial Discretion
and the Law of Proof," Law and History Review 7 (1989): 23-88.
All of these
works
offer substantial
bibliographies.
For a discussion of the consequences of some of these changes from the perspective of early
modern Europe,
see Pieter Spierenburg, The Spectacle of Suffering (Cambridge:
Cambridge Univer-
984), and Richard van Diilmen, Theatre of Horror: Crime and Punishment
sity Press,
1
Germany,
trans. Elisabeth
On English
Neu (Cambridge, England:
in
Early
Modem
Polity Press, 1990).
prisons, see the following: Pugh, Imprisonment in Medieval England;
John Bellamy,
Crime and Public Order in England in the Later Middle Ages (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1973), ch. 6;
Christopher Harding,
England and Wales: "Jail
A
Bill
Hines, Richard Ireland, and Philip Rawlings, Imprisonment in
Croom Helm,
Concise History (London:
Delivery," Dictionary of the Middle Ages 7:44-45;
Criminal Justice
in the
Reign of Henry
V
1985), chs. 1-2; Richard
Edward Powell,
W.
Kingship, Law,
Kaeuper,
and
Society:
(Oxford: Clarendon, 1989).
the Ages from Divine Judgement to Modern German John Fosberry, Publications of the Medieval Crime Museum, Rothenburg ob der 4 (Rothenburg: Medieval Crime Museum of Rothenburg ob der Tauber, 1981).
For Germany, see Criminal Justice through Legislation, trans.
Tauber, vol.
For France, see Annik Porteau-Bitker, "L'Emprisonment dans Revue historique du droit francais
le
droit laique
Cheyette, "Chatelet," Dictionary of the Middle Ages 3:278-79.
The work
of Bronislaw
The records
Geremek, The Margins of Society
Cambridge University For Spain, see
age,"
of the Chatelet have
is
L.
available
Akehurst (Philadelphia:
been studied
in the
work
Medieval Paris, trans. Jean Birrell (Cambridge:
Press, 1987).
N. van Kleffens, Hispanic
E.
Edinburgh University
in Late
Beaumanoir
of
in The "Coutumes de Beauvaisis" of Philippe de Beaumanoir, trans. F.R.P.
University of Pennsylvania Press, 1992).
du moyen
46 (1968): 211-45, 389-428, and Fredric
et etranger, ser. 4,
Press, 1968),
and Joseph
Law
F.
End
until the
of the Middle Ages (Edinburgh:
A History of Medieval Spain (Ithaca:
O'Callaghan,
Cornell University Press, 1975), both with extensive further references.
There are many good studies of the place of northern
Italy in twelfth-
and thirteenth-century
European history, for example, J. K.Hyde, Society and Politics in Medieval Italy (New York: Press, 1973).
On
the laws of Sicily, see
James M. Powell,
Constitutions of Melfi, Promulgated by the
and
ed.
Emperor Frederick
11
trans.,
A
History of Italian
Law
(Boston:
Little,
Martin's or,
for the Kingdom of Sicily in 1231
(Syracuse: Syracuse University Press, 1971). For general legal history, the older Calisse,
St.
The Liber Augustalis;
Brown, 1928), must be read
work
of Carlo
in the light of
number of more recent scholars, notably Laura Ikins Law System of Medieval and Renaissance Florence (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1994), and John K. Brackett, Criminal Justice and Crime in Late Renaissance Florence, 1537-1609 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1992). On Bartolus, see Anna T. Sheedy, Bartolus on Social Conditions in the Fourteenth Century (reprint, considerable revision indicated in the work of a Stern, The Criminal
New York: AMS Press,
1967).
On the Florentine Le Stinche,
see
Marvin
Prison: Le Carceri delle Stinche," Studies in the Renaissance 7 (1960):
E.
Wolfgang, "A Florentine
148-66, and Marvin E. Wolfgang,
"Crime and Punishment in Renaissance Florence," Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 81 (1990): 567-84. On the legal system that created and operated Le Stinche, see Stern, The Criminal
Law System
of Medieval
and Renaissance Florence.
On the fabric of medieval prisons, see Norman Bruce Johnston, "The Development of the Radial Prison: A Case Study of Cultural Diffusion," 3 vols. (Ph.D. diss., University of Pennsylvania, 1958), especially 1:7-29.
CHAPTER TWO
The Body and the Early
Stat:
Modern Europe
Pieter Spierenburg
n 1757 Robert-Frangois Damiens was sentenced attempting to take the cles
to
and joints prevented the horses from tearing
tioner
had
to
make
Punish, should not mislead us into thinking
contrary, Damiens's execution inflict for
his
arms and
many
at the
mus-
legs apart, the execu-
incisions to carry out the punishment. But the affecting
Damiens's suffering, detailed by Michel Foucault
ishment to
be publicly quartered in Paris for
of King Louis XV. Because the unusual strength of his
life
opening of
drama of
his Discipline
offenders were treated as harshly.
and
On the
was altogether exceptional. The judges, uncertain what pun-
so heinous a crime, decided to impose the same sentence that the pre-
vious regicide, Francois Ravaillac, had received in 1610. French authorities had not quartered
anyone in the intervening years, and they would never do so again. Courts in early modern Europe already made frequent use of
less severe
corporal pun-
ishments as well as a variety of other sanctions. Between the early seventeenth and the mideighteenth centuries, the penal system changed greatly. At the center of this transformation
was the emergence of the prison the rise of the prison, family,
and the human body
emerge, but
it is
as the chief institution for
one must examine changing itself.
scaffold
is
toward offenders, the
A general pattern of development in Western Europe does
also important to consider national
The executioner's
combating crime. To understand
social attitudes
and regional
distinctions.
one vivid example of the wider cultural context on which
punishment occurs. For most contemporary
legal theorists, the staging of executions, the
ceremonial behavior of magistrates, and the adornment of scaffolds represent mere inherited social
conventions rather than significant aspects of the punishment. In
fact,
spectators (and
probably the authorities as well) most likely saw a whole constellation of meanings in the ritual of the scaffold.
The manner in which sentences were executed was at
least as
important
as the content of the sentences.
Court
activities
provide another example of how broad cultural perspectives affected the
nor
evolution of penal systems. Torture, for example, was a tool for questioning prisoners and so r ' r qualified as part of the fact-finding process.
As an
officially
accepted form of physical injury,
A 1 786 woodcut of the ma executl ° n °y { .
burning performed Berlin.
in
50
/
PlETER SP1ERENBURG
however,
it is
akin to corporal punishment. Both torture and corporal punishment reflected
toward the body, an attitude that was long widespread in Europe and
a particular attitude that gave flected
little
thought to pain or bodily
integrity.
Various semijudicial measures also re-
wider cultural significance. Relatives or guardians,
ruly family
members who,
strictly
for instance,
could imprison un-
speaking, had committed no crime. This type of
imprisonment, recorded in the Netherlands, France, and Germany, went beyond private
wanting
cipline, for relatives
apply
to
it
had
dis-
to obtain magistrates' permission.
The Variety of Agencies Dispensing Justice In early
modern Europe,
a variety of agencies
"regular" courts, special ecclesiastical tribunals
Sometimes these
in certain areas.
rights dated
had the
right to exercise justice. Besides the
and law enforcement
officials
had jurisdiction
from the feudal period, as in the case of the
seigneurial courts in France, which, alongside the royal courts, continued to deal with
mon
and quarter sessions, many judicial ally
by
justices of the peace.
more complicated system. political
affairs of lesser
Germany, with
its
com-
at assizes
magnitude were handled summarily, usu-
many
principalities
In independent cities such as
Hamburg,
and
free
towns, had a
the senate, the
supreme
body, also acted as a high court. Several European countries had special law enforce-
ment agencies charged with detecting and forestry courts passed all
beyond the proceedings
criminals until the eighteenth century. In England,
trying particular types of offenders; for example,
judgment on poachers, and farm-tax
officials
punished smugglers. In
nations, military courts-martial constituted another special law enforcement agency.
Perhaps most prominent of
all
the branches of separate jurisdiction
meted out justice through two types of institutions: courts siastical hierarchy,
passing a
number
and the
Inquisition.
The
was the church.
encom-
courts' concerns transcended religion,
of offenses that the regular courts handled in countries
where such forms
The English church courts handled
of ecclesiastical jurisdiction were absent.
It
were dependent on the eccle-
that
all
kinds of
matters in the realm of marriage and sexuality and also prosecuted such offenses as usury and
defamation. Bishops' courts in
Sweden played
several Italian states in the early
modern
a similar role. So too, in Portugal, Spain,
bigamy, prostitution, astrology, and magic healing.
Officially, the inquisitors' authority
restricted to heresy, but that broadly defined concept included
prostitutes
and
that paid love
their clients, for
was not
The prevalence
many deviant
To be
sure,
church
meant
that the state gave over part of
officials
When
families
had
for
local
communities. The
supposedly exercised over their subjects.
The custom of
state.
state to
maintain order in pri-
state, for its part, also relied
authorities viewed the hierarchically governed nuclear family as rule they
judicial
their sons, wives, or other rela-
misconduct, they acted together with the
imprisoned
homes and
its
normally acted in league with the secular
manner, the family also acted in league with the
private confinement typifies this alliance. tives
was
Both
example, could be tried for clinging to the erroneous belief
of ecclesiastical justice
vate
activities.
sinful.
authority to the church. rulers. In a similar
and
period, the Inquisition prosecuted offenses such as
a
on
the family.
model of
The
the benevolent
— The Body and the State
/
51
The Variety of Punishments Although different
bodies sometimes resorted to different types of penalties, they relied
legal
more often on common forms agencies usually
drew on
the French royal judges,
the
set of
punishments
French farm-tax
and law enforcement
that the regular state courts used. Like
offenders to the galleys. Unlike
officials often sent
most special courts could not pronounce the severest sentences,
the higher courts, though,
which were reserved
of punishment. Special state tribunals
same
for the
most serious offenders. For example, Dutch
village courts,
which
exercised "low jurisdiction," could not try cases that might carry the death penalty. Military courts-martial frequently
employed sanctions all
their
own. "Running the gauntlet"
represented one such exclusively military punishment. This technique required the offender to
run between two rows of
punishments often
fell
men who
struck at
to the offender's peers,
even courts-martial relied on the standard
him with
which meant
clubs.
The execution of
military
that he retained his "honor." But
fare of punishment. Military judges in
seventeenth-
century France regularly pronounced galley sentences, and their Dutch counterparts in the eighteenth century often imposed terms in a prison workhouse.
Church justice stood further apart regarding its types of punishments. were often content with countries
relatively
had the authority
lar justice),
it
to
Ecclesiastical judges
mild sanctions. Although the Inquisition in Mediterranean
pronounce death sentences (carried out by the agents of secu-
did so only in a minority of cases.
Very often church judges condemned the
offender to wear a penitential garment for a certain time. English church courts, which in the
Middle Ages regularly sentenced offenders tion. In the early
to
modern period they
to
often
be flogged, stopped doing so
imposed
a public
after the
Reforma-
penance, obliging the offender
go barefoot while dressed in a sheet. They also suspended punishment or used excommu-
nication or fines. In
the types of
fact,
punishment invoked by
religious courts eventually
spread to the secular realm. Public penance, for example, gained a role in secular justice in seventeenth-century Germany.
The regular
state courts also
on the nature of the choice; judges
case.
had
a
wide range of sentences
at their disposal,
depending
Throughout preindustrial Europe, sentencing always involved
had more varied
alternatives than they
do today
or, for that matter,
a
than they
did in the late nineteenth century. Penal options during this period ranged from aggravated
forms of the death penalty (such as breaking on the wheel) to minor sanctions (such as a
warning not
to repeat the offense). In
between
lay
punishment (such as mutilation), exposure on the
more and
less serious
forms of corporal
scaffold or the pillory, forms of
bondage
(such as galley servitude or confinement in a prison workhouse), banishment, fines, and a host of minor obligations or prohibitions.
Among early
these
many punishments, two
modern Europe. One
embodied contemporary
—execution on
attitudes.
types held the greatest interest for the people of
—most —punishment involving bondage and labor
the scaffold or at a similar public spot
clearly
The other
suggested the direction criminal justice would take in the future. The scaffold served as a stage
on which the drama of justice was enacted
before the people of the day. For authorities,
it
in
its
most
was the most
visible
forceful
and conspicuous form
means
of exerting social
52
Pieter Spierenburg
/
control.
Although the scaffold retained
ready by the
late sixteenth
century
its
importance well into the nineteenth century,
its
disappeared, execution on the scaffold became
more
The
scaffold eventually yielded
imprisonment and
first
appeared around 1600. These gradually evolved
primacy
its
al-
use had changed. As conspicuous forms of mutilation
to
(so to speak) routine
to the point
and
less dramatic.
to transportation,
which
where confinement
to a
prison workhouse became a major penal sanction. The prison, of course, remains the pri-
mary means
of punishment today.
To
trace
its
development
is
the principal task of this
chapter.
Historians today no longer describe the evolution of criminal justice in simple terms,
such as
come
a gradual progress
away from
cruelty. Several
and the changing character of the
major
social
and
cultural processes
development of new attitudes toward the body,
into play, including privatization, the
family. Privatization involves the gradual withdrawal of
various features of life from the public arena to private space. By the middle of the eighteenth century, for example, death passersby.
It
ter of public
death shed
no longer took place
became an intimate family
in the presence of servants or
At the same time, cemeteries
affair.
even of casual
lost the charac-
meeting places and were often relocated outside the boundaries of towns. As
its
public nature, the open infliction of capital punishment was
bound
to
be
affected.
Penal changes also reflected lence
and an aversion
new
attitudes
to physical suffering
toward the body. Growing
sensitivity to vio-
had an impact on ideas about appropriate forms
of punishment. Finally, developments in the family were crucial to the evolution of imprison-
ment
in the early
modern
period. Offenders
who
served a term in prison were viewed as
having escaped the disciplining bonds of the family. As inmates, therefore, they received a quasi-patriarchal form of discipline.
Thus the
history of
punishment and prisons
entails not
only political and institutional processes, such as the formation of national states and the
refinement of systems of justice, but also changes that belong to the realm of social history.
Corporal Punishment Theatrical
punishment and the scaffold were closely linked
in early
physical punishments, though not everywhere carried out
usually dispensed in public, giving
and death was
a
show
them
modern Europe. Noncapital
a scaffold-like structure,
a theatrical character.
The
were
legal infliction of pain
before an audience. In most countries the penal system included a
clearly circumscribed class of
punishments defined
as public
scribed class of punishments affecting the offender's
some
on
life
and an equally
clearly circum-
or bodily integrity. For example
offenders, especially juvenile delinquents, received floggings in the courtroom. But this
practice, familiar in France
and the Netherlands, was exceptional. The
public and physical punishments
is
deceiving, since as a rule, the
two
distinction
between
classes largely over-
lapped.
A
range of nonphysical, public sanctions usually had a shaming function. Thus
accused of immoral conduct had
to
wear an
outfit or carry a
symbol
radation. Offenders appeared before the public wearing a rope
that
around
marked
women
their deg-
their neck, as in the
The Body and the State
Rome.
case of the perpetrators of carnival excesses in
often took place
when
In the Netherlands a
53
/
mock beheading
the judges could not unequivocally establish the guilt of
someone
suspected of stabbing a victim to death. Exposure could of course turn into physical punish-
ment when
the audience harassed the offender or
when he
some
or she had to stand in
uncomfortable posture. In eighteenth-century Bremen, for example, some thieves had to stand in the
market square wearing a neck-iron
for half
an hour before leaving for prison. Well into
the eighteenth century, standing in the pillory in England entailed the risk of harassment
by
the audience.
Punishments that were both physical and public can be divided into verity.
Whipping, the
least severe,
five
degrees of se-
was the most common form of corporal punishment
in
all
Germany, the executioner generally administered
countries. In the Netherlands as well as
public floggings with whips of various materials, such as rope or birch branches.
The next degree of severity involved burning the branded with red-hot ing usually
on the
left
a
irons, but in
permanent
scar, the
where
convict. In France,
all
mark by which
and
relatively
most often
heated sword. Brand-
made
their imprint
from the king, the mark func-
practice of branding
autonomous cities, such as those
mark showed
erlands. There, the
The
a
the judges literally
justice derived ultimately
tioned symbolically as the king's imprint. republics
convict's skin. Authorities
Amsterdam they sometimes used
was equally prevalent
of the northern
the city coat of arms or a part of it.
in
and southern Neth-
The court of Brussels,
for
example, adorned the backs of branded criminals with an angel, which also figured in the city coat of arms.
To
who
a degree,
branding was a preindustrial method
inspect the suspect's body. a
Of course,
this
method worked only
crime serious enough to warrant branding. In
punishment, only cific
for identifying recidivists. Judges,
took marks as sure signs of a previous conviction, often ordered the executioner to
fact,
a minority received this penalty,
if
the suspect
had committed
among those who submitted to corporal but those who did sometimes bore spe-
evidence of their prior criminal record. In France during the 1810s and 1820s, the skin
condemned
of criminals
voleur) instead of a
to forced labor
showed
T
(for travaux forces) or
V
(for
mark.
Relatively rare, the third degree of corporal
ous encroachments on bodily in the cheek.
the letter
integrity. In
punishment, mutilation, involved more
Amsterdam, some
Other punishments amounted
seri-
violent offenders received a cut
to outright mutilation.
The amputation of hands,
an always infrequent practice, continued in some countries for a longer period than in others. In Europe
no judicial sentence ever ordered
did occur occasionally until about 1600.
a person's feet to be cut
off.
Blinding, however,
No doubt the most common form of mutilation was
cutting off an ear. In several countries this practice continued well into the seventeenth century. In the eighteenth century, offenders lost their
thumbs, usually when they perpetrated
large-scale fraud.
Capital
punishment involved
either a "merciful" instant death, the fourth degree of cor-
poral punishment, or a prolonged death, the
fifth
and
severest form.
Never imposed
lightly,
the death penalty required recidivism or other aggravating circumstances, except in cases
of
murder and homicide. Tradition held beheading, hanging,
garroting,
and burying
alive
54
Pieter Spierenburg
/
Various forms of medieval physical punish-
ment are this
illustrated in
German woodcut
from 1509.
among
the "merciful" forms of capital punishment.
Throughout Europe, decapitation was
considered the most honorable method, particularly when performed with a sword, the noble
weapon. The few tors of
sider
origins
them hardened
brawl alty,
aristocrats
more humble
fell
who ended their life on the scaffold were had the
privilege of decapitation only
criminals. First offenders
into this category.
Amsterdam
a
few
it.
killed their
all
beheaded. Malefac-
the court did not con-
opponent
in a tavern
Hanging was the standard nonhonorable form of the death pen-
imposed on robbers and burglars,
thought deserved
who had
if
In theory
recidivists (usually),
women
and everyone
else
who the judges
could not be hanged for reasons of decency, but in
women did meet their end in a noose.
Still,
most
women there
received the
death penalty by garroting. Supposedly a more acceptable alternative to hanging, garroting
Even slower was burying
meant
a slower death.
tive to
hanging in France
The
alive,
which represented the decent
alterna-
until the sixteenth century.
severest category of capital
punishment comprised prolonged forms of execution. In
France, burning alive was occasionally practiced until the eighteenth century, particularly in serious cases of arson. French convicts could spare themselves a prolonged death
accomplices
after
by naming
hearing their sentence. In that case they earned the retention: an instruction
to the executioner to strangle the convict before lighting the pyre. this secretly so that the
The executioner had
to
do
audience would not notice that the show was a fake; authorities did
not want the mercy shown to an individual offender to cause the public to doubt the severity of justice. In the northern
and southern Netherlands and most parts of Germany, breaking on
the wheel represented the
most
common
form of prolonged death penalty. The convict's
bones were broken with an iron bar before he received the coup de grace
modern England, by
contrast,
to his heart. In early
prolonged death was practically unknown. Capital punish-
The Body and the State
merit there did not go
hanging did not
beyond hanging, although
a
famous pamphlet of 1701 argued
As the secrecy surrounding the custom of the retentum in the theater of physical
punishment.
when
that
in the
to stop.
the Scaffold
indicates, staging played a leading role
A custom of the Amsterdam prosecutor further reveals
the importance of staging: the prosecutor determined the
tioner
55
effectively deter potential lawbreakers.
Forms of the Death Penalty: The Theater of
whipping not
/
number
of lashes given at a public
courtroom but on the spot, gesturing with his hand
to
tell
the execu-
But most theatrical of all public punishments was the execution of death
modern period, execution rituals developed throughout Europe, with many similarities from nation to nation. One key element was the ceremonial presence of the sentences. In the early
magistrates. In Amsterdam the judges
and the prosecutor, dressed
in special ceremonial robes,
took their seats in the windows of a gallery overlooking the scaffold and the audience. Burgomasters attended too, and the town secretary recited the sentences of the condemned. Religious officials appeared as well, whatever the their task
in
was
which they
to prepare the
condemned
fulfilled their duties also
down
magistrates knelt
to
dominant
religion. In a strict sense,
but the plainly visible and public way
Amsterdam
served to legitimate the punishment. The
pray together with the preacher and the condemned criminals
hangman took charge.
before the
for eternity,
In other cities the priest or minister invited the audience to
join in the prayer.
Another
theatrical element, the execution procession,
Smaller Dutch towns as well as large
through the cell at
streets. In
Newgate jail through
gallows
at
Tybum.
more adventurous to
London,
Tyburn,
All the
period: the
several of the
ritual
ceremony of
could assert
their bells to
The raucous custom
the execution
state
In
itself.
—from
accompany public hangings
itself,
more
Hyde
Park,
event.
which was
town
to the
Some
of the
also
brief,
sober events held
at a central place.
in
Tudor
times.
As
a result,
at
modern
varying locations
The English
Wherever
it
instituted elabo-
occurred, this shift
and changing attitudes toward violence and
state authority
en route
persisted until the late eighteenth century.
suffering. In
was fragmented and no superior source of justice
justice could take rather casual forms.
firmly.
districts of the
announce the
Dutch towns during the sixteenth century,
however, large areas of Europe came under direct established
marched prisoners
Seville
incorporated yet another characteristic feature in the early
accompanied the growth of the medieval times, because
and
most densely populated
ceremonious occasions conducted
rate rituals to
sometimes figured into the drama.
Paris,
spectators climbed the wall enclosing
executions underwent a metamorphosis to ornate,
London,
example, the person about to be hanged was led from his
town churches rang
for a better view.
The execution
for
cities like
From the sixteenth century onward,
political control,
and public authority was
governments paid more attention
of the law. Public executions bolstered the
power
of
to the
symbolic force
monarchs and magistrates and made
it
concretely visible. Authorities did not want to display naked oppression but rather a theater of righteousness
and repentance.
Accordingly, magistrates took great pains to organize a "beautiful execution." Ideally, the convict behaved
humbly on
the scaffold,
showing repentance. In the Netherlands, offenders
56
Pieter Spierenburg
/
who had just been whipped or branded were obliged to kneel down in front of the judges and express their gratitude for the mercy
would heed
that those about to die
shown them. So
too, audiences at executions expected
the minister's admonitions
and approach
eternity with a
clean conscience. Reports of the period indicate that both magistrates and audiences appre-
such "beautiful" executions. When, in 1767, an Amsterdamer
ciated
showed
who had
killed his wife
repentant attitude on the scaffold, reciting a line from a religious hymn, the judges,
a
the minister,
and thousands of spectators apparently
rejoiced.
Just as people attached importance to the convict's contrition, so they expressed disgust
who
of convicts
at the sight
refused to repent or
moment when he should have thanked commit
Two
who
even displayed their impertinence on
A recidivist whipped and branded in Amsterdam in
the scaffold.
1653 exclaimed,
at the
very
the judges for their mildness, that he intended to
hundred more crimes. The magistrates ordered him flogged anew immediately.
a
other impertinent
contempt
for the
Amsterdam
offenders in the early eighteenth century
watching crowd, one by putting out his tongue
showed
to the spectators
their
and the
other by screaming abuse at them. In England, audiences also disliked being deprived of a beautiful execution.
on the
When a Yorkshire murderer obstinately refused to acknowledge his guilt
scaffold in 1682, an observer noted that the majority of onlookers
went away disap-
pointed.
Another element the living.
which they displayed until they
punishment was the use of dead bodies
in the theater of
Most European towns and
the corpses of selected capital offenders.
supported by a harness. Towns always located their gallows for instance, placed
it
on the main water route
defamation the courts selected criminals
fenses or
who had
tices differed
refused to
somewhat from
ing in chains, was
fate
The bodies hung
name
field at a
for all
in public
conspicuous spot.
incoming ships
who had committed
to see.
For
particularly heinous of-
accomplices.
Although the theater of punishment shared many
at the
mountain on
decomposed; those who had died on the wheel were propped up on the device,
Amsterdam, this
warnings to
as
villages kept a gallows field or gallows
similarities regardless of region, prac-
place to place. In England, exposure of the body, called hang-
uncommon. When the executioner did carry it out, he left the corpse to rot
scene of the crime rather than on a gallows mountain. English criminals feared another
—
the
anatomy room
thorities permitted
—even more. During
London surgeons
the second half of the eighteenth century, au-
to claim the bodies of criminals
hanged
at
Tybum, but
they had to compete for the bodies with other interested parties. Relatives, friends, and
workmates of the executed often fought over the bodies with the journeymen surgeons. England differed from other countries, such well. In the
as the
Dutch Republic, on another point
as
made no distinction between the execution of corporal days" in Amsterdam a number of criminals were flogged,
Netherlands the courts
and of death
penalties.
On
"justice
some were branded, and one tioner dealt with
all
of
or two were put to death,
them together on
all
in a single ceremony.
The execu-
the scaffold, beginning with the capital convicts.
Offenders sentenced to mere exposure sometimes stood there during the ceremony, tied to the scaffold railing. (Only
minor offenders were exposed on the kaak,
a
kind of mini-scaffold.
This took place on separate days and constituted the only occasion of public punishment
The Body and the State
besides the justice days.) In England, by contrast, the authorities the execution of death penalties
on
the scaffold
punishment. Hangings did not accompany floggings. Put into
whippings seem
to
have drawn
drew
and other occasions
less public interest
effect at a
57
between
a sharp line
for public
/
and physical
whipping
post, the
and were often imposed summarily by
a
justice of the peace.
Another area of national and regional variation entailed the amount of self-expression allowed convicts on the scaffold. In some places they delivered a speech from the scaffold; in others they remained silent.
Dutch executions were comparatively sober events
gard. Convicts could pray or sing psalms, but otherwise they
remained passive.
in this re-
No one
ob-
when the notorious murderess Hendrina Wouters kept on praying while the executioner broke her bones in Amsterdam in 1746. But in 1800, when a robber condemned in The Hague declared he wanted to make a speech, the magistrates silenced him. Convicts occa-
jected
sionally addressed the public in southern France
so often. In
fact,
Each speech outlined
pattern.
plain: every child
to church,
up
parts of
Germany;
a familiar pattern of vices in the
vices that inevitably led to a grave
was
and
clergymen wrote most of their speeches, which
who
all
in
adhered
England they did to a stereotypical
condemned's
earliest
youth,
misdeed or a criminal existence. For the public the lesson
disobeyed his or her parents, every adolescent
and every husband who spent
his time in
who
refused to go
an alehouse stood the chance of ending
at the gallows.
The
precise location of the scaffold also varied from
town
the geographic particularities of a jurisdiction. In the larger fold stood
somewhere near the
center,
and the corpses destined
to the gallows field afterward. In smaller activities often
had
to
took place
at the
same
towns or
villages,
determined partly by
for public display
scaf-
were taken
notably towns in Germany, both
spot. Because the scaffold
and the gallows mountain
be accessible to the entire population, capital convicts were hanged on the gallows
mountain
where they subsequently remained
itself,
if
they had been denied a burial. In
German towns the form of capital punishment determined the at the
to town,
towns on the continent, the
location.
some
Beheading took place
market square, and hanging, burning, or breaking on the wheel was conducted on the
gallows mountain. In sixteenth-century Cologne, the market square was reserved for the
execution of political offenders. These local idiosyncrasies of setting, however, serve only to highlight the theatrical character of public punishment. Finally, regional differences affected the religious content of the execution. In general,
executions had a slightly more prominent religious component in Catholic countries. sure, in
German
Protestant regions, schoolchildren sang songs of death,
to the convict as Armesiinder (poor sinner).
countries
seem
at Seville, for
to
and people
To be
referred
But executions in France and the Mediterranean
have featured more baroque religious staging. In the execution procession
example, the convict usually rode a donkey, reminding the public of Jesus'
entry into Jerusalem a few days before his crucifixion. France, meanwhile, followed the cus-
tom
of the
amende honorable.
On
their
way
to the place
where they would be put
to death,
convicts stopped for a while at a church or a chapel to perform a public act of penitence,
asking forgiveness from God. All the while they had a rope around their neck and carried a
burning candle.
58
/
Pieter Spierenburg
Despite these variations, public executions encompassed a familiar theatricality. The courts
designed executions as public spectators.
rituals,
staged so as to
make
the deepest impression
on the
Along with the theme of deserved punishment, these events prominently featured
motifs of repentance and righteousness. The formal participation of the magistrates
marked
the execution as an official expression of the force of law.
The Audience jor Execution The
changed over time. To understand the mechanisms of the change,
theater of the scaffold
one must examine both the reactions of the audience and the attitudes of the
elite.
The crowd
consisted for the most part, but not exclusively, of lower-class people; for example, the sev-
enteenth-century
Lille artisan
capital executions as well as
Chavatte reported in his chronicle that he regularly went to see
whippings and exposure
often appreciated the spectacle exactly in the
was moved by the show of repentance and
manner
justice.
at the pillory.
Many
attention to the moral lesson as they did to the suffering
simply attended
to witness the spectacle.
the offenders: lower-
spectators
no doubt paid
as
little
and pain of the condemned. They
And in certain cases the crowd felt
favorably toward
and lower-middle-class people looked sympathetically on smugglers,
because they did not consider smuggling a genuine crime.
for instance,
Executions that followed rebels
Although the audience
the authorities hoped, not everyone
were condemned
riots
presented special problems for the magistrates.
for participation in tax revolts or disturbances over
majority of spectators strongly sympathized with them. In
When the
food prices, the
Amsterdam during
the seven-
teenth and eighteenth centuries, such post-riot executions always took place in an atmo-
sphere of extreme tension, and soldiers stood ready to restrain the crowd. Because they attached
such great value
to the theater of justice, the authorities
tions nevertheless.
Not
until their confidence in public
proceeded with unpopular execu-
punishment declined
for other rea-
sons did they come to fear the possibly rebellious crowd of spectators.
During the eighteenth century the reactions of crowds
at
ordinary executions changed.
Most of the evidence comes from London, but the transformation may have occurred
in other
European cities as well. According to contemporary reports, the crowds assembling at Tyburn did not play the part of passive and receptive spectators. Instead of taking a moral lesson to heart, they approached the spectacle of execution
admiration for bold earlier centuries
men who were
showed up
with irreverence and sometimes even showed
about to die
fearlessly.
This defiant attitude, which in
only in picaresque novels, apparently infected the majority of
London's population. As onlookers cheered on the convicts or offered them drinks, the procession from Newgate to
responded of heroes.
to this
As
public order. the
ued
London to
a special occasion of
a consequence, the authorities increasingly
The
merriment. The condemned
putting on their finest costumes and adopting the posture
spectacle of the scaffold
had turned
viewed executions as problems of
into a kind of popular festival. In
1783
magistrates abolished the procession to Tyburn, but the actual hangings contin-
draw
Modern festivals.
Tyburn became
new attitude by
But
large, vulgar
crowds.
historians once assumed, incorrectly, that executions
when
had always been popular
the perceptions of a large part of the audience changed, the execution
The Body and the State
/
59
In late-eighteenth-
century London, the spectacle oj the scaf-
jold essentia!!)' had
turned into a popular festival.
Engraving,
after a painting from
William Hogarth's
The •
Idle Prentice, of
a procession
to the
gallows at Tyburn.
ritual
the
could no longer convey a moral lesson or buttress the power of the authorities. Instead,
ceremony became the occasion
nineteenth-century
The changing Judges and at least to
officials lost
for
merriment or even
attitudes of the elite also
legislators, of course,
for
mockery of the
law.
elite
and had the power
to alter penal
earliest sign of a
change of attitude among the
elite.
earlier
end of the seventeenth century.
A
related
development
law or
some punish-
Penalties involving
the mutilation of a person's body, notably the cutting off of ears, were discontinued the middle or
a result,
reduced the appeal of the execution ceremony.
belonged to the
discontinue certain penal practices. Indeed, the disappearance of
ments constituted the
As
confidence in public punishment.
around
that occurred
even
concerned branding. In the sixteenth century the executioner often imprinted the
mark on
the convict's
clothing
would hide
hand or forehead;
later
he branded only the offender's back, where
the mark. Admittedly, the court continued to sentence
some
serious
offenders to mutilation, but only as a prelude to the death penalty. In other words, mutilation
was acceptable only munity. Convicts
The
elite
if
who
of the
the convict died subsequently
and was thus removed from the com-
did not receive the death penalty escaped
Dutch Republic showed the
first
maiming
as well.
signs of mild distaste at the sight of
executions toward the end of the seventeenth century. Upper-class people usually expressed this distaste
by disparaging the curiosity and behavior of the lower-class spectators. Constantijn
Huygens, the seventeenth-century poet and diplomat, wrote as much. He also raised his voice against the maintenance of a stone scaffold at of all constructions. Indeed,
The Hague,
most Dutch towns replaced
their
calling
it
the
most villainous
permanent stone
scaffolds with
removable wooden ones during the seventeenth century so that the sight of gallows and wheels was no longer a daily experience. Greater sensitivity to public punishment, however, did not appear until a century tion to the spectacle
anonymous
later.
From
the 1770s onward, literary expressions of opposi-
became increasingly frequent
citizen of Amsterdam
in several
European countries. In 1773 an
wrote that he trembled and grew
ice
cold
at
every step the
60
/
PlETER SP1ERENBURG
convicts took
up
the ladder
on
their
way to be hanged;
in the eyes of many other spectators.
to his relief he noticed a similar horror
During this period, revulsion against the display of dead
bodies also increased. In the Netherlands, exposure was abolished in 1795 as a
relic of older,
barbarous days. Quantitative data substantiate the gradual decline in public punishment, particularly capital
punishment. During the Middle Ages, the lack of a strong central system of justice
resulted in rather infrequent use of the death penalty. In the county of Warwickshire, En-
gland, during the late fourteenth century,
and
in the
Dutch
city of
Utrecht during the four-
teenth and fifteenth centuries, courts sentenced fewer than one-tenth of convicted felons to capital
punishment. The early modern period witnessed
monarchs and other rulers displayed
their
In England the proportion of convicts riod, reaching its height in the
who were hanged
punishment, as
a rise in capital
first
newly acquired power, and then
a gradual decline.
rose sharply during the
Tudor pe-
middle of the sixteenth century. Then a marked decline
In Cheshire, for instance, the average
set in.
number of death sentences dropped from about ten per
year around 1600 to under two per year in the second half of the century.
At the same time, courts redefined the types of crimes that required the death sentence: Cheshire authorities demanded execution for seven-eighths of 1600, a figure that that figure rose
dropped
to one-half
from one-tenth
was aimed more and more
all
crimes against property in
by the middle of the century, whereas
to one-third
for
homicide
during the same period. Thus, the death penalty
crimes against the person. Everywhere throughout
at serious
England, except in London, capital convictions for property offenses dropped considerably
between the end of the sixteenth and the middle of the eighteenth
The Netherlands experienced
Amsterdam
the peak
per year in the for the first
first
employment
a similar trend
of capital
centuries.
during the early modern period. In
punishment came
preceding half-century and only one per year for the following
and second halves of the eighteenth century,
six small
Netherlands saw the number of executions drop by
punishment
in the Netherlands
was
especially
century.
Dutch courts simultaneously
England.
Germany and Switzerland
with about
relatively late,
five
comparable figures are three per year
half of the eighteenth century; the
half.
marked
fifty
towns and
years.
Between the
rural districts in the
Evidently, the decline of capital
in the
second half of the eighteenth
started to reserve this penalty for homicide, just as in
also
showed
a trend similar to that in England, with a
peak of death sentences in the sixteenth century and
a decline afterward. Historians
have
observed this pattern in the cities of Frankfurt, Augsburg, Nuremberg, and Zurich. In addition, judicial torture
Long
a
customary aid
to questioning in all
widely. Certainly the torture ine.
The Parlement of Paris,
mild, since almost
came under sustained European
was not always
for
as
attack during the eighteenth century. jurisdictions, torture
gruesome
as the
no one confessed under
make them name
it.
Some French
their accomplices. But
methods of torture, we know much us a rough picture.
From
imag-
example, used a form of forced drinking that must have been convicts, however,
dergo two phases of torture: one to make them confess and another, sentenced, to
methods varied
modem reader might
less
about
the bills submitted
its
after
had
to
un-
they had been
though we know something about
incidence.
Some
data from
by the "indoor executioner,"
it
Amsterdam
give
appears that the
The Body and the State
/
61
court used the severest forms of torture with declining frequency during the eighteenth century. Shin- or
thumb-screws or hanging with weights
tied to the toes
was used on two
per-
sons per year in the twenty-year period ending in 1741, but on only one person per year in
The Netherlands
the following twenty-year period.
1790s, as did most other European countries
late
Although imprisonment began
punishment continued of the
for
some
its
triumphant
legally abolished judicial torture in the
at
around the same time.
rise in the late
eighteenth century, public
time. In England, for example, scholars
mark
the beginning
"modern" penal regime around 1870, when transportation ended and executions took
place in private. Certainly,
among
on the
the elites, sensitivity toward the proceedings
scaf-
fold intensified after 1800, but well into the nineteenth century their feelings of revulsion
could not overcome the idea that public physical punishments were necessary. Advocates of
imprisonment, notably those favoring solitary confinement, spoke most strongly against the scaffold.
By the middle of the nineteenth century the authorities abolished most corporal
penalties or, as with flogging in England,
removed them from
the public realm.
Then, between 1850 and 1870, capital punishment moved from the scaffold prison walls. France
A
until 1939.
gether. after
The
out
some
to within
the exception, continuing to execute the death penalty in public
few countries, such as the Netherlands, abolished capital punishment
last
execution in the Netherlands
World War
elements.
was
II
—took place
—except
in 1860. Elsewhere,
for the
indoor executions retained some public
When convicts were put to death in German prisons, fifty to
one hundred entrance
alto-
episode of extraordinary justice
for
example,
tickets to interested persons
officials
from the
handed
civil service.
This custom came to an end in 1908. Other public elements also disappeared by the early twentieth century, completing the
movement toward
private, or "concealed,"
punishment.
Lesser Punishments The movement toward as the less,
private
punishment and the eventual triumph of imprisonment stand
most conspicuous changes
in the long-term evolution of the penal system. Neverthe-
throughout the centuries, courts routinely applied a host of minor sanctions below
layer of conspicuous evolution. Historians have not systematically studied these in their
own
right,
probably because they have
little
often constituted the larger part of the sentences
when confronted with
large
numbers
petty offenders in the cheapest way.
spectacular appeal.
imposed by
early
Still,
this
punishments
these penalties
modem courts.
Especially
of lawbreakers, judges usually dealt with the bulk of
Even today we often
the prison as the primary penal institution, but the
most
(usually for violating traffic rules). Likewise, in the early
forget this simple fact;
common judicial modern
of justice primarily in terms of the scaffold, but the courts
we
sanction
think of is
a fine
period, the public thought
imposed banishment much more
frequently.
Moreover, authorities often condemned offenders to suffer two or more different punishments as the result of one conviction. English offenders, for example, might be whipped in a house of correction. Combined sentences were extremely common A court condemned a burglar to a flogging on the scaffold and to confine-
and then imprisoned in the Netherlands.
62
/
Pieter Spierenburg
merit in a prison
ment
workhouse afterward. Banishment could be imposed
in a trial or could be
combined with
Whether or not they combined to
as the only punish-
a corporal penalty, a prison sentence, or both.
lesser sentences
with heavier sanctions, courts resorted
banishment and other minor punishments with varying frequency. The approach depended
on the type of judicial agency.
partly
criminals
down
was
likely to
A
court concentrating
pronounce few sentences
the judicial hierarchy, the
number
imposed the
lightest
between
parties rather than enforce
punishments. In England,
two villagers with a long-standing quarrel might be "bound over" measure proved
serious
of such sentences increased. At the bottom of the
ladder, special colleges of judges tried to keep the peace
the criminal law. These courts
on the prosecution of
that included only petty sanctions. Farther
to
for instance,
keep the peace; often
this
sufficient to effect a reconciliation.
Banishment At
first
glance, banishment might not
had roots
in his
community, owned
have found banishment an ordeal. they had to follow him. But place,
if
If
punishment
for the settled
a
a house,
minor punishment.
was
When
and had employment and
he wanted
the convict
banishment merely continued
a severe
seem
a
to
a
condemned man
friends too, he
must
remain united with his wife and children,
vagabond, without family or work in the
a marginal existence. In short,
first
banishment represented
but a relatively light one for outsiders.
Who,
then, re-
ceived this punishment? In the
Roman Empire
exile served as a penalty for political dissidents,
the upper classes. This tradition continued
when urban
most of them from
courts in the Middle Ages also ban-
ished citizens in political cases. Medieval courts introduced the practice of banishing nonresident troublemakers,
which seemed
a convenient
the problems they might cause in another
In the early sibly,
it
modern
town or
and inexpensive way
in the countryside
to
be rid of them;
were of
little
concern.
period, banishment of the settled as well as of outsiders continued. Pos-
befell established citizens
only in special cases, but the available literature does not
allow a firm conclusion. In Holland, adultery or concubinage could warrant a fifty-year banishment from the
province, a penalty the local courts imposed occasionally. In these cases, the usually belonged to the settled population to the
and had done something
condemned
particularly
obnoxious
—married men caught with pros-
community. But wealthy people accused of adultery
titutes, for
example
formed Church,
among the
—commonly bought
as a rule,
off the prosecution.
Adulterous members of the Re-
were censured only by the consistory. Concubinage and adultery
nonsettled did not attract the special attention of Dutch courts except as an addi-
tional charge
when such people were sentenced
for
Most trials conducted by the Amsterdam court
property offenses.
in the early
modern period involved people
from a floating population of professional criminals, those without a fixed residence. ber of petty thieves and
first
often suffered other penalties in addition to banishment.
Amsterdam
A num-
offenders were banished. Recidivists and professional criminals
court's public noncapital sentences
No
less
than 97 percent of the
between 1650 and 1750 included banish-
ment. Banishment imposed on thieves from the floating population functioned essentially as
The Body and the State
measure.
a local police
cion of
new
Many
banishment and punished
From about 1715,
for this instead.
a penalty for infraction of
volved had denied
initial
when
suspi-
a recognized
the use of both
whipping and
banishment increased. Most of the offenders
in-
charges of property crime.
Banishment also served
keep offenders away from a town or
to
though courts in Holland had the authority
seldom yielded
Amsterdam under
denying his subsequent crime, he might be charged with infraction of
recidivist persisted in
imprisonment as
of the convicts were caught again in
but these crimes were often hard to prove. Hence,
thefts,
63
/
a real advantage.
Only
to banish offenders
for the
a rural jurisdiction. Al-
from the whole province,
this
crime of vagrancy in the seventeenth century
did the Estates (parliament) of Holland insist that local courts pronounce banishments from the province. Because the prison
workhouses could not accommodate the
bonus
vagrants, the Estates offered a
to every court that
large
numbers
Banishments from an entire country were probably rare throughout Europe,
would have
difficulty putting
some
transportation to
such
a sentence into effect. This sort of
Still,
authorities
for a court
banishment resembled
extent, with the difference that the banished person
where he or she pleased outside the country.
of
banished one.
was
go
free to
had trouble forcing the ban-
ished person beyond the border. As a result, only a few persons were sentenced to remain
away from
the
Dutch Republic. had no
Just as banishment the poor. gling.
who
Amsterdam
The
on
great effect
vagrants, so fines could not be collected from
courts nonetheless levied nominal fines
parties involved in this crime often recruited
could never pay the
fine required
by
on the poor
in trials for
middlemen from among
smug-
the poor,
law. In effect, the flogging that they received in
addition to the fine turned out to be their one punishment. Throughout Europe, a fine was
normally a penalty reserved for the
upper and middle
classes; a
painful type of punishment.
The Amsterdam court
tried
The criminal
rich.
justice system generally favored the
monetary sanction often took the place of a more shameful or
Members
of the lower-middle class also paid fines
misdemeanors according
on
occasion.
to a separate procedure, registering the
proceedings on the so-called schoutsrol. Almost always the penalty was a small
fine,
imposed
number
for a transgression of
one of the
Those
who were
cases, for petty violence.
city
by-laws but also, in a considerable
fined instead of being tried
by
often
of
the regular criminal
procedure belonged to the settled population of guild members, shopkeepers, and "respectable" workers.
Amsterdam petty sanctions. to
punish but
fered
also provides an illustration of the final class of Its
court dealt with a
whom
some kind
it
number
of restriction
on
its
freedom of movement within the
Dam Square or the Stock Exchange.
disturbances in one neighborhood had to
restrictions
and brothels and sometimes
made
it
minor punishments, the
whom
it
did not really want
refused to release without a sanction. Almost half of this group suf-
example, were denied access to
access to inns
of arrested people
possible to arrest
the grounds that the person
Pickpockets, for
who had caused
to another. Prostitutes
to coffeehouses as well. Like
someone and
showed up
this tool until recent times. Petty
move
city.
People
treat
him
at a certain location.
were often denied
banishment,
all
these
or her as a recidivist simply on
The Amsterdam
authorities used
drug dealers and troublesome addicts were forbidden
for
64
/
Pieter Spierenburg
fourteen days to frequent the street where most of the trade went on. In 1990, however, a
court
deemed such
prohibitions
illegal.
Penal Bondage
A new type of judicial sanction, midway in severity between the scaffold and the minor punishments, grew popular during the early
modern
period. Courts
came
incarcerated in workhouses or forced to perform labor in
term "bondage"
to
to use
some
frequently as physical sanctions. Instead of being flogged or hanged,
some other setting.
it
almost as
offenders were
We may use the
denote any punishment that puts severe restrictions on the condemned
person's freedom of action
and movement, including but not limited
to
imprisonment. In-
deed, the term embraces both punitive and penal institutions, a distinction worth making
because several forms of punitive bondage become penal, in the sense of
fully
belonging to
the criminal justice system, only later in their history.
Bondage always carried the Especially in early
modern
The obligation
the inmates.
hospitals, as well as
loss of liberty
prisons, the
work
to
and usually involved forced labor
work program supposedly
disciplined
as well.
and punished
distinguished prisons from almshouses, asylums, and
from workhouses, whose inmates worked voluntarily and not as
punishment.
Imprisonment and other forms of bondage grew increasingly popular
pean countries as
early as the sixteenth century. Thus, far
in the penal system, the proliferation of penitentiaries in
from representing
Europe
of gradual developments during the preceding centuries.
after
in several a radical
Euro-
change
1800 was the product
One such development,
the emer-
gence of bondage, reflected changing ideas about idleness and labor on the one hand and
renewed
interest in enforcing morality
on
the other. Ideas about idleness
and labor had
al-
ready started to change before the Reformation, and an interest in vigorous moral enforce-
ment emerged from both
More ity.
the Reformation
and the Counter Reformation.
often than other forms of bondage, imprisonment
Confinement as
spanned more than
a punitive sanction a single
moment
had
several
in time,
correct
way
bad habits rather than
to
of
life.
ior that,
to prisons
to enforce moral-
Because
its
execution
during
this
in
like "evil
effort to
period were
Within the prison, the agents of discipline
punish actual crimes. Phrases
and "disreputable behavior" occurred frequently
workhouses strove
features.
confinement implied a longer-term
change the behavior of people. Indeed, many of those sent confined because of their
was designed
unique
tried to
conduct," "laziness,"
documents describing the conduct
to eliminate. Relatively unspecific, these
that
terms simply referred to behav-
according to the agents of discipline, ought to be improved.
Sometimes termed recurrent in the early
"civilization offensives," these efforts to
modem
period.
Churchmen
as well as
campaigns. Protestant and Catholic clergy directed their intercourse,
and
a
reform immoral people were
laymen organized these moral
efforts at
concubinage, premarital
number of "superstitious" popular practices. Laypeople, meanwhile, tended
to favor "societies for the reformation of
manners," founded in England from the 1690s on-
ward. These societies promoted the imprisonment of drunkards, gamblers, and similar fenders. In general, the early
modern period was one
of-
of increasing moral entrepreneurship
The Body and the State
aimed
at "civilizing" the
/
6 5
behavior of the whole populace. Since anyone might lead a
life
judged immoral, upper-class people were also imprisoned
that his or her peers
for this
reason.
was considered the habit of
Idleness, the other target of reformers,
a specific sort of
and beggars, figured very
people. This well-defined social group, the stratum of vagrants
prominently in the founding documents of prison workhouses. The
idle
not only were im-
prisoned but also, in certain countries, were sent to row the galleys of the
among
the
to experience the full
first
reflected a
change of attitudes toward poverty, marginality, and idleness,
turn led to
more
The
earlier,
remained within reasonable
an opportunity
limits,
to give
footsteps of Christ,
mendicant orders, they
all
as long as their
who held out his hand
they were not a source of anxiety. The poor provided the
alms and thereby to earn entrance to heaven. Whether they
beg
if
members
or
laity
deserved charity. The populace and the learned
elite
of
shared
in individual cases they
most
a
God-pleasing
poor or unable
likely did not inquire
whether
a
beggar
did so with good reason. Learned scholastics, meanwhile, were reluc-
tant to inquire into the causes of a beggar's misery,
and
numbers
Ordinary laypeople probably did not think that everyone, without exception,
was worthy of alms, but
charity
Men and
as a sacred state.
and
appeared as beggars, vagrants, or needy people in one's parish or as poor
this attitude.
change that in
medieval attitudes toward the poor had been more tolerant. Clerical people
women without possessions followed in the
the
a
repressive sanctions.
and laypeople, speaking of "the poor of Jesus," saw poverty almost
rich with
They were
fleet.
weight of bondage as a punitive sanction. This policy
act.
which
Thomas Aquinas found
to earn a living
by
it
finally
provided an occasion
for
self-evident that everyone should
labor, although this
begging should not bring
luxuries.
After
thought
it
1500
a
new attitude emerged, one that was far more suspicious.
Increasingly, people
necessary to inquire whether the beggar bore the blame for his misery; potential
almsgivers distinguished the deserving poor from the undeserving. Even the clergy no longer automatically found the image of Christ in the poor.
And
the secular authorities
ered the poor a threat to the stability of society and sought to supervise them
few exceptions, the public tolerated idleness only from the
now consid-
strictly.
With
a
sick, the disabled, or the aged. All
others should be compelled to work. It
may appear odd
that social attitudes
toward poverty, rather than attitudes toward
—
crime, provided the ideological basis for the emergence of bondage. But bondage
two most prominent forms
ment and tutions
—
galley servitude did not start out as criminal
meant
to deal
punishments but
with problems of poverty and marginality. At
poor became unwanted strangers, the reaction was rural district. In a
at least its
originated as a noncriminal category of sanctions. Imprison-
world of localism,
sixteenth century, local authorities
this
to chase
seemed the most
had no choice but
as disciplinary insti-
first,
when
them away from
the itinerant
one's
logical solution. But
to start cooperating
town or
during the
with each other,
recognizing that banishing marginals from one town meant foisting them on another. At the
same
time, the public's intensifying disapproval of idleness gave rise to the idea that people
who refused to work should be forced to do so. At this point, appeared alongside the negative sanction of banishment.
the positive sanction of bondage
66
/
Pieter Spierenburg
English convicts in
chains are led from
Newgate
in
prepara-
tion for transportation to
prison colonies
abroad, circa
1
770s.
Sixteenth-century Europeans did not invent punitive bondage. As ancient Romans, uity
may
among
others, practiced
very well have contributed to
it,
and the Renaissance
reintroduction. Early
its
we have
seen, the
interest in classical antiq-
modern Europe recognized
four basic forms of bondage: the galleys, public works, imprisonment at forced labor, transportation. France pioneered the
bonds manned
first
and
form. Already in the fifteenth century, French vaga-
the country's galleys, either because they were being punished or because
they had been impressed, that
is,
seized
and
forcibly
made
vagrants and delinquents represented only a small minority ery Mediterranean state kept a galley fleet
and manned
it
to serve. At that time,
among
however,
the oarsmen. Almost ev-
with volunteers
who
could find no
other employment, as well as with non-Christian slaves captured at sea or bought in Asian
markets. In France, Spain,
about 1500 onward.
and most
On
Italian states, galley
Italian galleys, for
the middle of the sixteenth century. locals (along with
Only
sentences became more
offenders
who received
Italian states occasionally
hospitals
housed
came
in those institutions
to represent a
galley sentences
rounded them up
became overcrowded
from
in Venice did a reasonable supply of lower-class
oarsmen from the Dalmatian and Greek
toward the end of the century, forced laborers were the
Many of the
common
example, offenders outnumbered volunteers by
group
in the Doge's fleet also.
were vagrants; France, Spain, and some
for this very
purpose.
in the 1540s, for instance, a
were condemned
coasts) delay this process; but
largest
When Venice's poorhouse
number
to serve in the fleet.
of unlicensed beggars
Thus, galley servitude
mostly but not entirely noncriminal punishment.
It
befell
beggars and
vagrants in particular but also extended to convicts. This combination turned out to be crucial to future
developments.
Public works as a form of punishment appeared in Europe only slightly earlier than
imprisonment. Spanish records contain examples of penal servitude by the middle of the
The Body and the State
and
sixteenth century. Unlike imprisonment
sanction from the outset. Those subjected to for
some crime by a court. Although
every form of compulsory labor, street or
it
it
galley servitude, public
term "public works" referred
most commonly referred
to labor that
underground. Convicts dug ore in mines, repaired ramparts,
or went from door to door collecting
human
a criminal
who had been condemned
were always people
in the broadest sense the
work was
67
/
to
took place in the
built roads or houses,
waste.
Following on the Spanish experience, the public works penalty grew especially popular in it
Germany and Switzerland
in the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries. In those countries,
was often associated with imprisonment. Some male inmates of prison workhouses actually
stayed within the walls only at night, working in chain gangs during the daytime. In Celle at the beginning of the eighteenth century, for example, male convicts were sentenced to build the zuchthaus (prison) in
which they or
their successors
would
be confined.
later
Imprisonment constituted the third form of bondage. Although the courts had incarcerated people throughout the Middle Ages, convicts did not at institutions.
The prison workhouses established
teenth century stitutions
we must
onward
differed
from
first
inhabit separate, punitive
Europe from the second half of the
their predecessors in that they
where inmates performed forced distinguish between jails
in
and
labor.
prisons.
To
housed offenders sentenced by of chastisement or correction. labor. Early
a court or
The population
of jails largely consisted of
to
trial),
together with
work. By contrast, prisons primarily
committed there by another authority
The inmates had
modern Europeans made
in-
highlight the novelty of this approach,
debtors and people under provisional detention (for example, awaiting
an occasional sentenced offender; they did not have
six-
were single-purpose
obligations to
a linguistic distinction
fulfill,
largely
for
purposes
through forced
between jails and prisons,
refer-
ring to prisons as "bridewells" or "houses of correction" (in England), tuchthuizen (in the
Netherlands), and zuchthduser (in Germany), the latter two terms discipline."
Although the
British led the
literally
meaning "houses
way, the Dutch and the Germans most
of
fully devel-
oped the model of the prison workhouse.
show
This form of bondage originated in northern Europe. Records to establish prisons included
that the
first
towns
London (1555) and other English towns (from 1562), Amsterdam
(1596) and other Dutch towns (from 1598), Copenhagen (1605), Bremen (1608) and other
North German towns (from 1613), Antwerp (1613) and other towns in the southern Netherlands (from 1625),
Lyon (1622), Madrid (1622), and Stockholm (1624). This geographic
concentration of early prisons in the north obviously reflected the rarity there of galley servitude,
which provided an
alternative sanction in the Mediterranean areas.
Transportation, the fourth form of bondage, was used most frequently in England, where
King James
I
introduced
decree, the king
it
announced
as a penalty in a royal decree of 1615. In the
his desire to take care that "justice be
preamble
to the
tempered with mercie" in
view of "the severity of our laws." The notion that a combination of severity and mercy should define any approach to crime remained a key idea in the English criminal justice system well into the eighteenth century. In 1615,
introduction of the vice to the
economic motives may
new punishment, which
Commonwealth." This
also have played a part in the
required offenders to perform a "profitable ser-
service, of course, consisted of
indentured servitude in
68
Pieter Spierenburg
/
American colonies. Hence, transportation belongs
Britain's
offenders were not simply shipped overseas and then set
Transportation was imposed only infrequently in Britain until 1718;
mation about
its
Toward the-end
practice before that date.
bondage,
in the category of
for
free.
we have little infor-
of the seventeenth century a few
other European countries experimented with this penalty. The court of Amsterdam sentenced a
number
work
of criminals to
Swedish courts sent convicts
for the
governor of Surinam but soon dropped the practice.
to the country's Baltic
dominions and
few
a
to
New Sweden (the
present state of Delaware).
The Early Modern Workhouse
We
are relatively well
informed about the daily experiences of convicts confined to early
modern workhouses. Records cept of the prison
workhouse
and the nature of the
two
illuminate as a
institutional regime
The management
of prison
significant aspects of
household and the
role of
and the inmates' reactions
such institutions around 1600 and the
first
when
confinement and the panoptic principle took center
solitary
a
which bears
istrates
who founded and
ultimately directed the prison. for the institution's finances
and oversaw the
the con-
household;
it.
stage.
The
The
first
Most workhouses
levels of officers, the
level
included the mag-
The second, consisting of
and
third level, the resident
intro-
half of the nineteenth century,
the ad-
for passing disciplinary sentences
seriously misbehaved. Both the magistrates
actual time at the prison.
little
tors
particular relevance to our discussion.
was responsible
on inmates who
first
complex hierarchy of supervisors consisting of four
third of
ministrators,
to
life:
in this
workhouses did not change very much between the
duction of the
were managed by
workhouse
managers
its
and the administrators spent
staff,
reported to the administra-
internal affairs of the prison. Subordinate to
them was
the fourth level
in the managerial hierarchy, the assistants.
The
the workhouse,
main
group with the most direct responsibility
role of the resident staff, the
tasks: to
most
clearly reveals the nature of the prison program.
keep the inmates busy with work,
to provide
internal order. In the Hanseatic towns, these tasks often
the zuchthaus
and the spinhouse
at
Hamburg had
fell
them with
The
for
food,
running
had three
staff
and
to
ensure
to three separate officials.
a werkmeister
Both
(work master), an oeconomus
(household manager), and a zuchtmeister (discipline master), although one person sometimes served as both werkmeister and zuchtmeister. In the staff,
known
discipline" assisted him. Likewise, the
tions with other staff
concherge
was the
central figure,
who
first
all
among
members
of the
staff.
father,
a "master of
but in his
peers. In Delft,
rela-
however, the
the institution's internal affairs.
who dealt with prisoners, contemporaries preferred
word
"father" intentionally. This usage
examples just given, but in unofficial speech the term
edly. Prisoners usually conferred the for several
controlled
of the officials
paternalistic terminology, using the
the
the head of the
and the work program;
Haarlem prison had an indoor
members he was merely
Whenever they spoke faintly in the
Amsterdam rasphouse,
as the "indoor father," took care of meals
shows up only
"father" crops
up
repeat-
term on the Delft concherge; Amsterdam inmates used
The
title
also
appeared in
it
Germany. In Bremen, prisoners
The Body and the State
referred to the speisemeister (food master) speisemutter (food mother); the
(house
and
/
69
his wife as the speisevater (food father)
and
Hamburg oeconomus was admonished to act as a good hausvater
father). Paternalistic titles for
prison personnel were recorded throughout Germany,
from Danzig to Munchen, and in the Habsburg Empire. The
fact that Austria
used such terms proves that the father imagery extended beyond Protestant istic spirit
also
also
A paternal-
pervaded the administration of the Austrian zuchthduser.
The word "mother" was
were only
just as important, for fathers
mothers. As a result, married couples almost always managed prison
when new personnel were sworn
towns,
and Bavaria
areas.
in,
fathers
if
husband and wife took the oath
died. For example, in the
by
When
together.
one of the partners died, the other could not easily continue in the job, especially
husband who had
assisted
In the Hanseatic
affairs.
if it
was the
Hamburg Zuchthaus, on December 16, 1643, an oeconome named Gesche Heimb.
authorities assigned the task of feeding the prisoners to
We do not know whether she was the widow of the previous oeconomus, but whatever exceptional situation put a
1644, Gesche ber 17.
When
woman
in charge,
it
lasted for only nine
Heimb married Jacob Schumacher, who took
months.
he died in February of the next year, Gesche
Heimb
September
9,
on Octo-
exercised her function
alone again until December 1646. The administrators finally bought her
new
On
the oath as oeconomus
off,
appointing a
couple in her place. They explicitly noted that they did not think her incompetent, for
she had always performed her duties well. The problem was simply that she had no desire to
marry
again.
Records from Delft to direct prison affairs.
Leiden, and The
offer similar
evidence that the authorities preferred to appoint couples
The administrators
in
1736 advertised
Hague newspapers: "The regents
of
St.
a
job opening in the
house, in the town of Delft notify everyone that the post of concherge in the said house to
be vacated
at the last
day of September of
Delft,
George's Hospital, also prison work-
this year 1736.
Everyone interested,
is
due
who
is
married, has a knowledge of the fabrication of cloth, worsted, and baize, and possesses the required capabilities,
is
invited to report to the regents of the said house before
1
February
1736." Six candidates replied, but only two merited serious attention. The administrators
met and, having considered applicants, voted
have
to
"the personalities, wives,
unanimously
for
and other circumstances" of the two
Leendert van den Heuvel. Thus, not only did candidates
be married but their wives' character formed an essential part of their qualifications.
word
concherge
was
the household structure.
Un-
Delft followed similar procedures later in the eighteenth century; the
then defined as "indoor father." Staff like
members
up
usually lived in prison, in part to shore
modem penitentiaries, which maintain a clear separation between confined inmates and
an outside
staff,
early
modern workhouses provided
staff living
quarters that were part of the
building as a whole. In Amsterdam, for example, both the indoor father and the master of discipline lived in the rasphouse.
of old age, his successor
moved
When Jan de Lange resigned as master of discipline because into his living quarters.
who happened to be De Lange was eighty-four years old when he
rooms of the indoor The ages of
staff
father,
members
in
De Lange moved
into
one of the
his son-in-law.
resigned,
which was probably exceptional.
Dutch prisons were very seldom recorded, but most of the
70
PlETER SPIERENBURG
/
and mothers
fathers
Bremen Zuchthaus,
in Hanseatic for
sons and daughters of
for
in their forties or
fifty-five in
1726,
who also worked in the
cause of an escape. Her daughter,
common
towns were
example, was
members
staff
them
marital status of personnel helped qualify
when
The mother
fifties.
officials
house, was twenty-six
to "assist them).
of the
questioned her be-
The age
was very
(it
as well as the
and mothers over
to play the role of fathers
the inmates.
Of
course, the staff served merely as surrogate fathers and mothers. Contemporaries
never referred to inmates as pseudo-children. Interestingly, records from the early years
common
quently called male inmates "journeymen." The
members makes
sense in light of
this.
use of the term "master" for
fre-
staff
At the time, the terminology of employment and that
of paternalism were quite compatible. In free society, master craftsmen
acted as surrogate fathers over their apprentices and journeymen.
and shopkeepers
Shop and household were
not yet distinct. In prison the situation was no different. The indoor father and mother had a
shop
to run,
which happened
To help manage assistants,
be a prison workhouse.
to
the journeymen-inmates, the staff relied
on journeymen-assistants. The
never very numerous, reported directly to individual members of the resident
Records show the presence of assistants to the indoor father and of maids
who
staff.
helped the
indoor mother. Although they obviously ranked above the inmates, assistants performed tasks similar to those performed privilege of
a
by
prisoners. Indeed, prisoners themselves often earned the
performing such assistance tasks
if
they behaved well. The prison, in
effect,
was
complex household.
The workhouse notions the ideas of staff
of "family"
and "household," however, may
and magistrates than about the
the punitive character of the environment
spend
their time in the
inmate it:
activities,
two
manner
that
labor, religious exercises,
may have remained
official
and preparations
linen.
and
central. to.
For prisoners,
They did not always
We know
of three
labor. Prison trades varied widely, but rasp-
the prison trade practiced
Women
fell
most
fre-
fabricating such cloths as bombazine, canvas, or
Rasping involved the pulverization of logs of dyewood to produce powder
material. This very strenuous job
main
prison order and one that hoped to subvert
work were most important. Cloth work,
quently, included spinning, weaving,
us more about
for escape.
The prison regime revolved around forced ing and cloth
wanted them
the authorities
complied with
tell
reality of inmates' experience.
for coloring
only to males convicted of the most serious crimes.
did most of the spinning, whereas both
men and women with light sentences did minimum output from each
weaving. Whatever the task, the prison normally required a
inmate. In the case of rasping, staff measured output as the weight of the In
Amsterdam and Bremen
ing-saw, had to produce
a pair of strong inmates,
fifty
pounds
who worked
powder produced.
together handling a rasp-
a day. According to various prison ordinances,
days lasted about ten to twelve hours, comparable to the working hours of
work-
free laborers.
Some inmates managed to exceed their minimum output during these hours and, as a rule, received a small sum of money, with which they could buy extras from the indoor father.
On
weekdays, the religious routine consisted of an obligation to say a morning and
an evening prayer, probably
a universal
requirement easily enforced by the
staff.
Inmates
The Body and the State
Two inmates
71
/
oj a
rasphousein 1663.
Only criminals convicted oj serious crimes
were sentenced
to the
strenuous labor oj rasping
—by which
logs
dyewood were pulverized to create pow-
oj
der jor coloring material.
performed no labor on Sundays, and the Lord's day served as the main occasion exercises.
The prisoners usually assembled
in a special
room
for a service
for religious
and sometimes
received religious instruction as well. In the Netherlands, authorities in the early years har-
bored great hope that such instruction could hasten reformation. But by the middle of the seventeenth century they acknowledged that certain people could not be saved dition, the staff
convicts in the that at least
found
it
at all.
In ad-
too dangerous to gather particular inmates for services. The hardest
Amsterdam rasphouse,
for
example, were simply given a pocket Bible in hopes
one inmate could read and would
recite
from
it
to his fellows. In
Haarlem, where
comparable conditions prevailed, the managers found a different solution: the Sunday
mon was
delivered in one of the raspers'
rooms could hear
it
too.
rooms so
The male weavers and
ser-
that the inmates of the adjacent rasping
the female inmates assembled separately in
the courtyard of the institution.
The
religious character of imprisonment
was more pronounced in North German towns.
Regular ministers from parish churches preached in prisons on most Sundays. The records of the
Hamburg Zuchthaus around 1630 show that
"students and instrumentalists" provided "a
nice music" during these services. Together with the inmates, the general public attended services at the prison in a
room normally called
Hamburg spinhouse and
in the zuchthaus at Celle,
the groups of male
where the
seat, if
was recorded
community" bars.
at the
between
sat
Hamburg
citizens
they so desired.
third major inmate activity, preparing for escape,
ted official order. There were also conflicts
to the superiors,
and insubordinations and
sented by
most
was not the only one
that subver-
and violence among inmates, sexual contacts be-
tween inmates or between staff and prisoners,
far the
"free
and female prisoners, separated from them by
could pay for a reserved
The
the church. This practice
refusals to
work or other forms of disobedience
revolts. Preparations for escape,
however, repre-
common subversive activity and lay at the heart of a developing inmate
72
Pieter Spierenburg
/
subculture.
actual escapes
Still,
happened
infrequently.
the mid-eighteenth centuries, the percentage of inmates
Between the mid-seventeenth and
who escaped was very small, usually
well under 10 percent. In Brussels, over twenty years during the eighteenth century, seventyfive
men and
six
number seems
women
to
broke out from the
tuchthuis. Later in the eighteenth century, the
have declined even further. But unsuccessful attempts must have outnum-
bered successful escapes
one or more inmates
at all times.
at least
Probably no day passed in early modern prisons without
contemplating a breakout.
The escape methods inmates used
into three categories.
fall
arson, appeared mainly in the seventeenth century. Prisoners
hoped
to create a situation of total
stances in early
of
modern
The second method,
"archaic" manner,
set their
room on
made with
prisons favored this method. Buildings were
notorious act of desperation, and
for
work was combustible recorded
officials
getting keys
complicity, occurred with
staff into
who
fire
chaos in which they could run away. The physical circum-
wood, and much of the equipment
tury.
The most
by
no
it
a
good deal
seemed
as well. But arson
less frequently in the
a
eighteenth cen-
force or trickery or using violence to coerce the
particular pattern over time.
The
third
method,
breaking out, increased in frequency as arson declined. Even though these methods too yielded success in only a minority of cases, breaking and digging out were
more
clever ap-
proaches.
Attempts
at these
forms of escape constituted the inmates' major nocturnal
was
pecially
busy digging tunnels and trying
up
their
their
to
efforts, these
prisoners
made
es-
break walls or bars almost every night. By keeping
hopes and maintaining the myth that one day they would
own
of their
activity, just
daytime business. Eighteenth-century male convicts made themselves
as labor
all
be
free as a result
their situation tolerable. Preparations for escape
boosted morale, and that principle shaped the prison subculture that emerged in the eighteenth century.
The Development of the Prison
as a Place of
Punishment
There was one major exception to the regime of forced labor in prison. Some inmates were in prison because their relatives could not cope with them, or because the family feared that the
unruly
member might damage
the family reputation, or both. In such cases, imprisonment
served as a tool of private discipline. The family drew
up
a petition explaining
why
the indi-
vidual should be imprisoned, and the authorities decided whether or not to consent. Usually, private offenders to
work
too.
gram. Their rate the
were confined because of conduct considered immoral. Most of them had
But a minority from wealthy and distinguished families avoided the labor prorelatives,
who
could well afford to pay for their upkeep, wanted merely to sepa-
black sheep from the outside world. Inmates from such wealthy backgrounds belonged
to the prison population
from the
start.
Both in the Amsterdam rasphouse and the Hamburg
Zuchthaus, for example, the authorities established separate wards for these privileged few
at
the beginning of the seventeenth century.
These wards signaled the creation of a new type of confinement, one that differed from that of the prison
workhouse. Separation from the outside world, rather than forced labor,
The Body and the State
/
73
defined this regime. Although the prisoners did not suffer complete solitude, their treatment
foreshadowed the nineteenth-century system of solitary confinement. In the Dutch Republic,
new system
the
eventually gave rise to a different sort of prison, in which the inmates per-
formed no work
Enterprising individuals were the
at all.
the mid-seventeenth century.
who
first
to establish
own homes. An
lodged a small number of the insane in their
1662 opens with the statement
that ever
more
citizens
it
ers
was henceforth obliged
institutions, in
ordinance of December
were making a business of this; further
mentions "the insane and other confined persons." Everyone
on,
such
We read of them in Delft, where they began with private people
to request the magistrates'
who housed these prison-
permission and to submit to
official
visitations.
During the decades
that followed, private institutions, for the insane as well as for mis-
behaving people, emerged in other places. In Amsterdam in 1694 two lord"
and betermeester of the
institution
to open.
men hired on as "land-
The ordinance establishing the
spoke of "malicious and obstinate persons" rather than the insane.
the phrase "to the exclusion of
monopoly and in
was about
beterhuis that
all
It
also included
other betermeesters in town," which gave the managers a
suggests that private entrepreneurs had previously
accommodated prisoners
Amsterdam.
From
the
end of the seventeenth century, such
became common instituting a
in the Netherlands. Quite a
form of confinement
distinct
for the
profit,
and the
or rural areas,
from that of the older prison workhouses. All from the outside world without forced
beterhuizen adhered to a regime of separation
The proprietors sought
institutions, referred to as (ver)beterhuis,
number opened in small villages
relatives of the
inmates paid for their
labor.
stay. Institutions
confinement of family embarrassments proliferated in eighteenth-century France, where
they were often
managed by monastic
orders.
England had
its
private prisons too, but admis-
sion seems to have been restricted to the insane.
The emergence and part
the spread of such institutions in the Netherlands
by the simultaneous evolution of prison workhouses. Because the
admitted
common
criminals, upper-
desirable for the detention of their private prisons.
As
and middle-class
own. Their
families
distaste for
no longer found these places
workhouses created
a result, in the period before 1800, public
gland
—
the
demand
for
A
brief review of the
Dutch Republic, Germany, France, and En-
illustrates this shift.
The Dutch experience was
onment
—
a
imprisonment was more firmly
established as a criminal sanction, replacing other forms of bondage.
penal history of four European countries
were spurred in
latter increasingly
to other
institutions
the simplest. Because the
Dutch had always preferred impris-
forms of bondage, the transformation of their prison workhouses into penal
went smoothly. From the beginning, the town courts of Amsterdam and Haarlem
had sentenced
thieves
and comparable offenders
Amsterdam workhouse opened as a prison housed convicts only. spinhouse, too, soon
It
thus represented the
filled
to the tuchthuizen. After 1654,
for vagrants first
when
the
and minor delinquents, the rasphouse
criminal prison in Europe. The
Amsterdam
mostly with criminal women. Other towns in the Dutch Republic
maintained just one prison, with a ward for each sex. These exclusively criminal prisons, but convicts
facilities
did not evolve into
made up most of their population in the eighteenth
74
/
Pieter Spierenburg
Female prisoners at work in an Amsterdam spinhousein 1664.
century.
By then, courts frequently imposed sentences of imprisonment. During the
quarter of the seventeenth century, the cases; a century later,
it
imposed imprisonment
By
Amsterdam court did
so in one-fifth of
its
third
criminal
did so in three-fifths. By the 1670s the court of Groningen-City
in two-fifths of criminal cases.
Germany was slow to replace public works with imprisonment as a criminal many years in the Holy Roman Empire, the courts faced strong opposition to
contrast,
sanction. For
using prison workhouses for the confinement of criminals. This opposition came from prison administrators,
and from revenue
who
citizens reluctant to
if
money paid by the families of nonconvict inmates, spend public money to support inmates. Both feared a loss of
profited from board
workhouses were too
German notion
of honor,
closely associated with the criminal element of society.
which the populace cherished with
particular tenacity,
The
viewed ev-
erything connected with crime and criminal justice as tainted. In this view, any prison work-
house used
to confine criminals
the authorities proclaimed families
it
would become an infamous or dishonorable
decent. Since the presence of
from committing undisciplined members
income and the public would have
place,
criminals
even
if
would deter
to prison, the prison masters
would
lose
spend more on the punishment of criminals.
to
The Hamburg magistrates found
common
a solution
first
by establishing
house, to which only infamous convicts were committed.
Opened
a
new
in 1669,
prison, the spinit
was the second
criminal prison in Europe. Without paying inmates, of course, the institution required
another source of financing, which either
had fewer
financial options or
it
found in the public treasury. Other German towns
were more reluctant
to
spend
their
money on
separate
The Body and the State
/
75
prisons for convicts. In the second half of the eighteenth century, however, authorities over-
came
mon
the popular hostility to infamous institutions.
In France, the change in
was
By
that time,
imprisonment was a com-
penal sanction throughout the Empire.
first
approach
to penal
bondage
instituted in the sixteenth century as a
started with galley servitude,
form of punishment primarily
which
for vagrants.
During the seventeenth century, criminals sentenced by courts, especially deserters condemned
by courts-martial, came their
to
importance as naval
predominate in the galley
tools,
which doomed them
After 1715, however, galleys lost
fleet.
as a military institution.
As
a result, the
composition of the oarsmen population changed. Whereas during the thirty years before
1715 almost half the oarsmen had been condemned by a court-martial, usually during the following third of
for desertion,
century nine-tenths of the oarsmen had been sentenced for
a
smuggling and common-law crimes. At the same time, those condemned
to galley servitude
increasingly served their sentences as workers rather than oarsmen. After 1715,
more convicts remained
in the
arsenals or for private merchants In
1
748 the
galleys
more and
harbor of Marseilles during the winter season, laboring in the
on
a for-hire basis.
were abolished, and the complex at Marseilles was dismantled. French
law, however, did not change. Courts continued to impose galley servitude; to execute these
sentences, the Rochefort.
condemned were put
They had
to carry
to
work
in the naval arsenals at Toulon, Brest,
and
heavy loads, turn wheels, drive pumps, or pull cables; others
labored in joinery, drilling, or caulking, and a few assisted in building ships. At night they
chained to their beds. This kind of punishment survived the Revolution
slept in barracks,
and endured
The arsenals were
until 1854.
in fact labor
camps where convicts had
to
remain
within an enclosed space, so the penalty was more akin to imprisonment than to public
works. In one respect, however, these labor camps had fewer penal possibilities than the prison workhouses of other countries: only
rowed
men worked
in the arsenals, for only
men had
the galleys.
For the confinement of both tion, the hopitaux generaux. In
ited facilities for locking
up
women and men in France we must turn to another institu-
most places these were asylums rather than prisons, with lim-
criminals. In Paris, though, the situation
convicts were imprisoned in
its
The
hospital general.
physically distinct establishments joined administratively. la force,
which was
Bicetre,
which
syphilitic
families
,
by
housed only men but from the
women. The
a court or ,
different, for
prisoners in
la force
had been committed
by the lieutenant of police In the .
last
at the
and at the
theft.
On the eve
Salpetriere accounted for about one-seventh of
the total hospital general population of Paris, about
650 and 1,000 inmates,
respectively.
a minority of the inmates of both institutions were incarcerated in la force, the
two wards ranked among the
The
also
,
of the Revolution,
Even though
on
request of their
case they were either prostitutes
and charged with vagabondage or petty
Bicetre
women; and
early eighteenth century
or suspect people arrested at night la force at
many
Two of these had a separate ward,
in fact a prison within the institution: the Salpetriere for
originally
housed
was
institution actually consisted of several
largest prisons in
Europe
at the time.
regular courts sentenced convicts to imprisonment in a hospital less often than they
did to galley servitude. This preference for the galleys shows up in the penalties imposed on
76
Pieter Spierenburg
/
food thieves by the Parlement of Paris during the eighteenth century. At no time in this period were
more than one-twentieth
of all food thieves imprisoned in a hospital general. In the
half of the century about one-sixth
first
were sent
to the galleys,
century about one-third received a galley sentence, Which the arsenals. Indeed,
down by
by the
1
its
own
peculiar developments, but eventually imprisonment grew.
Although the English had pioneered imprisonment' courts and system
tant to use the bridewell
for the detention of felons.
employers made up the bulk of those confined
tation
confinement in one of
780s, galley punishment constituted half of all sentences handed
the Parlement of Paris.
England too had
their
but before the end of the
now meant
legislators
remained reluc-
Vagrants and servants who cheated
to bridewells.
For a long time, transpor-
was the preferred form of penal bondage. The Transportation Act of 1718 made
it
a
primary penalty rather than a means to avoid capital punishment; the act also decreed that henceforth the government would pay for the shipment of convicts. In
sand British convicts were transported
all,
some
only by English courts but also by Irish and, to a lesser extent, Scottish courts.
were
Irish convicts, vagrants
victs
were thieves indicted
More than
relatively
for
fifty
thou-
America between 1718 and 1776, condemned not
to
Among
the
numerous, but most of the English and Scottish con-
grand larceny.
half the persons transported
were in
their twenties
and
four-fifths
were male.
Maryland and Virginia were the most frequent destinations, although some convicts landed in the Caribbean. In America, the shipping contractors sold the convicts to private ers,
mostly middle-sized planters
who owned
number
a small
employ-
of black slaves. Because the
price of a convict averaged about a third of that of an African, the larger slaveholders protested the system.
works
They suggested,
in vain, that
England adopt galley servitude or public
as punishments.
Evidence from eighteenth-century Surrey, England,
illustrates the fate of
men and women
condemned to noncapital punishments for property offenses. As the century progressed, more and more received sentences of transportation, so were transported (women were transported meanwhile, was
statistically insignificant
quarter of the century,
accounting for
The decline of
first
at least
three-fifths of
male convicts
half of the century; even in the third
a revival of transportation in the 1790s,
imprisonment gained
two-thirds of criminal sentences by the end of the century.
transatlantic transportation before the
prisonment gained well as in the
during the
by 1772
during every period). Imprisonment,
no more than one-tenth of convicts received prison sentences. But
from that point onward, despite steadily,
that
less often
American Revolution shows
for reasons other than the troubles in the colonies.
that im-
Hence, in England
as
Dutch Republic, Germany, and France, imprisonment was well established
toward the end of the early modern period.
Acknowledgments 1
wish
for
to
thank Sjoerd Faber and Jim Sharpe
composing
this chapter.
for their
comments. Their works,
too,
were important
The Body and the State
77
/
Bibliographic Note This essay draws on
my own work
in the history of
punishment and
discipline in preindustrial
Europe: The Spectacle oj Suffering: Executions and the Evolution of Repression, from a Preindustrial Metropolis
to the
European Experience (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1984); The Prison
Experience: Disciplinary Institutions and Their Inmates in Early
Modern Europe (New Brunswick,
N.J.:
Rutgers University Press, 1991). For a theoretical comparison of European and American develop-
ments
in
punishment, see
my article "From Amsterdam
the Prison in Seventeenth-Century Holland History (Spring 1987),
An Explanation
Auburn:
The major competing theory on executions and et
the rise of imprisonment
et
is to
be found in
Deraison: Histoire de la Eolie a I'Age Classique
Gallimard, 1961) (translated in English as "Madness and Civilization"). is
of Social
Punir: Naissance de la Prison (Paris: Gallimard, 1975) (translated in
English as "Discipline and Punish"). See also his Eolie
valuable overview
for the Rise of
439-61.
Michel Foucault, Surveiller
(Paris:
to
and Nineteenth-Century America," Journal
Georg Rusche and Otto Kirchheimer, Punishment and
An
older but
still
(New
Social Structure
York: Russell and Russell, 1939).
Important works dealing with specific types of judicial sanctions are the following: A. Roger Ekirch, Bound for America: The Transportation of British Convicts
Clarendon
Press, 1987),
60,000 Eorcats sur
les
servitude; Bronislaw (Paris:
on deportation
overseas:
to the Colonies, 1
Andre Zysberg,
Caleres de Erance, 1680-1748 (Paris: Editions
Geremek, La Potence ou
la Pitie:
L'Europe
et les
718-1 775 (Oxford:
Les Caleriens: Vies et Destins de
du
Seuil, 1987),
on
galley
Pauvres du Moyen Age a Nos fours
Gallimard, 1987), and Robert M. Schwartz, Policing the Poor
in
Eighteenth-Century Erance
(Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1988), on disciplining the poor; John H.Langbein,
Law of Proof Europe and England in theAncien Regime (Chicago: University of Chicago Peters, Torture (New York: B. Blackwell, 1985), on judicial torture. The major works dealing with separate countries are, for England: J. M. Beattie, Crime and the
Torture and the Press, 1977),
and Edward
Courts in England, 1660-1 800 (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1986), andj. A. Sharpe Judicial
Punishment
in
England (London: Faber and Faber, 1990); for France: Nicole Castan, Justice
et
Repression en Languedoc a L'Epoque des Lumieres (Paris: Flammarion, 1980); for the Netherlands:
Sjoerd Faber, Strafrechtspleging en Criminaliteit
(Arnhem: Gouda Quint, 1983); Control in Medieval and Early
for
te
Amsterdam, 1 680-1 81 1 De Nieuwe Menslievendheid :
Sweden: Eva Osterberg and Dag Lindstrom, Crime and
Social
Modern Swedish Towns (Uppsala: Academia Upsaliensis, 1988);
Germany: Richard van Dulmen, Theater des Schreckens: Cerichtspraxis und
Strafrituale in der
for
Eruhen
Neuzeit (Munchen: Beck, 1985) (also available in English); for Italy: Gaetano Cozzi, ed., Stato, Societa e Giustizia nella Repubblica Veneta, Sec.
Servitude in Early
15-18 (Roma: Jouvence
,
1
980) and for Spain: Ruth Pike Penal
Modern Spain (Madison: University of Wisconsin
;
,
Press, 1983).
CHAPTER THREE
ll-Ordered P
Ti
England, 1780-1865
McGowen
Randall
nn
he contrast between a prison in 1780 and one in 1865 could scarcely have
been
greater.
Disorder and neglect were the dominant features of the
eighteenth-century prison. the noise
and smell of the
who belonged
On
entering the
place.
in the prison
It
jail,
one was confronted with
was seldom easy
from those
who
to distinguish those
did not. Only the presence
of irons differentiated the felons from the visitors or from the debtors
The of
jail
its
appeared to be
a peculiar
inhabitants lived in ease while others suffered in squalor. There
of authority.
Some
and
kind of lodging house with a mixed
their families.
clientele.
was
little
Some
evidence
prisoners gambled while others stood drinking at the prison tap.
the other hand, the prison in the mid-nineteenth century
was quiet and
orderly,
if
On also
drab and functional. The eeriness of the building was exaggerated by the ghostly forms of convicts in uniforms
and masks. Only prisoners and jailers were present, and the difference
between the two groups was apparent
at a glance.
Conversation and pleasure had been
outlawed, but the prison was clean and healthy. Prisoners were confined to identical
and subjected
to a similar diet. Their lives
were carefully regulated.
A
cells
prison had assumed
an unmistakable appearance.
A
Although the difference between the two points seems mation
is difficult
and complex. For one
clear, the history of the transfor-
thing, the story begins long before 1780.
England
school class held in
the chapel of the Sur-
House of CorrecWandsworth, England a prison rey
tion in
had experienced significant changes in penal policy on several earlier occasions. And although the late eighteenth century witnessed a particularly intense
and innovative discussion of im-
"silent
prisonment, the actual transformation of imprisonment was slow and halting. The only constant in the period
from 1780 to 1850 was a nearly uninterrupted increase in crime and the
but
it
of prisoners. This increase lent a sense of urgency to the debate over punishment,
scarcely explains
momentous change
why particular solutions were proposed. Although these
decades saw
in the character of English society, especially in the rise of
industrial civilization, focusing too insistently
reductionist explanations of penal reform.
on
this vast transformation will
urban and
only produce
system." The
boxed-in pews at Surrey prevented prisoners
number
—
that operated by the
from
seeing or
speaking with one another.
From The
Criminal Prisons of
London and Scenes of Prison Life (1862)
by Henry
Mayhew and
John Binny.
80
/
McGowen
Randall
Penal change was a complicated
affair, full
of contradictory impulses
and
policies.
With
many causes operating, it is probably futile to search for one decisive cause or one particular moment when the modern prison was "born." Reform came in waves. It was often the product of compromises among competing ideas ancfbetween abstract schemes and practical
so
limitations. Despite the sensation created
between 1780 and 1820 tended
by John Howard's
be carried out
investigations, prison reform
at the local level.
was only after 1810
It
that
campaign, conducted in part by Quakers, shifted attention to parliamentary inves-
a national
tigation
to
and
Even
legislation.
impose central direction on
in the early nineteenth century, Parliament
local authorities.
By the 1820s,
critics of
was
reluctant to
reform argued that con-
finement had become too lenient and needed to be more deterrent. By the 1830s prison chaplains pushed what tional levels.
prison
many life
in
at
came
to
be called the separate system
The proponents of
this
at
both the
local
and the na-
system triumphed in the construction of the national
Pentonville in 1842. Yet debate over penal policy continued into the 1850s, with
people echoing criticisms that had
1865 was profoundly
different
first
from
his
been uttered life
in 1780.
The average
in 1780, but despite the large
and the greater numbers incarcerated, the prison remained an
prisoner's
new
prisons
institution strangely resistant
to the intentions of its designers.
The Eighteenth-Century Prison Experience Eighteenth-century English justice employed a wide variety of measures to punish crime. For
misdemeanors, English courts typically imposed inflictions
military.
and symbolic
fines or resorted to public
such as the pillory or whipping. Offenders were sometimes encouraged
Many
of those
condemned
to
to join the
death were pardoned on the condition that they be
transported to the American colonies. The hierarchy of punishments climaxed in the drama of the gallows,
where secular authority invoked the image of divine sanction
man justice. Punishment spoke of the majesty of God and the king. their honor.
The condemned were
invited to earn forgiveness
ness of the sentence and the goodness of
human
justice.
and
a lesson.
The
spectacle of
human
suffering
was
to perfect
inflicted to
by confessing
was intended
It
was
to
hu-
avenge
to the correct-
But punishment, although
pected the participation of the convicted, existed for the public. ple
It
offered as an
it
ex-
exam-
put the crowd in mind
of the vastly greater terrors of hell, the only fear that most magistrates believed could over-
awe
a fallen
humanity. Such occasions ran the risk of participation by an unpredictable
crowd, which might sympathize with the condemned or become enraged
at a
bungled
execution. But since the fundamental goal of punishment was publicity, this risk had to be taken.
Although whipping, the
modern
justice,
pillory,
fined while awaiting
trial
fully
expressed the aim of early
or the execution of a sentence. Only a small minority were actually
imprisoned as punishment, usually of institutions existed, the
jail
for
such minor offenses as vagrancy. In theory two types
and the house of correction. The former contained
debtors, as well as those held for for short terms.
and the gallows more
confinement had a familiar place in the judicial process. People were con-
trial,
whereas the
latter received petty offenders
felons
and
sentenced
But the distinction between the establishments was not always observed, and
The Well-Ordered Prison
81
/
even within a particular institution, different categories of prisoners often mingled together. Indeed, the terms jail and prison were often used interchangeably, and they will be so used in this chapter.
There were an extraordinary number of places of confinement, probably more than three
hundred. The possession of such an establishment was a jealously guarded privilege for a borough, manorial, or ecclesiastical franchise holder. Yet many of these local jails consisted of
no more than a gatehouse, room, or cellar. They seldom contained inhabitants of time.
Only
lation of the it
a few establishments held a significant
county jail at Warwick,
for instance, fluctuated considerably
was near time for the assizes, the twice-yearly
their tour of the country.
John Howard,
for
number of prisoners. The
trials
any length
prison popu-
depending on whether
of serious crimes before the judges
the prison reformer, found
33
on
felons in the jail in
January 1776, along with 24 debtors, whereas in October he discovered only 7 felons and 22 debtors.
London contained
population.
The
in the late eighteenth century.
a disproportionate share of the prison
prison, Newgate, often held as
city also
different local authorities
who
confinement was not
part of the explanation
was
as felons
even
strictly associated
for these various prisons lay
were debtors.
It is
in the 1770s,
Of
and
numbers
in
of debtors. Debtors constituted a
Newgate, Howard found
county jails there were often as
the 4,084 prisoners
Howard counted on
many debtors
his tours, 2,437
hard to overstate the importance of imprisonment from debt in shaping the
popular image of confinement as well as the
from
a civil process, a contest
jail itself.
between two private
The incarceration
citizens.
of debtors resulted
Imprisonment was not meant
punish a debtor but rather to secure the debtor until the debt was paid. Government its
responsibility to
had betrayed felons,
uphold
a trust.
and the
with
with punishment in the eighteenth century,
the presence of large
at assize time.
felons
exercised widely varying degrees of oversight.
larger portion of the long-term inhabitants of a jail than felons. In
between 30 and 50 debtors
many as 300
possessed large separate establishments for debt-
and the Marshalsea. Responsibility
ors such as the Fleet
If
and
the largest prisons
The most important London
credit relations
by providing a place of confinement
to
fulfilled
for those
who
Although debtors and felons were confined together, debtors were not
authorities
were limited
in their responsibility for
and control over debtors.
The jailer had little power over them. They proved an unruly element within the jail,
resisting
efforts to police their
conduct. They were ever ready to complain of infringement of their
rights as Englishmen.
They often brought
their wives
and children into the prison, further
contributing to the problem of regulating the institution. In 1776 in the Fleet, along with
475 wives and
Howard found 242
children. In theory the creditor
debtors
was supposed
to
provide subsistence to the debtor, but this did not always occur. In some counties debtors
were offered food, but in many instances debtors had families.
They depended on the wider community,
of debtors formed the basis for a
money economy
to provide for themselves
family, friends, or charity.
The
and
their
situation
in the prisons. Debtors not only rented
space from the jailer and bought his food or beer but also sold goods and services to others confined. As a result the prison experience
depended more on what one could
afford than
on
the particular reason for confinement.
The presence of so many debtors
power
of the creditor over the debtor
in prison
seemed
had long been
at
a source of complaint.
The
times an unconstitutional assumption of
82
/
McGowen
Randall
many
influence in private hands, and the plight of so
and sickness aroused widespread concern. Jailers
in particular, accused of the greedy exploi-
by circumstances, became
tation of those trapped
innocent families confined in hunger
targets of outraged
popular opinion. The
exposure of abuses occasionally prodded the authorities to investigate prison conditions. At various times Parliament passed insolvency acts to secure the release of debtors. Wills some-
times included bequests to provide food or clothing for poor prisoners. But legal authorities
regarded imprisonment for debt as a valuable sanction that secured responsible conduct in business.
It
seemed,
very
at the
least, a
necessary
evil.
In part because of this practice, con-
finement consisted of a series of private arrangements in which there was a wide degree of latitude for all the parties involved.
The
fluid character of prison life
was reinforced by
the peculiar position of the jailer.
Prisons were largely self-financing operations, and the jailer was supposed to derive his in-
come from
the fees
owed by
prisoners for various legal services. In addition the jailers en-
joyed the profits from whatever commercial opportunities they could organize. They might
from
collect fees
visitors,
charge for bedding, or benefit from the sale of beer in the prison. In
the larger prisons the office
was so
lucrative that
ously guarded the possession of the Bedford profit
came
to
jail
it
was widely sought
after.
be considered a form of property legitimately belonging
the judicial decisions
One
family jeal-
through several generations. The sources of
on confinement concerned
Many of
to the jailer.
the rights of the parties involved rather than
the rules regulating discipline. In an important case in
1669 the judge supported the claims
who continued to confine a man found innocent at his trial because he had not paid The man claimed that he was too poor to pay. The judge, Matthew Hale, held, "[I
of a jailer his fee.
cannot] help that, nor can
must pay them." Such Although
it
give
away other men's
might seem that such
was seldom
this
I
a decision
More
the case.
vated the trade of those resources. Jailers
had
who
little
trouble.
a
judgment exposed the prisoners
interest in securing a
down
more rigorous regime;
their costs. Their rapacity
you
a
culti-
without
generous tolerance
was
also kept in
check
want
A riot would attract the attention of authorities and result in an unwanted inspection infrequency of petitions and riots suggests that the occu-
The
some measure reconciled
Even
if jailers
means their
to
do
own
relative
had possessed the ambition
so.
They had almost no
families or
staff,
to their conditions.
to
impose
tighter control, they usually lacked
and those few
assistants they
employed came
were often recruited from among the prisoners. Instead they
erated a wide measure of self-government
on the
tol-
part of those confined. Prisoners often de-
veloped elaborate rules and procedures for keeping order jails
He
who were
to petition magistrates or assize judges. Jailers did not
pants of jails were in
from
fees,
to unlimited extortion,
could pay while simply neglecting those
of the establishment.
the
they will not remit their
typically the jailer treated prisoners as customers.
increased their profits while keeping
by the freedom of prisoners
rights; if
accorded with the general attitude toward office-holding.
among
themselves. In the larger
they had courts that heard complaints, assigned fines, and settled disputes that arose in
their
community. The order of the prison mirrored
that of society to a surprising degree.
Prisoners entering the prison paid garnish as a form of initiation just as a trade. In
most prisons no
occupation, but
at their
effort
was made
if
to regulate the prisoner's day.
own initiative and for their own profit.
they were entering
Some worked at an
Others were permitted to beg.
The Well-Ordered Prison
The usual complaint about prisons was and drunkenness. ous,
Jailers tolerated the
who mingled
almost unrestricted admission of friends and the curi-
community created among
internal organization of the prison
it
this privilege.
The prison
the prisoners from the wider world.
was dominated by custom and the rough compro-
mises that governed relations between prisoners and prison could be tumultuous, but
83
occupants passed their time in games, gambling,
with the prisoners. They profited from selling
wall scarcely separated the
The
that
/
would be
jailers. Life in
an eighteenth-century
a mistake to confuse disorder
with anarchy.
The Bridewell, Transportation, and the Hulks The preceding paragraphs should not be taken regime.
velop
The
early
to suggest the existence of
modern period saw many attempts
new solutions
to deal
to
an unchanging
remedy immediate problems or de-
with crime. Time and again an outbreak of jail fever or a surge in
crime attracted the attention of local justices or Parliament. Local records often record expenses for repairing prisons. Parliamentary legislation in 1670 sought to ensure that debtors
An
and felons were kept
separate.
build and repair
The Society
investigation of
jails.
act of for the
1699 vested new powers
in the county justices to
Promotion of Christian Knowledge conducted an
Newgate and the Marshalsea
in 1702. In addition to listing abuses,
the idea of keeping prisoners in separate cells.
James Oglethorpe secured
committee to examine the Fleet and the Marshalsea in the 1720s. In 1728
Although some of
this legislation
these statutes. These measures
was mandatory,
do not indicate
local authorities
praised
a statute required
post a schedule of fees, and in 1751 the sale of liquor in prisons
jailers to
it
a parliamentary
was forbidden.
were required to enforce
a consistent record of intervention; bequests
were forgotten and rules went unobserved. But they remind us that there were important periods of innovation in punishment well before the
The most dramatic evidence of an earlier effort
last
decades of the eighteenth century.
to transform
confinement in the centuries
before 1780 lay in the existence of the house of correction, or bridewell. This institution
emerged
By the try.
in late-sixteenth-century
The
distinctive
were intended its.
London
early seventeenth century perhaps
Many
to
purpose of these institutions was
employ their inhabitants so
of the proposals offered
even in smaller
in response to the
details.
growing problem of vagrancy.
170 such houses had been opened across the counto
reform as well as to punish. They
that the prisoners
by penal reformers
in the
would
learn industrious hab-
1780s were foreshadowed here,
For example, the keeper of a bridewell was to be paid a
salary,
and
magistrates were responsible for the oversight of the institution. In one gloomier sense the history of the house of correction offered an tions failed to
ominous lesson
as well.
Even
after these institu-
produce the intended reform they were nonetheless adopted by justices
who
appreciated the advantages of short periods of confinement. Magistrates became convinced that these sentences
were an
effective
way
to deter vagrants
and
to discipline disobedient
servants.
The bridewell became
instance,
between 1690 and 1720 a number of new houses were created.
the focus of several later efforts to reform punishment. For
Parliament's continuing interest in the institution
was
A
measure of
legislation passed in 1 706 permitting
judges to sentence felons to the house of correction for up to two years. Significantly, the act further specified that the sentence could include hard labor.
84
Due
Randall
/
to the
McGowen
overcrowd-
ing oj prisons in the late eighteenth century,
the English
government
began
to confine in-
mates
in the hulks oj
old sailing vessels. Al-
though originally
in-
tended as a temporary
measure, imprison-
ment
in the hulks con-
tinued well into the
nineteenth century.
From The Criminal Prisons of
London
and Scenes of Prison Life (1862) by Henry
Mayhew and John Binny.
If
the house of correction
was
a significant area of
experimentation with secondary pun-
ishments, transportation to the American colonies was just as important. Both initiatives were part of the
same search
an alternative intermediate punishment
for
time
at a
when
there
was
little
choice between the gallows and branding. Indeed the early-eighteenth-century legisla-
tion
on bridewells and transportation suggests
marks
that this period
a decisive break in
penal thought and practice. Both forms of punishment signaled a shift away from penalties that
employed the body in
a public spectacle to sentences defined in
terms of labor and time.
A sentence of hard labor already had a double meaning, promising both suffering and reform. Proponents of transportation believed that
would transform
the colonies
a
term spent facing the severe conditions of
them with
the idle as well as provide
though the transportation of felons had been experimented with the legislation that restored the penalty in
with
state funding.
Faced with
1718 arose
a rising tide of
new
a
opportunity. Al-
in the seventeenth century,
at central
government
initiative
and
crime in the aftermath of a war, the authorities
acted decisively to transform the character of punishment. The sentence was an immediate success, at least as
measured by
its
Some
acceptance and use.
thirty
transported to the American colonies between 1718 and 1775. Yet
ment did not a
indicate uniform enthusiasm for the penalty.
punishment
that
seemed
insufficiently deterrent.
tion of the sentence could not be controlled.
thousand people were
its
By the 1750s
widespread employ-
Opponents pointed out
The rumor
that those
argued against
critics
that the reputa-
who were
sent out pros-
pered rather than suffered undercut the effectiveness of the penalty. Sentencing patterns suggest that
even before the disruption produced by the American Revolution, judges were returning
with renewed interest to confinement as a better way to punish offenders.
By the 1770s English justice was buffeted from several diately, the
number
of those convicted of crimes
was on
different directions.
the rise,
and the
Most imme-
resulting over-
crowding in prisons was compounded by the presence of more debtors. The abrupt interruption of the transportation penalty in find a solution, settled in
1775 produced
1776 on the use of old
a crisis. vessels,
The government, which came
to
in scrambling to
be called hulks, as
places of temporary confinement. Although an emergency measure, this expedient revealed
The Well-Ordered Prison
the shifting currents in penal thought.
The plan adopted
was more rigorous than anything found
was imposed on
most of the
in
and they were
the prisoners,
set to
for the
jails
management
of England.
A
/
85
of the hulks
restrictive diet
hard labor clearing the Thames and
other seaports. Well into the nineteenth century the hulks continued to be a major repository for convicts retained in England, but they never lost the taint of being a half measure.
They earned popular disapproval by being expensive and
at least initially
when
immorality and violence that prevailed
Critics repeated tales of the
unhealthy.
the hatches were
closed.
Penal expedients during these years were adopted, in large part, out of a sense of desperation. Especially in the aftermath of the
by crime. For growing
a brief period the authorities turned to the gallows.
for a return to transportation. In
revival of transportation did not
The arguments
years earlier.
American Revolution, England seemed deluged
rather than principled
1787 the
By 1783 the clamor was
sailed for Australia. Yet this
first fleet
diminish the discussion of confinement, as
in favor of the hulks
and transportation tended
and merely sharpened the urgent sense
that a
it
to
had seventy
be pragmatic
more adequate form
of
punishment was required.
The
In addition to these practical pressures, the
discussed, in a changed political
and
The
political radical Josiah
"Nothing but a
real
new modelled,
it
environment. The imperial
Dornford expressed
this feeling in
reform can save us from ruin as a nation."
was one of
in this period.
a
London was
associated
He
1785 when he wrote,
argued, "Were our prisons
step toward reform of the lower orders of the
of authors
who
a center for
such
number
crisis
questioning of English institutions and
far- ranging
would be one considerable
people." Dornford
punishment
whole question of punishment was again being
intellectual
with the American Revolution produced a morality.
Reform
Rise of
published works on prisons and agitation,
and
radical doctors
and
lawyers took a lead in the movement. Reformers focused on two aspects of prison administration, health
and
religion.
the bodies,
and
less of the souls of
the
"With
grief
speak
I
it,"
Dornford complained, "we take
most heartrending terms. They were trapped
jailers'
magistrates were permitted to appoint chaplains to jails
were empowered
in 1774, magistrates
care of
in prisons, victims of disease, hunger,
and
to provide
to select
and
when,
in 1773,
them with
a salary
greed. Parliamentary legislation displayed a sensitivity to such concerns
and when,
little
our prisoners." The plight of prisoners was described in
surgeons to attend to the
prisoners.
In concentrating so insistently
on the bodies and souls
of individual prisoners, the re-
formers indicated an intensification of concern that had found expression for over a century.
They
rejected the idea of
punishment
callousness. Society should
show
as spectacle, suggesting that
such displays produced
a tender regard for the individual, thus fostering gentler
manners. These goals demanded more attention to punishment, not to every author during these years had favorable words for
Even
a
some kind
its
relaxation. Nearly
of solitary confinement.
defender of the gallows such as William Paley praised the ability of solitude to frus-
trate vice
and promote
virtue
among
prisoners.
86
/
McGowen
Randall
Among
was
the foremost advocates of solitude
Hanway. In 1776 he published
the philanthropic entrepreneur Jonas
Solitude in Imprisonment.
he argued, offered an opportunity
to
The interruption
reexamine the arrangements
of transportation,
for dealing
with prisoners.
He complained that earlier discussions had failed to consider the importance of reforming the offender. Hanway was part of a rising evangelical tide that inspired many advocates of reform in the
eighteenth century. By "reformation" he meant religious conversion. "This
late
confinement," he wrote, took place between this world and the next and was "calculated to
"However nauseous
qualify" prisoners for either. necessity, like to that
which
it
may be,
for a time,
medicine for the body, and those wretched beings so apparently intended to preserve both
is
may
body and
it
will cooperate
with
be induced to submit
soul." Suffering
was no
longer physical pain exploited in a drama intended for an audience but was a spiritual ordeal
provoked
for the prisoners
struggle; the prisoner's
more
suitable
own
own
good. The prison was simply the passive setting for such a
conscience inflicted the suffering.
emblem of divine justice,
Hanway saw
the prison as a
displacing the gallows, which had for centuries been
human predicament before an omnipotent Hanway proclaimed, "and he
considered an appropriate representation of the
judge. "The walls of his prison will preach peace to his soul," will confess the
The
goodness of his Maker, and the wisdom of the laws of his country."
demand
insistent
marked
for solitude
new development
a
in the conception of the
form and purpose of punishment. The house of correction had long targeted idleness, using labor to produce reform. But
Hanway went beyond such an analysis
in attacking a particular
form of sociability. Whatever the source of crime, the remedy lay in the isolation of the individual soul.
Only by becoming an individual could
to guide his
life.
tude cut the offender off from his
life. It
for
The most
significant effort jail at
ing was strong and well suited to
blankets.
on arches
taught a lesson of
internalization of more exacting rules
was undertaken by
Horsham
number of the measures proposed by the built
A proper confinement
promoted the
reform soon influenced a few leading individuals to experiment with
building the Sussex county
was
a corrupt world. Soli-
conduct.
for regulating private
These proposals
community.
false
heightened responsibility for one's
local prisons.
the convict discover the right principles
True religion needed the assistance of institutions in
its
in 1775.
reformers.
a
Duke
of
Richmond
The jail was well situated, and
purpose. Each prisoner had a separate
to aid in the circulation of air.
The jail made
the
The prison brought together
cell.
in re-
wide
a
the build-
The prison
Each room was equipped with bed and
break with the past in striving
to achieve
an equalization of
treat-
ment. The felons were washed on entrance and clothed in a uniform. Debtors were permitted a quart of strong beer or a pint of
had abolished
all
been appointed, with a regular
Horsham in
wine a day, but felons had only water to drink. The county
and it provided the jailer with
fees as well as the tap,
salary, to give a
sermon once
a
revealed a frustration with waste, disorder, and sickness;
what could be achieved through the
a salary.
A chaplain had
week and prayers every it
day.
displayed a confidence
rationalization of institutional
life.
John Howard Although authors a
like
proper penal regime
Hanway and Dornford
—
religion,
discussed the various elements that
—
work, severity
the
book
that
composed
had the widest impact on
The Well-Ordered Prison
penal arrangements was published by John
Howard
in 1777. The State oj the Prisons in En-
gland and Wales captured public attention. Although this
did so less by the force of peculiar
book
to attract
its
originality than
by
its
87
/
work popularized prison reform,
it
was
a
synthesis of existing thought.
It
such acclaim. Howard recorded in several paragraphs a few simple
regarding the condition of each English prison he visited. Yet contemporaries read through
facts
Howard was a middle-aged when he was appointed sheriff of Bedfordshire. This official's responsibiljail, but Howard was unusual in going so far as to visit it. He shared with
the tedious details to the passion that fired his investigations.
country gentleman ity
included the
other religiously inclined reformers a sense that his beliefs required an energetic to transform the world.
What he found
in the jail
went unobserved. The prison symbolized the dicated responsibility. In particular he
acquitted were
was appalled
to discover that prisoners
asked him for evidence that other counties acted
provide an answer,
Howard began an
commitment ill,
and
rules
antithesis of Christian charity. Magistrates ab-
confined because they could not pay the jailer's
still
who
magistrates,
shocked him: prisoners were
investigation that took
He
fees.
who had been
protested to the
differently. In
him
seeking to
En-
to all the prisons in
Soon he roamed the continent examining the forms of confinement in other countries.
gland.
Finally in
1791 these exhausting and dangerous investigations led to his death in Russia
while he was visiting prisons there.
Although Howard was drawn
to his mission
by
and
his particular religious disposition,
although the appointment to a peculiarly English office provided the occasion for his
effort,
once Howard visited the continent he discovered a Europe- wide interest in confinement.
One consequence gest that
came
of his
book was
to
expose the English to these other practices and to sug-
England lagged behind other countries. Howard never claimed
to prisons.
He simply sought
practices he could discover.
to bring the English up-to-date
They had already achieved the perfection he hoped ,
and most of them so clean
did not
know "which
the industry istrates
and
to
it
,
"
won his admiration. were "so
he was in a j ail Howard
that a visitor could "hardly believe"
.
admire most, the neatness and cleanliness appearing in the prisons,
and regular conduct of the prisoners, or the humanity and attention of the mag-
regents." At a
moment
of crisis in English penal practice
somewhere
Howard's advocacy of prison reform, however conventional subtle
when
adopt the best
to introduce in England: prisons
idea that a proper prison regime already existed, only
more
to
Everywhere he went he found people concerned with similar
questions and conducting parallel experiments. The Dutch in particular
quiet
originality
and
ways
a powerful intervention.
If justices
Howard introduced
the
else.
in
and the public
some
in
respects,
was
in
England were begin-
ning to reconsider confinement, Howard's contribution was to make the prison the center of focus, shifting
all
other forms of punishment to the margins.
perspective at the very time that judges were sentencing greater
He
fostered a vital change of
numbers
of felons to confine-
ment. Howard's book created the impression that the prison was the natural and inevitable shape of punishment. Yet he also sought to show that imprisonment in England was deeply flawed, that
was
its
own
it
was riddled with abuses.
cure.
Howard had an
It
particular architecture or regime, although tion, as a
required immediate reformation.
ideal of
way of handling people. The
what the prison should
he had thoughts on both
difference
Still,
be, not so
issues,
the prison
much
as a
but as an institu-
between Hanway and Howard was
that the
88
Randall
/
In this
McGowen
1787 painting
by Francis Wheatley, prison reformer John
Howard ing
an
shown
is
visit-
ailing prisoner
and donating fresh bread and bedding.
former concentrated on the offender and on constructing a regime appropriate to his moral condition, whereas his travels sis
Howard focused on what made
Howard visited
was less on
schools, hospitals,
the character of the people confined
common features of all such places.
the
was
of praise for
full
sublime
it.
If
for a healthy
and poorhouses
and
efficient institution. In
as well as prisons. His
and the mission of the
empha-
institution than
on
he found an institution well managed and clean, he
He had nothing more
faith in the ability of institutions
to inquire of its inhabitants.
with a
common
He had an almost
shape and regime to solve social
problems.
When Howard
visited a prison,
what offended him was the evidence of disorder and
inattention, the failure to post rules, the indiscriminate
mixing of inhabitants, and the un-
regulated boundary between the prison and the community. Although he characterized such
disorder as oppressive for the prisoners, what he meant
was
health,
and
a
part simply variety in penal practice
He took
and saw
as
that
it
pained him. His concern
anarchy what was a different form of order.
the independence of the prison culture as one
istration.
He focused on simple
oversight,
and the
points, the fees taken
level of illness. Yet these so-called
the heart of existing arrangements. In proposing to to create a
the
was
new organization of the prison, one grounded on principles of rationality, warm sense of religious purpose. He often described as an abuse what was in
to establish a
jail
new institution. He wanted
a prison that
should stand as a counterpoint
more symptom by
jailers, the
of general
abuses were not incidental but went to
remedy them, Howard was was
to the disorder
believed that jailers should be paid a salary so that they
less like the actual
the petty pleasure indulged in by the prisoners.
in fact trying
world. The
life
of
from which crime sprang. Howard
would have no
interest in collaborat-
ing in the circumvention of established laws. Local officials should take a far in inspecting prisons to ensure that these regulations
maladmin-
absence of magisterial
more
were observed. He wanted
They should not be
active role
to extinguish
able to gamble, drink, or
pass their time in idleness. Those confined should be submissive; swearing should not be
The Well-Ordered Prison
tolerated.
Howard's
target
was not simply
filth
disorder, the "audacious spirit of profaneness
the various
autonomy
ills
and physical
afflictions
89
/
but also the noise and
and wickedness." He made no
distinction
among
he discovered. He attacked with equal fervor the presence of disease and the
them
of prisoner culture, seeing
common
as part of a
failure.
The Years of Local Prison Reform The
agitation that coincided with the publication of
the passage of the Penitentiary Act of
and William Eden with Howard's features
Howard had admired to
Howard's book
779. This statute was drawn
in continental institutions
be arduous and
were
servile.
to
in
one sense climaxed in
up by William Blackstone
The proposal combined many
influential support.
instruction, a labor regime. Prisoners
The work was
1
—
solitary confinement, religious
wear uniforms and be subjected
The
act
proposed
of the
to
pay
to a coarse diet.
officials a salary,
but
its
authors expected the costs to be recovered from the profits of prison labor. The prisoners
would in
effort.
tion.
The
also enjoy a share of the earnings.
which prisoners could earn
The
legislation
act called for a
kind of progressive class system
a remission of part of their sentence
by good conduct and
summarized the most advanced thinking of the day on the prison ques-
Two penitentiaries were to be built, one for men and the other for women. The program
was invested with impeccable philanthropic credentials when Howard, the Quaker physician John Fothergill, and George Whately,
treasurer of the Foundling Hospital,
oversee the construction. Yet the committee soon the buildings,
enthusiasm
and support
for reform.
for the project
were appointed
Far from inaugurating a
new
waned. The
act
facility
era, the Penitentiary
at the national level in the
The surprising dimension of the
exceeded the national government's
combined
to
undermine the program.
Act revealed the limits of what could be
eighteenth century.
agitation of the
1770s lay
tional legislation than in the burst of activity that followed at the
less in the failure of the na-
county level. Perhaps
prisons were rebuilt in the years before 1790 in a largely uncoordinated effort. of prison construction occurred in the 1820s. the role of the traditional landed classes in carrying out the reform.
control.
The decision
to
into disagreement about the location of
The constraints imposed by the war against France and practical doubts
about the wisdom of building so centralized a
expected of reform
fell
From 1780
to
and
this success so
unexpected was
their representatives at the quarter sessions
1865 most English prisons remained under
to rebuild a prison or
royally appointed justices of the peace
What made
forty-five
A second wave
who
change
gathered
voted the sums needed to carry out reform, and the
its
at the
new
local
administration rested with the
county quarter sessions. They
prisons were not cheap. Prisons
could account for anywhere between one-quarter and one-half of the county budget, contributing to the sharply rising burden of county rates. Intellectuals and political radicals
have made the penitentiary idea a cherished project, but vative
and cautious
local politicians that
it
may
was the support of more conser-
provided the approval and funding
for the
new
constructions.
Prison reform was not one of the partisan political issues of the period. political parties, the
fearful of
Of the two major
Whigs contained the more advanced and systematic reformers. The Tories,
reforms justified by abstract principles, supported more modest and pragmatic
alterations. Typically a
Whig
interested in reform initiated a discussion
on
local penal
90
/
McGowen
Randall
arrangements, although there were even exceptions to this generalization. In Bedfordshire the
Whig Samuel Whitbread pushed
penal change, while in Lancashire T.
Sussex the Duke of Richmond played the central
roles.
Such men were
advanced thinking on the prison question and shared
B.
Bayley and in
most
familiar with the
a confidence in the potential of the
reformed establishment. They took a leading part in collecting information and studying architectural designs. But they to
had
to carry
more conservative
advance reform. The acquiescence of the bench
in part
by a crime
threat at a time
when
vincial authorities faced a rising tide of
Local
facilities
were simply not up
traditional
magistrates with
bold
in_ these
initiatives
them in order
can be explained
punishments seemed unsatisfactory. Pro-
crime in the 1780s and with
to the challenge.
The
attack
also coincided with other efforts to "civilize" popular culture,
on
it
the threat of jail fever.
the disorder of the prison
such as the attempts
to control
alehouses and to abolish cockfighting and bullbaiting. Rural justices faced an increasing population
and
a dramatic rise in poverty. Enclosures
as gleaning
produced greater
judicial activity.
and
The
conflicts over
Em-
The reformed prison came
ployers turned to the courts to punish the indiscipline of servants. to
such customary practices
struggle over poaching intensified.
be accepted as a convenient remedy to petty criminality. But the justices were responding to more than these circumstances
expanded the
the rebuilding of prisons. For they not only rebuilt
posed a
them with new stricter
architectural proposals in mind.
regime on the
Both through their
jail
and secured
size of
when
they initiated
county prisons but also
They enforced measures
that
im-
tighter control over the activities of the jailer.
own activity and in their actions to foster a new ethic of administration on own altered notions of the responsibilities that
the prison, these magistrates displayed their
went with office-holding. These principles required a more energetic involvement istration as well as a
more
professional
and impersonal
style of
government.
A
in
admin-
public office
who
involved a trust that raised service above self-interest and party consideration. Justices
possessed this ethic looked with suspicion on those cially
when
description
the officer exercised an unrestricted fit all
too well the situation of the
who
derived profit from an
power over those paying
prison but also implied a judgment sight of the institution.
made
on
Such a
the magistrates sensitive to
Howard's work. His book publicized lapses
administration of the county. Disease in the
the fees.
espe-
jailer.
This heightened sense of administrative responsibility the abuses catalogued in
office,
jail
that reflected
on
their
not only indicated a faulty regime in the
the moral integrity of those responsible for the over-
Although Howard was cautious
in his attribution of blame to jailers or
magistrates, his proposals involved a higher level of oversight
and
accountability.
Howard
urged justices to take a more aggressive role in the supervision of prisons. Parliamentary
measures sanctioned such increased less the Penitentiary
magistrates with the
activity.
The
legislation that influenced the justices
was
Act than the measures passed in 1782, 1784, and 1791 that provided
power to
repair prisons, separate classes,
and pay a salary to the jailer. By
the 1780s justices were less inclined to treat the prison as a franchise
and were beginning
instead to view the office of jailer as involving a trust. This philosophy triumphed in the
passage in 1815 of a statute that abolished
jail fees
with some other arrangement for paying jailers.
and required
that magistrates
come up
The Well-Ordered Prison
In
hind.
some English counties
Not every
initial effort to
rebuild the prison in Howard's
grand jury present the
as "insufficient."
jail
matter proposed the construction of a
from county
to county. In
considerable
sum
for
sixteen thousand pounds.
stop with the
A committee
rebuilt
county government. Yet
Morton
Pitt,
Howard's
its jail at
thousand pounds, a
the
site,
he found
new jail
it still
at a cost of
who
of Richmond's efforts in Sussex did not
was responsible
In 1789 he
1801. The pattern varied
a cost of four
the presence of an influential individual
The Duke
the
of justices formed to investigate the
when Howard visited
Much depended on
The
revelations.
Only in 1797 did
failed.
the justices resolved to build a
the prison as a personal cause.
Horsham jail.
to
own Bedfordshire
new prison, which opened in
1783 Dorset
inadequate. Led by William
would adopt
was taken up with enthusiasm, but others lagged be-
the task
responded readily or sympathetically
locality
91
/
for the construction of a
new house
of correction at Petworth. This bridewell not only included separate cells but also introduced
keep prisoners apart in chapel.
stalls to
Howard played
If
was exercised by the
a crucial role in accelerating prison change, as
architect
some nineteen prisons and influenced architect.
important an influence
William Blackburn. Before he died in 1790 he had designed the shape of
many more. He was Howard's favorite human nature.
Blackburn expressed the ambition to use space and stone to shape
His designs revealed the implicit belief that architecture could promote the goals of confine-
ment. Geometry and symmetry triumphed in these designs, which pursued health, order,
and more equal conditions.
opment of reason and
A rationally organized space, he believed, would foster the devel-
self-regulation in
position of the jailer within the prison to secure classification
lation of
human
and separation; he
The
sociability.
gion and ways to disrupt
when
its
its
inmates. His plans also sought to strengthen the
by promoting inspection. Above set the
disease analogy
main
all
Blackburn sought
task of prison architecture as the regu-
produced
a search for the sources of conta-
spread. Prison reformers feared the contamination that resulted
the untried mingled with the convicted, debtors shared the
those convicted of misdemeanors intermixed with those guilty of
formers were especially anxious about the effects of
same wards
more
men and women
as felons, or
serious offenses. Re-
intermingling and the
danger of allowing young offenders to communicate with mature criminals. The categories
were mundane and predictable, but the reformers invested immense energy in the discovery of these distinctions.
It
investment of time and rate these classes
was the
belief in the contagious nature of crime that
money in prison construction.
spawned
the
Blackburn's designs promised to sepa-
and so prevent contamination. Prison walls were the
cure.
The challenge
presented to prison reformers was to identify the dangerous and endangered groups and to properly allocate offenders
For the two decades
was George Onesiphorus stirred
cost
among
after the
these various categories.
death of Howard, the leading advocate of prison reform
Paul. In the aftermath of Howard's visit to Gloucester, local officials
themselves to reform the city
and scope of reform.
jail,
but the
Paul's intervention in
effort
became mired
in
acrimony over the
1783 dramatically transformed the
situation.
Paul was the son of a successful clothier, and after the death of his father he settled
down to
enjoy the status of a landed gentleman. Frustrated in his efforts to gain election to Parliament,
he turned to prison reform. In a speech delivered to a county meeting he pointed to the
92
/
Randall
McGowen
deaths from jail fever of five prisoners recently released from confinement. that existed in the local prisons
approved his proposal and sanctioned the
effort to secure
new county jail and
five bridewells.
rize the
building of a
He listed the abuses
and proposed an ambitious program of reform. The meeting parliamentary legislation to autho-
By 1785 Parliament approved the plan and Paul secured designs from Blackburn. The
new
facilities
were opened by 1792, with room
for
some
four
hundred prisoners and
of forty-six thousand pounds.
The regime
onment system, with
third of a sentence passed in solitude. In
rized the
the
first
main ambition
at a cost
established; at Gloucester included a stage impris-
of his program: "Their clothing
1792 Paul summa-
comfortable, yet humiliating;
is
secluded from the society of their friends, they are daily visited by gentlemen attentive to
and bodily welfare; food
their spiritual life
and
health, whilst the use of
is
and of corruption,
or partial indulgence,
of the prison were just as important.
desired that this official be
A
drawn from
prepared for them sufficient for
is
money
officers of the prison
lain
would have no
all
every
the purposes of
means
of luxury,
management
governor held central power in the prison, and Paul a higher class than
men
to
fill
were the jailers of the
the post.
It
interest in fees or profits; the
past.
was not enough governor had
He lent that the
new respon-
record-keeping, inspecting prisoners, and disciplining subordinates. The chap-
was given independent authority
of justices
this denial,
prevented." Paul's proposals for the
is
his support to the search for ex-military
sibilities for
denied and, by
was made responsible
to report
remind us not only of the importance of the between 1770 and 1820 but
on
the governor's conduct,
and
a
committee
for visiting the prison three times a quarter. Paul's efforts
also of
local level as the scene for
how many
most penal innovation
of the basic elements of reform were widely
accepted by this time.
The National Debate over Punishment Significantly, penal
reform did not become a partisan issue during the years of the wars with
revolutionary France. At a time
when many
other humanitarian causes were viewed with
suspicion because they were tainted with revolutionary associations, prison reform advanced.
The explanation trol
their
power and
justices tive
lies in
under the con-
the fact that the prison remained an institution firmly
of traditional local authorities.
They initiated changes. Parliamentary legislation enhanced
their prestige, as well as their responsibility.
The improved
concerned about the challenges of vagrancy and rural crime;
short-term punishment for petty offenses.
It
promised
it
jail
also aided
provided a more
effec-
to
produce moral reform without
more
striking because this situation
upsetting the old social order.
The lack
of sharp debate over the prison
contrasts with
what would seem
the
is all
a closely related issue, capital
punishment. The increasing
use of confinement was also accompanied by a growing disinclination to impose any public
punishment, such as whipping and the gallows, that ing.
Many
penal reformers were
critical of a
relied
on the spectacle of human
suffer-
criminal code that imposed death for a wide
range of offenses, but there was no consistent effort to alter that code in the eighteenth century. Justices by
1800 were
them
It
against
in principle.
less likely to
was only
in
1808
impose such that
penalties, but
few spoke out
Samuel Romilly inaugurated
a
campaign
The Well-Ordered Prison
/
93
A
1
795 engraving of County
the Gloucester
Gaol, which was designed by architect
William Blackburn. Blackburn believed that highly ordered architecture could foster self-control
and
nal behavior.
law by radically circumscribing the use of the death penalty. De-
to ameliorate the criminal
spite the steady
advance of prison reform, Romilly's proposals met with heated opposition
and made headway only slowly over the next two decades. Although the two causes were intimately related, the difference in the reaction to
them
reveals the fissures in the seemingly
monolithic movement. But the contest over the gallows took place on another plane. Even
though fewer individuals were being executed, the symbolic significance of the execution remained as important as ever display of the
power
to conservative politicians.
that enlisted religious
meanings and symbolism.
It
so closely identified with a particular conception politicians
sought to defend
Reformers tives
defended
demanded
like it:
it
its
practice.
that
it
it
was because and
this
form of punishment was
practice of social relations that
Tory
with such tenacity.
was public and emphasized the discretionary element of justice. They
ultimate
exercise discretion.
offered a public
Romilly condemned the gallows precisely for the reasons the conserva-
a justice that
rather than
The execution
of the state. Political authority sought to find legitimacy in a ritual form
was neutral and
predictable, that celebrated
procedural fairness
its
moment. They wanted
to circumscribe the authority of the judge to
drew too much
attention to the personal element in judicial
Such
acts
Punishment should not depend on
a personal decision
but should be so mechanical
could be calculated. The reformers also condemned the public nature of punishment.
The execution excited the wrong kind of emotions;
it
hardened those
who watched
rather
than softening them and making them gentler. The reformers invariably turned to the prison as
embodying
the proper form of punishment.
aspects of the unreformed prison, to achieve a greater control
omy
of the convict at the
The image
private.
same time
of the gallows repeated the worst
turbulence and unpredictability. The reformers wanted
over punishment, to regulate
punishment was carried out in
ments the
its
that
rituals of public displays of
its
operation and
The reformed prison sought it
left
no place
power gave way
effect.
to
In the prison,
reduce the auton-
for the observer. In the
reform argu-
to the technologies of institutions for
ratio-
94
/
McGowen
Randall
managing people and shaping minds. Prisons did not merely employed a minimal
level of severity in
inflict
needless and excessive pain; they
order to secure the proclaimed goal of reform-
ing the individual. In
1810 Romilly rose
in Parliament to
propose resurrecting the Penitentiary Act of 1779.
The government responded by appointing the Holford Committee question of penal reform. This committee canvassed
reform in the preceding decades. Paul in Gloucestershire.
testified
to
examine the whole
many who had been
on the reform
Jeremy Bentham was questioned about
principles he
active in prison
had
tried to realize
his twenty-year struggle, begin-
ning in 1792, to design and construct his model prison, the panopticon. Bentham's scheme for the prison
emphasized inspection and
the eighteenth century, that
labor.
Bentham produced an
had not been achieved
Although both themes had been discussed
in
idiosyncratic vision that carried each to a pitch
was
before. Yet the real significance of his appearance
that
it
afforded the committee the occasion to reject decisively the idea that prisons could be privately
managed
for profit.
an idea was intolerable
Bentham had
offered to run the penitentiary
to other reformers. Their revulsion revealed
under contract. Such
how
new
deeply the
had penetrated. Prison reform had been carried
principles of administrative responsibility
forward by those
who condemned
stripes feared the
danger of abuse in a prison not subject to oversight. They also mistrusted
the old system of a jailer relying
the operation of the profit motive both ers.
They wanted
to see the prison
on prison managers and
as
on
fees.
Reformers of all
an inducement
for prison-
operated along humanitarian lines and with the goal of
producing a religious conversion in the convict.
The Holford Committee
ment
that
once again came
the growing strength of a prison reform
itself testified to
conditions became a setting within which reformers could advance their sures.
One product
of this attention
was
much
more
radical
mea-
the decision to undertake the construction of a cost a half million
pounds to construct and was
criticism, the prison represented
an important step in the na-
national penitentiary at Millbank. Although
immediately subject to
move-
to occupy a national stage. Parliamentary investigation of prison
it
tionalization of the question of imprisonment. Millbank,
designed to hold one thousand inmates.
Its
opened
in 1816,
was
a
huge prison,
prominent location in London, as well as
its
complicated arrangement of pentagons surrounding a hexagon, precipitated unprecedented public discussion.
By the 1820s reformers were
less likely to
to national agitation to secure their ers'
positions
became more
look to the local bench and more likely to turn
schemes. Although not always openly expressed, reform-
hostile to the traditional
power exercised by
the magistracy.
success of measures taken to improve health and impose a degree of order
contented. They thought the prison should do more, that
H. G. Bennet, a prominent Bedfordshire,
was one such
Whig critic.
politician
who had
it
had not
The
left idealists dis-
yet realized
its
purpose.
played a role in prison reform in
"The occasional humanity of a
sheriff,"
he argued, "rem-
edies one abuse, relieves one misery, redresses one wrong, cleanses a sewer, whitewashes a wall; but the pline,
main
evils of
want of food,
air,
clothing, bedding, classification, moral disci-
and consequently moral amendment, remains
from the increase
in the
as before." In part the
numbers confined, which overwhelmed
problem arose
existing arrangements. At
The Well-Ordered Prison
both Gloucester and Petworth, overcrowding undermined implied a heightened Ironically
many
demand
95
But such criticism
uniformity and an increased expectation for thoroughness.
for
of the prisons that were criticized in the second decade of the nineteenth
century had been "reformed" in the in journals
earlier reforms.
/
wake
of Howard's
visits.
The appearance of such
articles
with a national readership marked one other aspect of this nationalization of the
was
prison question. In this milieu the tendency
to define local
arrangements not as occa-
sions for experimentation but as excuses for the continuation of abuses.
reformers and magistrates had harmonized in the
If
the aims of penal
eighteenth century, they had begun to
late
diverge by the early nineteenth century.
The Influence oj the Quakers
A
leading role in the revival of penal activism through national organization and with a na-
tional
audience was occupied by a small group of evangelically minded Quakers. Prison re-
number
form, however, was only one of a wide
Quakers during these
years.
William Allen,
of issues that claimed the attention of the
a proprietor of a
cern, illustrates the character of Quaker involvement. Allen in Lancastrian school reform,
and
in the operation of a Spitalfields
of the founders of the Society for Diffusing Information also pressed the cause of criminal
in 1811. In
1813 he began
London pharmaceutical con-
was active in the
on the Death Penalty in 1808, and he
law reform in a journal, The Philanthropist, which he launched
visiting prisoners in
Newgate on
prisoners there. Appalled by the disorder
and
riot
to the prisoners. After a four-year hiatus she
a regular basis. In the
Newgate
his coreligionist Elizabeth Fry entered the female side of
ties
Fields. Fry
became
a celebrity, aided
same year
to bring clothes to the
she encountered, she soon began to preach
returned to Newgate
committee, while her brother-in-law, Samuel Hoare, began to
Cold Bath
antislavery cause,
soup kitchen. He was one
by the
visit
at
the
head of
a female
another London prison,
series of articles describing her activi-
and published by her brother, the Quaker theologian J. J. Gurney. Prominent Londoners
flocked to the prison to hear her sermons
seemed proof not only
and
to
marvel
that religion could reform but that
in character. This activity lent luster to a
campaign
that
on the
prisoners. Here
at
her
it
produced the only true
effect
demanded a wider role
alteration
for religion in
defining the purpose of the prison.
This activism sprang in part from a deep sense of personal unworthiness, which shared
much with
the evangelical spirituality of the day. Nonetheless the Quakers displayed a con-
fidence in a divine providence that exerted itself to improve humanity. availability of
created in
an "inner
them an
light" to all people.
internal
agony
that not only led
them
to identify
world but also produced in them a desire to witness to their activity.
The awareness of
suffering testified to one's
constantly struggled against their
power of faith bility of the
to
They believed
in the
Their worldly success in banking and industry
own fallen natures,
own
these
faith
with the outcasts of the
by
their philanthropic
spiritual condition.
While they
Quakers were so confident of the
reform the convicts that they hurried to the prisons. The seeming incorrigi-
criminal was the result not of
The Quakers opposed punishments hardness and insensitivity that found
human
nature but of a mistaken punishment.
that afflicted the body.
its fullest
Such penalties produced
a
expression in the disorder of the prison. The
96
/
McGowen
Randall
and dissipation ... the mixed din of
"idleness, clamor,
appalled them. They
demanded order and
and profanity
fiddling, laughing,"
Quaker penal thought was
quiet in the prison.
distinguished by a belief in reformation as the only real task of punishment and the convic-
by the exercise of personal influence. In
tion that this goal could be achieved
prison, sary."
Gurney advised,
He
by kindness; chains
a well-run
are therefore unneces-
noted, "They appeared to us to be subdued and softened by the gentleness with
which they were and
"the prisoners are ruled
treated."
Fry and
Gumey
religious influence. Rather they relied
true religious principles.
The
social relationship established
the prisoner produced reform. belief but also in the
openness
The
work
did not advocate any particular regime of
on personal contact
a consciousness of
between the humanitarian and
prisoner's proof of reform
to this relationship.
produce
to
came not only
The Quakers put
in the
avowal of
great faith in the value of
voluntary efforts carried out by groups of laypeople within the jails. Displaying considerable organizational ability, they set
up committees and produced
prisons. "If throughout the country," wrote tees to visit
lightened,
and reform the prisoners were
numbers would be softened
to
become
into virtue,
producing reform, instead of misery operating
The Quakers galvanized the public by
regular schedules for visiting the
one proponent of these arrangements, "commit-
to
general, the evils of captivity
would be
and kindness would become the means of deepen crime."
their activity in the
immediate aftermath of the
Napoleonic Wars, renewing the prison question by exposing abuses. In particular they created a heightened anxiety around the figure of the individual prisoner, creating both a sym-
pathy for his plight and a
demand
established religion as a
more
ments and proposing
new
a
for a
central
regime appropriate to his condition. In doing
medium
so, they
for articulating the failure of existing arrange-
vision for the goal of reformation. In their
their publication of proposals to the public they
own
and
visiting
circumvented the magistracy. Their
in
call for
voluntary action as the basis for a permanent penal policy proved Utopian, but their organizational
flair
One
and
of their
zeal for publicity
most successful
had
efforts
a considerable
impact on
political discussions.
was the creation of the Society
for the
Improvement
of Prison Discipline (SIPD), founded in 1816. This group enlisted the support not only of
prominent philanthropists but of powerful politicians as national and the local levels.
Its
well.
bers appeared before parliamentary committees, providing a
The SIPD sought
a
applied pressure
new kind
at
and
both the its
mem-
of expert testimony.
to influence architectural plans for constructing prisons, offering detailed
comments on every aspect tise to
It
reports were frequently reprinted in the press,
of design.
The
society brought a
new level
of precision
and exper-
penal questions, ironically displacing and discrediting the voluntary efforts lauded by
Quaker
like Fry.
tions than
on
a
The SIPD focused more
attention
on the
practical
arrangements of institu-
concern for the prisoner. The discussion of proposals for
more
increasingly conducted in a
new
prisons was
technical language that limited the influence of the amateur
philanthropist.
The SIPD became an advocate advance
this cause
information for
its
through reports.
for greater centralization of English prisons
its activities.
They lobbied
Committee members for the
visited prisons
to
and collected
adoption of a radial design for the prison, a
design that promised not only the rational organization of space but also the of inspection within the prison. Although the
and helped
SIPD announced
that
its
fullest
object
measure
was reform of
The Well-Ordered Prison
the offender,
it
pursued
Design would frustrate victs to see the
its
more
policy through an ever
attempts
all
at
system of policing the prison.
total
communication and any
efforts
on
the part of the con-
world inside or beyond the prison wall. Perhaps more revealing of the
conception of the prison was
97
/
society's
advocacy of the treadwheel. This device, introduced in the
its
second decade of the century, was composed of a series of steps on a giant wheel and was propelled by the prisoners' climbing motion. By 1824 the
mechanism. The treadwheel had many virtues
ated by the uneducated all
and provided the prisoners with
independence in regulating
the
same burden.
It
some
fifty-four prisons
in the eyes of the SIPD. exercise.
It
It
had adopted
could be oper-
deprived the convicts of
own labor while supposedly exposing each individual to
their
gave the authorities the
fullest
measure of control because they
set the
pace and the resistance of the wheel. The regime was also one that could be imposed in every prison.
Above
all it
promised
to reconcile the
competing aims whose
conflict
overshadowed
every discussion of punishment: the struggle between reform and severity. The SIPD turned to the technologies of construction isfied
and machinery
to
support
discretion with mechanical force, the properly constructed cell
The Although the idea
that a prison
who
penal philosophy of those
maintained that too activities of the
strident
much
for the convict?
goal
by replacing human
and the treadwheel.
Reform
should deter potential offenders was always a part of the
sought the reform of the prison,
critics
from the beginning
rising influence of the prison chaplain
reaction.
The public debate over
on the following dilemma: was too much being done done
its
deterrence was sacrificed to the elusive goal of reform. But the
Quakers and the
and self-conscious
Critics of
claim to have perfectly sat-
its
each ambition. In each case the SIPD proposed to realize
produced
a
more
the prison increasingly centered
to the convict, or
was too much being
So long as the gallows remained the symbolic center of punishment, the
prison advanced under the banner of reform. But once the prison emerged as the dominant
form of punishment, some
critics
contended that
it
was
flawed.
The
earliest
complaints sug-
gested that prisoners were coddled, that they were fed too well, that county funds were wasted to
provide indulgences that the average working family was denied. "Those salutary ideas of
loathsomeness and misery," wrote one author in 1823, "which
which naturally tend of the cleanliness the walls."
ment
to the prevention of crimes,
cannot
fail
to
men associate with a jail, and much weakened by a sight
be
and order, the decent apparel and seeming comfort, which are found within
He concluded, "A prison ought
to
be a place of terror to those without, of punish-
to those within." Despite their discontent
with the direction of reform, these
critics
did
not have an alternative to the prison.
What they did have was a
different story
about the prisoner.
If
the reformers appealed to
sentiment in their highly charged portrayals of suffering humanity abandoned in dungeons, the critics used a scathing of humanitarians.
humor
to
mock what
The Whig essayist Sydney Smith was an to criminals. it is,"
The
they saw as the misguided and naive efforts
They provided a sketch of the convict
as clever,
immoral, and hypocritical.
early master of such attacks
successful prison, he feared, might well
do
on the
"softness"
a disservice to society.
he complained, "we object to that spectacle of order and decorum
one shop, taylors in another, weavers in a
third, sitting
down
to a
shown "Hence
—carpenters
meal by ring of
bell,
in
and
98
/
Randall
McGowen
We
receiving a regular portion of their earnings.
other side of the wall, or so very
little
have seemed the main cost of punishment
he portrayed criminals as caring more
that
was an antidote
to
—
for
the loss of freedom.
gloom and sadness wisely and
intentionally
of Smith's recommendations
was
horror, not excited
and discredit, though the prisoner
may
return from
man." Whereas the reformers appealed
Smith appealed
Punishment
more
so were
in the
sified effort to
ideas as the
it
to the
a better scholar, a better artificer,
good of the prisoner as
the goals of severity
and
the justification
what were
essentially
and deterrence.
1820s offered a confused picture. Many prisons had been rebuilt and
healthful as well as
passed through the
the
striking feature
He feared that the SIPD erred on the He wrote, "A prison may lose its terror
to the well-being of society to justify
same measures but directed now toward
filth,
—by
diet.
and education in jails."
side of "a system of indulgence
lives de-
to prison,"
austerity
employed the same language and
reform schemes: the regulation of space, time, and
for their regime,
do so because
by the ancient
thrown over such an abode." The
that they
it."
He wanted a prison
and extortion of jails; but by calm, well-regulated, well-watched
disease,
to
such freedom, a place of "sorfiow and wailing." "A return
—
the
He was able
freedom, one of indulgence and debauch.
illicit
on the
life
luxury than freedom. Felons also lived
he advised, "should be contemplated with horror
a better
better than real
it is
most authors an undervaluing of what might
In expressing this thought, Smith shared with
voted to the pursuit of an
are afraid
worse, that nobody will have any fear to encounter
initiative of
more rigorous
Robert Peel
at the
The Gaol Act of 1823,
for those confined.
Home
marked
Office,
impose uniformity throughout the country.
It
a dramatically inten-
forbade the use of alcohol in
prisons and called for the appointment of a surgeon and a chaplain. Facilities for instruction
were
to
act also
be provided.
A committee of justices was required to visit jails on a regular basis. The
proposed a system of classification
compromise.
was made
It left
a
for the prisons.
wide measure of latitude
to close small jails.
force these measures. Prisons
The
in the
But in most respects the act was a
hands of local
legislation also failed to
authorities,
empower
had become more forbidding places
and no
after forty years of inter-
mittent reform, but they lacked the staff to enforce the most severe regulations.
one hundred prisons had fewer than ten officers as late as
1835. There was
still
officers,
whereas only
fifteen
difficult to control.
to
fifteen
an intimacy and informality in the operation of most
But they were more isolated and a
the prison population. Both reform groups such as the
Smith continued
More than
had more than
prisons. Debtors continued to be a special case, preserving their rights
remaining
effort
the government to en-
be discontented with
this situation.
and customs and
much smaller proportion of
SIPD and
critics of
Punishment
still
reform such as
seemed too haphaz-
ard and uncertain. It is
tempting to portray each stage in the transformation of the prison as culminating in
a self-confident victory for
some scheme
or design. But
more
often those involved with
ing policy expressed frustration or a sense of impotence. Peel said as to
Smith in 1826. He wrote
to Australia every year
mained
in England.
"I
at a
time
in a letter
mak-
he sent
when several thousand offenders were being transported
and when the hulks confined many of the serious offenders who
re-
admit," he conceded, "the inefficiency of transportation to Botany
Bay, but the whole question of what
He did not think
much
is
called secondary
punishment
is full
of difficulty."
that the hulks represented a desirable solution, but he feared that solitary
The Well-Ordered Prison
punishment required "too
delicate a
He concluded by returning in
any other way: "The
of proper
and
theme
to the
real truth
hand
is
the
in the
/
99
enforcement of it to be generally available."
that there
were simply too many convicts
number of convicts is
to handle
too overwhelming for the
means
punishment." Peel acknowledged the importance of every idea ad-
effectual
vanced by the reformers even as he justified his
failure to institute
any of them.
The Controversy over Systems of Discipline a sense of crisis over the direction of penal policy prevailed. In
By the 1830s
13,700 people had been committed for increased to 27,200.
The number
trial for
serious offenses;
of prisoners nearly doubled
1820 some
by 1840 the number had
between 1820 and 1840. The
range of punishments, especially transportation and the hulks, seemed to have no effect this
inexorable
statistics
in crime
was
as great in rural as in
assumed an even darker form when considered disorders that accompanied the Reform
The
society.
The growth
rise.
urban
areas.
in the context of the general state of
Bill
agitation
were quickly followed by
a deeply disturbing outbreak of incendiarism as rural laborers across southern
new machinery. There were
tested against
riots
on
The criminal
England pro-
connected with the interdiction of the "new"
Poor Law, particularly in northern areas of the country. These movements were overshad-
owed Police
by the
in turn
rise of
Chartism and the disturbing image of an organized working class.
and penal reform were offered
as possible remedies to the
ills
that afflicted the nation.
In seeking to explain the failure of traditional arrangements, prison reformers turned to a familiar
The
argument, that the inadequately reformed prison was itself the source of the trouble.
feeling
was
so, prisoners
that prisoners
were
still
too free to communicate
among themselves.
contaminated the younger or less-experienced prisoners. Critics complained that tion
had
failed to
of the offense
stem
this
committed rather than the degree of his
now climaxed
of that culture
by imposing a regime of silence.
nicating, they
would be
seduce others to a
life
less resistant to the
of sin
this date the English
in America.
and
If
to detect
Auburn
in
in different
It
a
for those
somewhat more
also vested in the
a report in
1834
that offered a survey
ways and with it,
who violated its
different costs.
prisoners the rule.
ex-military
posed
a
man
worked together but
in
emphasis on the development of
pessimistic view of the chances of converting the
to impose. Despite the necessity of
like G. L. Chesterton,
necessary severity
to
silent sys-
Guards were instructed
employing more
achieve such control, the system could claim to be less expensive than
To an
The
governor a considerable discretion to decide which offenses
needed punishment and what penalty staff to
commu-
less able to
and the separate systems. Each promised
New York State. Under
by punishments
and took
1780s as
idleness.
even the smallest gesture. This system placed
habits
offender.
at
in the
had become fascinated with penal experiments being conducted
communication but
tem was employed
What had begun
prisoners could be prevented from
William Crawford, of the SIPD, published
a silence reinforced
work
guilt.
in the effort to gain the total elimination
regime intended to reform them and
of two systems of prison discipline, the silent
disrupt prison
classifica-
contagion because an offender was assigned to a class on the basis
an attempt to defeat prisoner culture
By
In doing
gave each other support and passed along information. The hardened offenders
upon a
class that
its
alternative.
governor of Cold Bath Fields, the system im-
was incapable of reform. He defended
the system
ARCHBISHOP M1TTY HIGH SCHOOL LIBRA** San Jos«, California
100
/
McGowen
Randall
as a practical
compromise between the extreme
measures that
most
prevailed in
still
trading at the prison and imposed tighter control
Cold Bath Fields was
prisoners,
goals of the separatists
prisons. Chesterton
was
and the too
on the turnkeys. Despite
a large prison, difficult to
its
lenient
ended
a reformer; he
illegal
many classes of
manage. The average sentence was
only six weeks, scarcely long enough to permit the kind of reform idealized by others. Chesterton believed that the silent system acknowledged the danger of contamination while offering the kind of harsh sentence that represented the
most
that could be expected of nor-
mal punishment. But
it
was the separate system
that attracted the
1830s. Although similar ideas had been offered by efforts
had been made
more
enthusiastic supporters in the
Hanway
in the 1780s,
and occasional
them, the years between 1835 and 1850 saw the most sus-
to realize
tained effort to reconstruct the prison along separatist lines. As practiced in Philadelphia, the
system isolated the convict for long hours in his
The
skill
of architects
oners in their
cells
and builders was devoted
and
hillside or distant buildings
prepared the mind
them
to depriving
own
cell to
commune
to preventing
with his conscience.
communication between
of any glimpse of the outside world.
beyond the wall was believed
to frustrate reform.
The
pris-
sight of a
The separation
impressions and the soul to hear the message offered by
to receive better
the chaplain. English advocates of this system, such as Crawford, believed prisoners should
be
work
set to
in their cells, but they did not think that labor alone
would produce
the
necessary changes. The separate system promised a true conversion, not the temporary obe-
dience produced under the silent system. Proponents of separation complained that the other
system was a mere compromise defended by half-measure men. The
demned because
it
vested too
much
discretion in the governor
silent
and
system was con-
relied too heavily
on
physical inflictions such as whipping.
The separate system employed
the passive weight of architecture to secure
ends. Soli-
its
tude was broken only by the soothing influence of a Christian message offered by the chaplain.
Not
surprisingly, a talented
group of chaplains became the foremost defenders of the
system. John Clay at Preston, John Field at Reading, and Joseph Kingsmill and John Burt at Pentonville
nors over
became
who
established by the Gaol Act of 1823 that only the chaplain
and the
had the necessary
advocates of separation could revitalization of religion ety.
They challenged magistrates and prison gover-
celebrities in their day.
should control the prison. Clay attacked both the system of classification
call for
activities of
Fry and the Quaker
support upon the idea, pervasive in
was the solution
The prison achieved prominence
He held
to a host of social
problems
afflicting
among
The
this period, that the
English soci-
as a central battleground in this struggle.
sustained in society by the spread of irreligion and immorality it
visitors.
insight into the true character of the offender.
Crime was
the lower orders, but
could be isolated and counteracted by the application of religion to the souls of the worst
offenders.
The separate system was significantly promoted by the 1835 report of a committee of the
House able
of Lords.
The committee concluded
and proposed two measures
to secure
be reported to the secretary of state. to visit all English prisons.
The
On
that it.
more uniformity in prison
On the
practice
one hand prison rules and
the other the government
was
was
diets
desir-
were
to
to appoint inspectors
legislation that followed gave these inspectors only limited
The Well-Ordered Prison
101
/
The dormitory oj the Cold Bath Fields Prison.
The
silent sys-
tem employed
at
Cold
Bath required guards to detect and punish any attempts among prisoners to communicate. However, as this
engraving indicates,
overcrowding and understating this
system
made
difficult to
implement. From
The
Criminal Prisons of
London and Scenes of Prison Life (1862)
by Henry
Mayhew and
John Bmny.
powers. In particular they could not order the adoption of reform or even nation of an incompetent
But of the
jailer.
Reverend Whitworth Russell
—
tact in pursuit of this goal
regime. Since Russell
inspectors chosen, two
make changes
ticularly well placed to influence
favorable to their system.
and were unwilling
was the cousin of the Whig
and Crawford continued
demand
the resig-
— Crawford and
the
proved unstinting advocates of separation. They used their
reports to coerce local authorities to little
five
government
to exercise
to
politician
Even
policy.
They displayed
compromise on any point
to their
Lord John Russell, he was par-
after their
deaths in 1847, Russell
an influence over English prison
policy.
Their greatest triumph came with the opening of Pentonville prison in 1842. The prison
was
a
monument
to faith in
an
ideal.
It
became the model
for the construction of
prisons in the decades that followed and attracted worldwide attention. prisoners in separate
could observe each
cells.
cell
Four wings radiated out from
The construction of
door.
a central point,
the walls hindered
many
local
The prison held 520 from which one
communication be-
tween prisoners, and even the guards wore padded shoes so that they would not disturb the silence. victs
The guards were
and kept
as strictly controlled as the prisoners, forbidden to talk to the con-
to a steady patrol
by
a
to English engineering; every detail cell
was exactly the same
was intended Prisoners
—
system of time clocks. The prison was also a
was ingenious, from the plumbing
thirteen feet deep, seven wide,
punishment,
to individualize
it
did
wore hoods when they emerged from
numbers. They had separate
stalls in
its
monument
to the lighting.
and nine high. For
a
Each
regime that
best to erase any trace of individuality.
their cells. Their
names were replaced by
chapel as well as separate exercise yards. Pentonville
represented the apotheosis of the idea that a totally controlled environment could produce a
reformed and autonomous individual.
The Rise of the Prison Administrators Whereas the 1840s seemed the prison, the
to
1850s revealed
mark
the triumph of a particular
a retreat
from
this ideal.
Even
and rigorous conception of
as the prison
emerged
as the
102
McGowen
Randall
/
The exercise yard at Pentonville Prison, an institution that
was
in-
spired by the writings oj Jeremy
Bentham. To
ensure prisoners' total isolation,
inmates at
Pentonville were forced to
wear hoods when-
ever they emerged
from their cells. From The Criminal Prisons of London and Scenes of Prison Life (1862) by Henry
Mayhew and John Binny.
central institution in the struggle against crime, the fundamental assumptions that
ported
its rise
had sup-
were being questioned. The separate system was not repudiated, but
it
was
modified to accommodate pragmatic considerations and was reinterpreted by proponents of greater severity.
The man who oversaw these adjustments, succeeding Russell and Crawford,
was Major Joshua Jebb. Jebb
first
served as surveyor-general of prisons, responsible for ap-
proving plans for the construction of
new
jails,
and then
as
chairman of the Directors of
Convict Prisons until his death in 1863. Although Jebb began his career under Russell and
Crawford, and contributed to the spread of the separate system, he was never a fanatical
He was more pragmatic
supporter of that system. rise to
power symbolized
in his attitude
the resurgence of the ex-military
prison governor. Even as a
number
of chaplains published
tem, their influence was in decline. Yet this decline in no
toward various regimes. His
men who dominated memoirs
that
the post of
defended
way hindered
their sys-
the spread of the
among those who criticized a regime of What recommended it to such figures was the
Pentonville model. Separation found ready support
chaplains and the extravagant hopes of reform.
hatred the regime produced in convicts. Although the separate system had been advanced as a
method
for securing the reformation of offenders,
severity that
it
was
easily
it
imposed
embraced by those whose main
interest
a
scheme of such rigorous
was
in
punishing criminals
and producing deterrence.
The
central challenge Jebb faced
the rise of
seemed
what came
to satisfy
a military
man
was
the task of fashioning a prison regime that
and transportation. Rather than adopt any
replace the hulks
to
some
be called the progressive stage system. Each segment of the regime
constituency, whereas
its
overall shape reflected the orderly
faced with the task of organizing a large prison establishment.
consisted of a term of separate confinement, although there was
purpose or length. Complaints about the a reduction of the
would
particular scheme, he oversaw
effects of separation
little
on the
The
mind
first
of
stage
agreement about
its
prisoner's sanity led to
term from eighteen to twelve and eventually to nine months. During the
The Well-Ordered Prison
103
/
second stage the prisoners were sent to public works prisons, where they worked together arduous tasks that would benefit the public. Major
facilities
Portsmouth, and Chatham between 1847 and 1856. Prisoners were
work building
set to
breakwaters and fortifications or working in gangs to reclaim moorland. Although
was
it
now
argued that such associated labor would produce contamination, popular opinion was
on the
side of hard
The
work
that
would produce some
third stage involved the
convicts based
on
their
useful result.
most controversial element.
good conduct while
at
were opened at Portland, Dartmoor,
It
offered conditional release to
an acknowledg-
in prison. This step represented
ment of what proponents of the separate system had ignored:
that prison administrators
had
management
and
no system could
ren-
concerns that conflicted with ideological purity
der prisoners simply passive targets of a penal regime.
that
A remission of sentence was a standard
device for securing the cooperation of prisoners during confinement by holding out a ise
of early release. Those
who administered
prisons
knew how important such a
prom-
policy was.
But to both penal reformers and advocates of deterrence, this policy looked like a dangerous
The contest arose from a dispute over how remission was earned,
relaxation of penal discipline.
by minimal observance of the acts of
rules or
by some extraordinary proof of reform. Penal servitude
1853 and 1857 wrestled with these complicated questions, whereas
reminded the authorities
that prisoners
a series of riots
were not passive observers of these decisions. In the
end, administrative considerations triumphed over ideological purity; prisoners earned re-
mission by not giving their jailers problems. Public opinion in the 1850s, alarmed in part by the impending end of the system of transportation,
was turning away from sympathy with
eral violent robberies
issue.
convicts. Panics associated with sev-
committed by convicts released on
The influence of the prison
in
ticket-of-leave served to focus the
shaping the experience of crime
for the
wider public can
be seen here. Writers complained of the "criminal classes," a group most easily identified as those
who returned time and again to jail. Newspapers and politicians both demanded longer
sentences under a more severe regime. The popular cry was for "hard labor, hard
and
fare,
hard bed." The prison had become the inescapable center for the debate about crime. The that this reaction against the
the regime created
language of reform did not result in any significant alteration of
by reform
casts a revealing light
created the belief that the prison
produced reformist
a
was the
right
on the
way
earlier efforts.
The reformers had and they had
to deal with criminals,
regime for gaining control over the individual, a regime that lent
and
a
fact
both
itself to
retributivist interpretations.
The Carnarvon Committee and the Ideal oj Deterrence Surprisingly, the bitterest complaints against the
prison regime
compromises involved
came not from reformers but from advocates
in the
mid-century
of greater severity.
Such
senti-
ments dominated the proceedings of a committee of the House of Lords, the Carnarvon Committee, appointed in
1863
to
reexamine the question of discipline in local prisons. The
committee was composed of politicians aroused by what they saw as an indulgence of convicts.
Although they targeted reform
paigns than they perhaps realized.
shaped in an appropriate fashion,
as the problem, they shared
Above it
all
would
more with
they continued to believe that
significantly reduce crime.
the earlier
if
cam-
the prison
They favored
was
a policy
104
Randall
/
McGowen
of deterrence, but the specific measures they advocated were consistent with a half century of
penal
effort.
These
retributivists
were as willing as
their investigations, the
number
autonomy
earlier reformers to override the
of local authorities in an effort to secure greater uniformity of penal practice. of prisons declined from 187 in
1850
to
126
As
a result of
They
in 1867.
sought to have their proposed rules embodied in parliamentary legislation and enforced by the threat of withdrawal of a treasury grant.
The members bemoaned
differences, as regards construction, labor, diet,
and general
the
"many and wide
discipline," existing in "the vari-
ous Gaols and Houses of Correction in England and Wales, leading to an inequality, uncer-
and
tainty,
punishment, productive of the most prejudicial
inefficiency of
called for a return to the relaxed standards of an earlier day.
more it
rigid
observance of procedures and more centralization. The prison
did not reform prisoners but because
it
tried to
results."
On the contrary,
reform people
who
they
failed
No one
demanded
not because
could not be changed.
Consistent with their skepticism about the reformability of criminals, the Lords were of those
critical
who
assigned a major role to industrial labor or education in the penal re-
gime. They insisted that only the "more strictly penal" portion of the sentence could achieve the central goal of it
all
punishment, deterrence. They applauded the separate system because
disrupted communication and was feared by convicts.
was the lack of any settled was considered
What
light labor,
but in others
it
was defined
as
hard
them
particularly appalled
definition of the phrase "hard labor." In
some prisons mat-making
labor.
The treadwheel and
the
crank were, the committee members insisted, the only punishments worthy of the name "hard labor." The Lords argued that the sentence should not be undercut in any fashion that
would console
the prisoner with the thought that he
was doing something
useful.
No
relax-
ation of diet, labor, or separation should be permitted except in the most extreme cases.
they wanted to put obstacles in the
an option. The diets
as
and
to
way
details of punishment attracted their attention.
make each prisoner sleep on planks during part
something
to
They proposed to reduce prison
of his term.
They saw health less
be preserved than as a minimal standard that the prison regime should ap-
proach as closely as possible in order
The Lords soon discovered prison
And
of surgeons, chaplains, or governors exercising such
to
punish thoroughly.
that their real
opponents were the pragmatic and stubborn
not the sentimental reformers. Those most intimately involved in prison ad-
officials,
ministration revealed
how
often practical considerations rather than consistent policy goals
governed the actual operation of the prison. Governors and surgeons provided anecdotal information rather than clear solutions to penal problems. Each
own
interpretation of existing practice
and of what needed
to
official
seemed
Carnarvon Committee frequently expressed frustration when dealing with Ironically the politicians
had
a
more
to possess his
be done. The members of the their witnesses.
consistent position than the penal "professionals" they
examined. The Lords held stubbornly to the idea that the purpose of the prison was deterrence.
They did not
flinch in the face of contrary evidence. Yet
position seldom gave answers as clear-cut After
fifty
even witnesses friendly
to personal discretion.
One
to their
decisive as they wanted.
years of attempts to turn the prison into a machine, imprisonment
mained subject independence.
and
Governors
in particular
still
had a strong sense of
re-
their
prison surgeon reported that he had written to sixty governors to inquire
into their practices. Based
on
their responses, he noted, "It
is
not merely in different gaols that
The Well-Ordered Prison
there are different instruments of punishment, but in the is
varied from day to day,
and
105
/
same gaol the kind of punishment
at different parts of the day."
Whipping and
irons were used
only rarely, but solitary confinement and the withholding of food were often employed to
punish
Prisons
difficult prisoners.
about one thousand wardens
to
lacked an adequate
still
sand. Despite the Lords' aggressive insistence that ant,
some
of their witnesses stubbornly dissented.
particularly
annoyed them by
certain effect that could be
it
1865 there were only
punishment should be hard and unpleas-
One
could deter.
A
John
of the prison inspectors,
produced by the prison. Perry replied
many other people did in the 1850s many had come to doubt
By the
In
his challenge to their contention that deterrence
confidence" as
turned to the hope that
staff.
cope with an average prison population of eighteen thou-
"deterring
power
that
Perry,
was the one
he had "not so
much
of prison punishments."
the ability of the prison to reform.
Some then
few, like Perry, confessed that they were not sure
what imprisonment could do but acknowledged
that society could not
do without
it.
The Mid-Victorian Prison Experience While reformers and both the
reality of the
retributivists tried to
prison and the use
shape the prison regime to
made
of imprisonment
by the
purposes,
suit their
judicial system dis-
played the substantial limits of their achievement. Judges and magistrates used the prison,
but not in a
way
that cooperated with the ambitions of the designers of penal regimes.
Both
reformers and retributivists believed that long sentences were needed to reform or deter of-
moved
fenders. But sentencing policy
by magistrates less.
less.
in the opposite direction.
imprisonment by the early 1860s, 52,000 were
Of the 12,000 sentenced
months or trast
to
to jails
by higher
Only 2,100 were subjected
some 9,000 debtors were
Of some 74,000 sentenced for
courts, nearly 7,000
terms of one month or
were
for a period of six
to the harshest penalty, penal servitude.
sent to prison,
where they remained,
as debtors
had
By con-
a century
The Carnarvon Committee acknowledged
earlier, a
separate group subject to special rules.
that
could be done for the typical prisoner beyond a short, sharp sentence. The average
little
occupant of the prison
dom
—
the drunkard or the individual
the professional criminal If
who was
who
could not pay a fine
—was
the central features of the eighteenth-century prison
had been abolished by 1865, the
various penal ideals of the reformers had been only imperfectly realized. This failure
imprisonment a
different
sel-
so graphically described in popular debate.
made
kind of experience from what had been imagined. For instance, the
reformers believed in the power of a rationally planned and minutely articulated architecture to transform
human
character. Far
from being neutral and anonymous, however, the actual
mid-Victorian prison building possessed a distinctive personality. The smell of the prison
was
offensive.
The cold produced
a level of suffering that
was incomplete, broken by the sobs and
approached
cruelty.
cries of prisoners at night or the
The
silence
movements
of
guards and the constant opening and closing of doors. Although the goal of separation led to refinements in the prison, these changes often only complicated the task of
numbers bathroom stalls at
moving
large
of prisoners about the building. Convicts were given only a few minutes in the in the
chapel.
morning, and
it
could take up to an hour to get prisoners in and out of the
106
/
Randall
McGowen
Similarly the rituals of prison
worked
often
life
differently than
had been
desired. Re-
formers introduced a regime whose ambition was to erase the old identity of the offender and to destroy the
supposed
No
aspect of
prison
immoral
sociability that
life
life
was thought too
symbolized
different
facilitate
to sustain
bad
Imprisonment was
habits.
this quest.
insignificant to contribute to this result.
New prisoners were
clothed in uniforms and assigned a
intended to
was thought
change by the combined action of stone, routine, labor, and
to create this
number
new
the creation of a
outcome. They
forms were coarse and
ill-fitting.
inspection of the prisoner's
names. These measures were
but numerous prisoners
demeaned and humiliated. The bathwater was
felt
the outset that he
by the spy hole in the
cell
and
The uni-
had no
right of privacy,
door.
Whatever high-minded goals inspired the regime, these aims tended multiplication of rules
testified to a
foul.
The shoes were cheap and uncomfortable. The physical
body established from
a lesson reinforced every day
religion.
initiation into
given a bath and a haircut. They were
in place of their
identity,
The
rituals that
governed prison
life.
to
be
Both reformers and
lost in the
oppo-
their
nents agreed that comfort and pleasure had no place in the prison, that privation was a necessary element of any penal scheme. In practice this agreement led to a relentless hunt to
check communication or deny any petty pleasure. The threat of punishment hung over every proceeding. The ex-military
than
at
men who
staffed prisons
were
far better at detecting infractions
contributing to moral reform. The morning inspection of the cell became a contest
during which the discovery of poorly folded blankets or a stained cup resulted in a mark against one's name. During the early part of their terms, prisoners slept
on
a
plank bed. Their
food was monotonous, unpleasant, and barely adequate. Short-term prisoners received bread
and an oatmeal
gruel.
Those confined
for
more than
three
weeks were given
in addition
potatoes and soup. Prisoners sentenced to hard labor and long sentences were provided with a
few scraps of meat. The food was often of dubious quality and ill-prepared. Hungry prison-
ers
were ready
to eat
rivation of food fulfill
was
anything they came across, whether weeds, candles, or paper. The depthe mainstay of
punishment within the
prison. Convicts
who
failed to
their work quota, were caught talking, or proved sulky might find themselves on a
of bread
and water. The pettiness and
spitefulness of these measures did far
more
diet
to set the
tone for imprisonment than any of the lofty words of spiritual consolation.
One
of the
main aims of
that their characters could different story. Prisoners
the
new
was
to
render prisoners passive so
were inventive
in discovering
ways
to subvert penal discipline.
convicts challenged the regime head-on, and a beating or a
demonstrated the
folly of
week
a
Only
of reduced diet
such attempts. The old hands avoided direct confrontations; they
were the model prisoners
whom
the reformed penal regime
be reshaped. But the evidence offered by prison memoirs told
whom many
commentators suspected of hypocrisy but against
nothing could be proved. They taught
new
prisoners
methods
with each other, shortcuts in finishing work, and the names of guards
for
communicating
who
could be played
upon. Convicts shared food and warned of the approach of guards. They developed ventriloquism, the art of talking without
moving
with the sound of tapping as pipes became the
one's
lips.
The prison
at
a
form of
night was
filled
medium for telegraphic communication. Some
prisoners created chat holes through which they could speak to each other. They relayed
The Well-Ordered Prison
A
/
107
view oj the interior
oj the Surrey
House oj
Correction. After din-
hooded prisoners
ner,
returned
to (heir cells
in single file,
under
close surveillance.
From The Criminal Prisons of London and Scenes of Prison Life (1862) by
Henry
Mayhew and John Binny.
information on where to find nails that would of old rope, easier.
exhausting.
They
told
Some engaged
and other small
in
how an
to step
make oakum picking,
illegal trade
with guards and
luxuries. Witnesses before parliamentary
sigence of prison culture and the solidarities formed
the separation of strands
make that ordeal less among themselves for tobacco
on the treadwheel so
as to
committees
among
testified to the intran-
prisoners.
No other area of prison life exposed the contradictions and tensions of imprisonment so much as health. The reform of incarceration had arisen out of a concern with the sickness and suffering that existed in the old to justify their existence.
But
had crept into the regime under sickness, yet they
jails.
critics
The claim
that
modern
worried that too
prisons protected health served
much relaxation
this banner. Prison officials
of a necessary severity
were often skeptical of reports of
were afraid of the scandal that arose from
illness
and death. Since the
prison surgeon had considerable authority to grant a prisoner release from labor or a better diet, convicts
Some were
had
a
powerful incentive to take advantage of
this
chink in the penal order.
so desperate that they deliberately injured themselves to avoid dangerous or un-
pleasant work. Others pline of the hospital.
became masters
of feigning illness to gain access to the relaxed disci-
The reformers and
retributivists
who
debated possible forms of
imprisonment always imagined reducing the autonomy of the prisoners and the guards
minimum. Prison memoirs
revealed
how
elusive this goal could be.
to a
108
Randall
/
McGowen Conclusion
In the period
The
shape.
between 1780 and 1865, confinement was given a more uniform and exacting
ideals of reformers often played a decisive-role in defining this shape,
the penal practices fostered
the classification of prisoners It
came
to constitute a
way
even though
by reformers long survived the decay of their ideals. For instance,
was born from
a desire to limit the spread of moral contagion.
of organizing the prisoner s progression through his sentence
enlisting his cooperation. All too often strategies that
were intended
to
and
reform prisoners found
acceptance because they increased the severity of confinement or aided in the management of convicts.
The most enduring accomplishment
a place apart
from the world.
dom. Prisoners their days.
It
was
of these years
was the creation of the prison
a realm defined by an ever more thorough loss of
as
free-
suffered few physical punishments, but they were denied any control over
They were permitted almost no
visitors.
Even
their letters
were censored. Com-
munication was conducted under a constant threat of punishment. Any contact that might resemble normal sociability
among
prisoners or with the outside world
became
a target for
controls and prohibitions.
Even
as the prisoners
were more closely controlled and observed, punishment disap-
peared from the experience of most people. The general public became inside of the prison. Society tic
came
to rely
reports about the prisons. Here
less familiar
with the
on the wide dissemination of literary and journalis-
was the other enduring consequence of this
period.
The
prison loomed even larger in the public's imagination as the prisoner disappeared from view.
The prisoner out of sight produced more, rather than at the
less, anxiety.
The public was alarmed
occupant of the "other" world and the possibility of his return
separate time
and space had been created
to their world. This
for the benefit of the offender, as a
way of reforming
him. The order and morality of the prison world was supposed to mirror that of respectable society. But the prison
branded those
regime remained an order of unfreedom and severity.
who had
passed through
it.
The witnesses before
the Carnarvon
returned time and again to the power of the stigma that attached to those prison.
The prison was supposed to individualize treatment,
public never
came
to accept this claim.
ering the true identity of those
who
On the contrary,
passed through
crime, created a uniform criminality
whose
taint
that
no one who contributed
to the penal debates
as such,
it
Committee
who came
out of
produce a "new man." But the
they regarded the prison as discov-
its gate.
Thus
the prison, far from curing
clung to anyone
Prisons were supposed to civilize their occupants, but
admit that the institution or its residents belonged
to
And
it
was
who had been
difficult for
confined.
most in society
to the civilized world. Yet this
to
was an effect
had intended. The prison regime of 1865
not only was the product of the ideals of reformers and the practices of prison administrators, of local initiatives that
had created
and government intervention, but
its
own
logic
and powerful
also
was the outcome of an
institution
necessity.
Acknowledgments Randall
McGowen would like to acknowledge John Beattie and Joanna Innes for their many helpful
comments.
The Well-Ordered Prison
109
/
Bibliographic Note
Anyone
interested in the subject of penal change in the period
between 1750 and 1850 should
consult Michel Foucault's Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan Sheridan
York: Vintage Books, 1979). This the prison
and
relationship to
its
book
a brilliant,
is
modem society.
if
For
difficult
(New
and controversial, interpretation of
my own comments on Foucault, see
"Power
and Humanity, or Foucault among the Historians," in Reassessing Foucault: Power, Medicine, and
Modern
Society:
A
the
and Roy Porter (London: Routledge, 1994). David Garland's Punishment and
Body, ed. Colin Jones
Study
in Social
Theory (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1990) offers an
both historical and theoretical treatments of the transformation of
intelligent discussion of
punishment. J.
Press,
This
M.
Beattie's
Crime and
the Courts in England,
1986) provides an essential introduction
work
is
particularly significant for
Joanna Innes have forced us
to rethink
its
1660-1800 (Princeton: Princeton University
to the operation of justice in early
Brunswick,
Rutgers University Press, 1980), she offers a
for debt, illuminating
1987), she provides a revisionist account of the bridewell,
rhythms of reform in early Christopher Harding 1985),
is
a
modem et al.,
whose
history
tells
much about the
us so
Imprisonment
good introduction
in
England and Wales:
to the general history of
Ignatieff,
A Just
A
Concise History (London:
confinement in England from
Measure oj Pain: The Penitentiary
in the
1750-1850 (New York: Pantheon, 1978), emphasizes the ideological sources
Industrial Revolution,
and the
1555-1800," in Labour, Law, and Crime:
England.
medieval times to the present. Michael
of the prison
Ungovernable People: The English
John Brewer and John Styles (New careful examination of imprisonment
Snyder and Douglas Hay (London: Tavistock Publications,
Historical Perspective, ed. Francis
Croom Helm,
An
by
first,
both the law on debt and the internal organization of the debtors' prison. In
the second essay, "Prisons for the Poor: English Bridewells,
A
essays
Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries, ed.
in the
N.J.:
Two
our understanding of early modem confinement. In the
"The King's Bench Prison in the Later Eighteenth Century," in
and Their Law
modern England.
discussion of the rise of transportation.
role of class conflict in its
English Prison Architecture,
architectural history of the prison but
on prison reform. For a
development. Robin Evans, The Fabrication of Virtue:
1750-1840 (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press,
one that uses design along with other sources
different treatment of the role of ideas in
1982),
to cast
producing change, see
is
an
new light
my articles
"The Body and Punishment in Eighteenth-Century England," Journal of Modern History 59 (1987),
and "A Powerful Sympathy: Terror, the Prison, and Humanitarian Reform in Early NineteenthCentury 1
Britain," Journal of British Studies
700-1850:
25 (1986). Margaret DeLacy's Prison Reform
A Study in Local Administration
in Lancashire,
(Stanford: Stanford University Press, 1986) provides us
with the best study of local prison reform, based on careful analysis of archival sources. Eric Stockdale's A Study ofBedford Prison,
1660-1877 (London: Phillimore, 1977)
is
another useful local
study of an important prison and includes short biographical sketches of some of the central prison reformers. Philip Priestley, Victorian Prison Lives: English Prison Biography,
Methuen, 1985),
offers
an account of prison
life
in Victorian
1830-1914 (London:
England based on two hundred
autobiographies written by prisoners. For a detailed history of administrative change, consult Sean
McConville,
A History of English
Paul, 1981). MartinJ.
Prison Administration,
1750-1877 (London: Routledge and Kegan
Wiener, Reconstructing the Criminal: Culture, Law, and Policy
1914 (Cambridge Cambridge University Press, :
England and links them
to
1
in
England, 1830-
990), charts changes in penal thought in Victorian
wider cultural currents.
CHAPTER FOUR
ACTING THE
PRI!
United States, 1789-1865
David
y
^\
J.
Rothman
he history of the origins and development of the prison system in the United States confronts
what appears
be an extraordinary paradox. In the 1820s
to
and 1830s, when democratic principles were receiving
their
most enthus-
when the "common people" were participating fully in politics and electing Andrew Jackson their president, incarceration became the central feature of criminal justice. At the very moment that Americans began to pride themselves on the openness of their society, when the boundless frontier became the symbol endorsement,
iastic
^
of opportunity
and
equality,
behind walls, in single of freedom
an idea developed: those convicted of crimes would be confined
cells,
and would follow
became more celebrated
rigid
and unyielding
routines.
As principles
in the outside society, notions of total isolation,
unques-
tioned obedience, and severe discipline became the hallmarks of the captive society. Indeed, to
make
prisons,
more
the puzzle
were eager
had ushered
in a
to
intriguing, Jacksonian
show them
new
off to
European
era in the history of crime
The European visitors, on the whole, tended
numbers
to tour the prisons
gland (with a stop
Americans took enormous pride visitors,
—
and boasted
that the
and punishment.
to agree
with
this assessment.
They came
the typical itinerary of a visit to America included
at a textile factory), a
plantation (to see slavery at work),
in their
United States
western settlement (Cincinnati was a
and one of the new
penitentiaries.
distinguished, including such notables as Alexis de Tocqueville
And
New
in
En-
favorite), a
the visitors were
and Gustave de Beaumont
from France. The purported purpose of Tocqueville's tour of the United States in 1831 was to advise the
from
this
Why
French government on the American prison system. The unexpected spin-off
mission was his classic analysis Democracy
what routines did they impose? to inspect their solutions?
and the
in
America.
How Why were they so delighted with
did Jacksonian Americans adopt a prison system?
society,
it,
did they organize
it,
and why did others
and
flock
Answering these questions requires moving between the prison
reckoning not only with crime and punishment but with ideas about social
order, social disorder,
and the destiny of
a
new
republic.
Interior oj the five-
story cellblock oj Ohio
State Prison.
From
Memorials of Prison Life (1850) by]ames Bradley Finley.
112/
David
Rothman
J.
The Colonial Legacy In the seventeenth selves,
and eighteenth
American
centuries, the
colonists, like the British
them-
shared a keen apprehension about criminal behavior. They included within the cat-
egory an exceptionally wide range of conduct, incorporating what actions (idolatry,
blasphemy, and witchcraft) along with
we would think of as sinful
social transgressions (theft, arson,
and murder). But however much they worried about the extent of crime, they saw no prospect of eliminating
it
from
condition and failings
From
their midst.
—men were born
their perspective, crime reflected
in sin
—and not on any
on
the
human
basic flaws in social order.
As
one clergyman informed his audience immediately before the public execution of a criminal, "The natural
man defiles every step he
takes,
and the
filth
thereof redounds to himself." Such
sentiments confirmed that the criminal, like the poor, would always be with us, endemic to the society,
What yond
and
that citizens
little effort
the sinfulness of
siders,
town
residents
and magistrates were
human nature went
as they
law enforcement
—
were then
police forces
as best they could.
it
to a careful distinction
between insiders and out-
on only
called.
was
was
to regard with deep suspicion anyone
to
respond
to
a crime, the
major
who wandered from town to town, rogues
Because the towns lacked formal mechanisms of
were an invention of nineteenth-century
litia
called
cope with
and nonresidents. Although anyone might commit
source of the threat seemed to emanate from those
and vagabonds
to
colonial Americans spent in trying to analyze the sources of crime be-
major
—
riots
who
the basic
means
cities,
and the mi-
for controlling
crime
entered the town and to "warn out," or ban-
those who came without introductions (for example, a letter from the minister in the home community) or without artisanal skills and sufficient property to demonstrate ish,
respectability.
When crimes did occur, colonial towns, like
meted out
their counterparts in England,
wide range of punishments. The most popular sanctions included
fines,
a
whippings, mecha-
nisms of shame (the stock and public cage), banishment, and of course, the gallows. What
was not on the
list
was imprisonment. The
local jails held
men) going through the process of judgment, yet punished, or
that
is,
men
(and
those awaiting
it
trial
was almost always
or convicted but not
men who were in debt without having satisfied their obligations. Which one would be applied to a given offender depended almost as much on
of the existing sanctions
who
he was as on the If
the offender
act that
was
he had committed.
a resident of the town, a person of means,
very serious one, the magistrates would levy a
fine. If the
might well end up on display in the stocks or public cage, neighbors. In Massachusetts, for example, lings; offenders
nal
City, for
to
guilty of
be sneered
to the
at
If
a
property, he
or spit
upon by
drunkenness was fined
unable to pay spent three hours in the stocks.
was an outsider
York
anyone
and the crime was not
townsman had no
on the other hand
his
five shil-
the crimi-
town, he would most often be whipped and then banished. In
New
example, the Mayor's Court between 1733 and 1743 whipped and banished
practically every nonresident guilty of theft.
The primary goal hope
that the
particular
in dispensing
one or another of these penalties was deterrence, in the
punishment would serve
to
keep the offender from repeating the crime in
community. For a town resident
to be displayed as
this
an object of derision before
Perfecting the Prison
/
1
1
3
The Walnut Street jail in J
Philadelphia
770.
Its
in
modest size
and architecture were characteristic of
American
jails
during
the colonial era.
The Library Company of Philadelphia
one's neighbors
would be so embarrassing
whipped would be so
painful that he
ishment represented the town's offender, even
if it
that the offender
would not repeat
effort to
would mend
the offense.
his ways; to
be
By the same token, ban-
avoid the repetition of a crime by getting rid of the
put an adjoining town
at risk.
Magistrates in colonial America never considered the possibility of rehabilitation through
punishment. Their aim was not to reform the offender but ior.
Only when the crime was very grievous,
deserts
In
—
the offender
all,
who
deserves to be executed
efficacy of the
active
if
were so weak and underdeveloped that the
lost all
ment had
worth taking
shame and embarrassment before
cur, the only recourse for the colonists to
compensate
for all the
was
his neighbors?
Were
weaknesses in the criminal justice system, which
that a thief,
damages,
sit
on for
first
if
to execute the offender. In effect, capital punish-
1736 ordered treble
What
these contingencies to oc-
were defined so very broadly. The Massachusetts assembly,
pay
the whip-
in his search for illegal returns, or
capital crimes
to
if
he repeatedly ignored an order of expulsion?
the offender considered the risk of a fine
To
compliance of
and coercive aspects of the law bore an unusually heavy burden. What
ping did not discourage the culprit, or
he
into lawful behav-
enter into the calculus.
punishment depended on the
the offender; the agencies of law enforcement
if
—
him
murder, did the idea of just
criminal justice in the colonial period had a tenuous and haphazard character.
an exceptional degree, the
punitive
to frighten
as in the case of
conviction, be fined or whipped.
for
is
why
example, in
The second time he was
an hour upon the gallows platform with
a
noose around his
neck, and then be carted to the whipping post for thirty stripes. For the third offense, he was to
be hung. The colonial system, then, vacillated between comparatively lenient and harsh
114/
David
J.
Rothman
punishments. Townspeople were let off with a pickpocket, horse thief, or counterfeiter,
fines or
some lashes
—but
the recidivist, whether
might well find himself mounting the gallows.
Reforming the Law In the immediate aftermath of independence British legacy and,
along with
the British
it,
and nationhood, Americans repudiated
methods
their
for dispensing criminal justice. Attract-
ing the most republican scrutiny and disapproval were the
numerous
statutes that
punished
criminal behavior with execution. As Benjamin Rush, the Pennsylvania physician and signer of the Declaration of Independence, argued: "Capital punishments are the natural offspring
of monarchical governments. therefore, they
shed
their
.
.
.
Kings consider their subjects as their property; no wonder,
blood with as
little
emotion
as
men shed the blood of their sheep or An
But the principles of republican governments speak a very different language. ...
cattle.
execution in a republic
is like
a
human
sacrifice in religion." In fact, in a curious twist, the
new Americans, embracing the ideas of such Enlightenment thinkers as Cesare Beccaria, blamed the codes themselves for the persistence of crime. "The severity of punishment
itself emboldens
men to commit the very wrongs it is supposed to prevent," Beccaria had insisted. tries
and times most notorious
bloodiest ticularly
for severity of penalties
"The coun-
have always been those in which the
and most inhumane deeds were committed." The
argument was par-
logic of the
powerful to Americans. They looked back on the colonial period as a case in point:
since British laws were so severe, juries terrible of criminals.
had been loathe
And once punishment
to convict
anyone except the most
lost its certainty, criminals
were encouraged
to
pursue their misdeeds. This analysis of past failure carried with
would be solution
it
an answer through which the new nation
able to reduce, perhaps even eliminate, crime. At the
would bring glory
to a republican
of the leaders in this
criminal codes.
The
ety,
state
movement,
states
inherent moral
both these ends, Tho-
insisted that
New
York had
to revise
its
should no longer tolerate laws of "barbarous usages, corrupt soci-
and monarchical principles
a certainty,
its
fulfill
.
.
.
[that
were
so) imperfectly
simple manners, and a popular form of government." As soon as
become
time, adopting this
would
superiority to other forms. Confident that his proposals
mas Eddy, one
same
government and demonstrate
adopted
it
to a
new
country,
did so, punishment
would
and crime would disappear. In accordance with these views, most of the
amended their criminal punishment statutes. Pennsylvania in 1786 eliminated the death
penalty for robbery and burglary and in 1794 restricted
New York, New Jersey,
and Virginia reduced
lowed
that
their
for the
example so
by 1820,
to first-degree
their roster of capital crimes.
practically
crime of first-degree murder or had
it
all
murder; in 1796
Other
states fol-
had abolished the death sentence except
strictly limited
to a
it
handful of the most serious
crimes.
As they enacted these reforms, the
punishment should substitute
states
immediately confronted the question of what
for execution. If they
what penalty should they impose? The answer was a term, a very jail at
Walnut
were not
to
hang the convicted criminal,
incarceration, to have the offender serve
long term, in prison. Pennsylvania led the way in turning the old Philadelphia Street into a state prison. In 1796,
New York
appropriated funds to build the
Perfecting the Prison
Newgate
Greenwich
state prison in
1797 and Virginia and Kentucky appropriation for the prison
and Maryland followed In this
ment a
life
that
first
at
Village.
New Jersey
theirs in 1800.
completed
its
/
state penitentiary in
That same year, Massachusetts made an
Charlestown, and in short order Vermont,
New
Hampshire,
suit.
burst of enthusiasm, Americans expected that a rational system of punish-
was at once
and humane would dissuade
certain
but a handful of offenders from
all
Unlike their colonial predecessors, they did not locate the roots of deviancy in
in crime.
the corrupt nature of
humankind
or, in
more
practical terms,
worry most about the danger-
ous outsider. They blamed British law and were confident that distinctively American utes the
first
prisons, the
tentiary
a
was not the
itself,
critical feature of the
A repulsion
expected goal.
reformed system, and rehabilitation was not
from the gallows, rather than any
spurred the construction. Americans were
still
faith in the
thinking in terms of deterrence.
By the beginnings of the 1820s, the
become
They mingled
faith in the efficacy of legal
had no discernible impact on the
freely,
rooms and took
irregular.
one
New York lawyer,
favorite
scheme of substituting a
"is a prolific
and
was
it
riots
commonplace.
common
dining area.
.
.
.
life
was
just as clear that
casual, undisciplined,
prison for the gallows," concluded
Our
state prisons as presently
A few conservatives aside,
clear that the elimination of capital
con-
no one wanted
to
punishment would not
something had to be done about organization of the
The way Americans resolved
critical stage in the history
state
mother of crime.
grand demoralizers of our people."
go back to the gallows. But
prisons.
For another, the
shared booty (which included alcohol), and had ample time to plot
and
eliminate crime
and
meals in one
their
their escapes or to share the secrets of their trade. Institution
"Our
reform had declined. For
level of crime.
the scene of rampant disorder, with escapes
Prisoners lived together in large
stituted, are
or manage-
prison.
one, statutory changes
prisons had
its
powers of the peni-
What mattered most was the certainty of the punishment, not the internal routine ment of the
stat-
new era. Although these ideas led immediately to the construction of facilities themselves were not endowed with any special attributes. In-
would inaugurate
carceration
115
this
predicament brings us to the second and most
of American prisons.
Republican Thinking Over the period 1820-50, Jacksonian Americans, cessors, believed that crime
was posing
in
marked
contrast to their colonial prede-
a fundamental threat to the stability
and order of
republican society. The idea of the prison was rooted in this perception, reflecting the fear that
once stable social relationships were
and cohesion were
in
now
danger of collapsing.
It
in the process of unraveling, that social order
became the
task of the prison to
do nothing less
than ensure the future safety of the republic.
To judge by issues,
the
numerous
articles,
pamphlets, and legislative reports that discussed the
Americans in the antebellum era were frankly puzzled by the persistence of crime.
They were not surprised parities of wealth existed
that
it
continued to plague Old World countries; where great
between
classes,
where the
dis-
common people had no voice in govern-
ment, and where laws were harsh, crime was the inevitable
result.
But the
new
republic
had
116
David
/
Rothman
J.
eliminated these evils
—not only had
the states reformed their criminal codes, but
economic
opportunity was widespread and a marked equality existed between the social classes.
Why was
then, should crime disturb this country?
The answer
it
Americans arrived
that Jacksonian
openness of their society was qualified by a nagging ing disorder and disarray. As they viewed social order
at
Why,
society?
suggests that their great pride in the
fear that this very
of the institutions that
openness was produc-
had once
stabilized the
were declining in influence. The outstanding case in point was the family. Fa-
were losing their authority
thers
it, all
new
maintaining a place in the
to discipline children, either
because they were devoting too
much time to securing their own economic advancement or because the children quickly left home to try to make their own marks. As one group of concerned reformers concluded, "It is the confession of many convicts that the course of vice which brought them to the prison commenced in disobedience to their parents, or in their parents' neglect." What was true for the family was even more apparent in the church. Once the mainstay of the community, the church was now losing its authority. Worse yet, the schools were not .
able to
fill
.
.
the gap, for undisciplined youths ignored their lessons just as they did those of the
community
family and church. All the while, of course, the
Americans were too
much on the move
—
was losing
itself
—
to the frontier, to the cities
its
leverage.
to believe that neigh-
bor could any longer influence neighbor.
From one in
angle of vision,
which every man was
for very
ized
all
But from another angle,
little.
by so much mobility, both
amid
all this
was a new society own inclinations, where inherited traditions counted
these developments were exciting. Here
free to follow his all
social
these changes were scary.
to the defects of
Were
we
owe
chiefly
States.
bellum America
all
Jacksonian reformers, declared,
do with the
"It is
Was the social crisis real or imagined? It may be that European
—
But
it is
was
the recording of crime statistics
real incidence of
society in change.
Whatever the
this perspective that is
It is
is
as primitive as the policing
that the preoccupation with crime
mecha-
had
less
crime and more to do with general social attitudes about a reality, there
most helpful
public response to crime.
more severe than anything found
nearly impossible to calculate the actual rates of crime in ante-
nisms themselves. Nevertheless, the likelihood to
stability
the increase of evils doers."
these fears justified?
United
maintain
our social organization, to the multiplied and multiplying temptations to
countries were experiencing a degree of social disturbance in the
a society character-
it
motion? To judge by the incidence of crime, the answer might well be "no."
Dorothea Dix, the most energetic and celebrated of
crime that
Could
and geographic, cohere? Could
was a
subjective vision of disorder. Indeed,
in enabling us to
in the realm of perceptions that
the country adopted the idea of the prison
it is
understand the resulting form of the
we will
and devised so novel
find the answers to
a routine for
why
it.
The Rehabilitative Ideal Americans in the pre-Civil that they perceived Father's Book child. At the
a variety of fronts to
combat
around them. Over these years dozens of advice books, with
and The
same
War period moved on
Rollo
Code
oj Morals, instructed the family
time, a generation of educators sought to
force in students' lives,
on how
make
and clergymen organized Sunday school
the disorder titles like
to raise
the school a
The
an obedient
more powerful
classes to reach out to the
— Perfecting the Prison
younger generation. In
this
same
spirit,
and with even greater
discovered the prison and attempted to lessons of order citizen, that It
was
and
make
it
intensity,
Jacksonian reformers
an institution that would teach inmates the
The prison would transform the deviant
discipline.
117
/
into a law-abiding
rehabilitate the offender.
is,
heady assignment requiring imagination and innovation, and American prison
a
New York and Pennsylvania set out the models New York devised the Auburn, or what became
reformers were equal to the task. In the 1820s that soon spread throughout the country.
known burn
as the congregate,
State Prison
system of penitentiary organization, implementing
and then
Ossining, better
at
system,
rival plan, the separate
at the
In retrospect, the differences
we
emphasized
shall see,
their respective merits
its
were the subject of a
opponent. The
many
of
whom
as Sing Sing. Pennsylvania set out a
and
fierce debate.
and
work
to
of glances.
Auburn
plan, prisoners slept alone,
on
came remarkably
to a cell. all
would transform him
aim of
system
incarceration.
innately depraved but
had
to eat
and even the exchanges
and
to individual
slept in solitary con-
visitors.
and Auburn were both committed
and were both convinced
that the routines
that since the convict
to
imposed
into a law-abiding citizen. Reform, not deterrence,
The shared assumption was
failed to
ate,
the
close.
They came together
talking
period of their confinement. They worked,
their enmity, the advocates of Pennsylvania
the inmate
the
one
it
in the prison shops, but the rules prohibited
the rehabilitative potential of the prison
now
example, pre-
on Auburn versus Pennsylvania never quite matched
finement and were allowed to see only selected all
for
New York
The Pennsylvania system, on the other hand, confined prisoners
cells for the entire
For
the
produced pamphlets leveling charges and rebutting countercharges about
outpouring of material on the pros and cons of slavery, the
New York and
own organization and
own fervent supporters drawn from the
Mathew Carey and Louis Dwight
their arrangements. If the literature
Under
Every report from
explicit defense of its
systems had their
rival
as
a steady routine of labor. Nevertheless,
—Samuel Gridley Howe and Dorothea Dix,
ferred the Pennsylvania system,
Au-
between the two plans do not seem very notable. Both,
isolation, obedience,
ranks of American reformers
at
Pittsburgh penitentiary and the Philadelphia prison.
from Pennsylvania penitentiaries constituted an an attack on
known
it first
was
was not
be trained to obedience by family, church, school, or
community, he could be redeemed by the well-ordered routine of the prison. The penitentiary
would succeed
defects in the social
precisely
where other community
plining environment of the institution
To
fulfill
this
institutions
had
failed. Just as the
environment had led the inmate into crime, the disciplined and
would
lead
him out
of
disci-
it.
mandate, prison reformers focused their attention on the divisions of time
and space within the
facilities.
One
of the most influential of the reform associations, the
Boston Prison Discipline Society, deemed architecture one of the most important of the moral sciences. "There are," the society observed, "principles in architecture,
which race.
.
great moral changes can be .
degree,
.
more
easily
by the observance of
produced among the most abandoned of our
Other things being equal, the prospect of improvement in morals, depends, in some
upon
the construction of buildings."
In fact, the reformers
hoped
that the solutions that they devised to prison design prob-
lems would be relevant to the wider society. With no ironies intended, they talked about the
"
118
An
/
David
J.
Rothman
aerial view of East-
ern State Penitentiary in
Philadelphia in
1856. The institution
was
the
model prison
SM^-Vi*-
of the "Pennsylvania plan," also
known
as
the "separate system.
Under
this plan, pris-
oners served their sentences confined to
individual
cells,
where
they ate, worked,
and
slept in isolation.
The Library Company of Philadelphia
penitentiary as serving as a
model
than "a grand theatre for the chaplain insisted: "Could
trial
we
all
and the school. The prison was nothing
for the family
of all
be put on prison
world would ultimately be the better
tions, the
next together
.
.
.
the prison has the advantage."
Beaumont came away convinced which
the penitentiary system,"
less
new plans in hygiene and education." Or as one prison
It
the space of
fare, for
for
it.
.
.
.
As
it is,
was no wonder, then,
had been caught up
that reformers
to the reformers
seemed
to
be
"a
two or three genera-
taking this world and the that Tocqueville
in "the
remedy
and
monomania
of
for all the evils of
society."
And
it
was no wonder,
positions so staunchly.
With
then, that
Auburn and Pennsylvania supporters defended
the stakes so high
and with
results almost entirely
the internal design of the prison, every element in prison organization
ing importance. Intense partisanship was inevitable the criminal
the right
assumed overwhelm-
program would reform
and reorder the society and the wrong one would encourage
The Pennsylvania camp saw itself as its
when
logical conclusion.
It
purist, taking the idea of
separated inmates from each other
—
over the heads of newcomers so that as they walked to their
their
dependent on
vice
and crime.
reform through isolation to
to the point of placing
cells
hoods
they would not see or be
seen by anyone. Over the course of their sentence, they were given nothing to read except the Bible to
do
and were prevented from corresponding with in their cells (spinning
would
learn steady habits
nity cured of vice
From
and
and
wool was one
friends
common
discipline. In this
and
family; they
activity), in the
were given work
expectation that they
way, they would be released to the
commu-
idleness, ready to take their places as law-abiding citizens.
the perspective of Pennsylvania supporters, the
and inconsistent version of their own superior
plan.
Auburn plan was an incomplete
Auburn tempted
ding conversation but placing them next to each other
at
the prisoners
meals and
at
—
forbid-
work. Inevitably,
Perfecting the Prison
guards would be forced to punish those prisoners
who
119
/
broke the silence, giving the congre-
atmosphere of cruelty and corruption. Pennsylvania, by contrast, would
gate institutions an
be humane, secure, ordered, and ultimately, successful.
For its
was not easy gued
Auburn school responded not by defending its own compromises (which
part, the
to do)
but by finding flaws in the Pennsylvania arrangements. Supporters
was
that Pennsylvania
impractical, citing the difficulty
dreds of inmates in the individual
enough
prisons were not thick
cells.
They contended
ar-
of feeding and employing hun-
that the walls at the Pennsylvania
prevent conversation, a claim that prompted a rebuttal
to
from Pennsylvania, which stated that the walls were indeed thick enough; in short order, pamphlets were pouring out that analyzed the measurements of prison walls and the layout of pipes.
Auburn proponents also
insisted that total isolation
was so unnatural
that
it
literally
drove prisoners mad. Perhaps most important, they maintained, altogether accurately, that
Auburn was considerably gregate costs
less
expensive to build and maintain and that prison labor in con-
workshops would bring
when Auburn could do
greater returns to the state.
Why bother to incur the greater
the job of reform as well as Pennsylvania?
The Prison System The very
intensity of the debate, as well as the shared premise that criminals could be reha-
bilitated,
made prison reform a central concern for state legislatures in the antebellum period.
One
after the other
they appropriated the considerable funds necessary to construct or reno-
vate penitentiaries. In the late 1820s, Connecticut built a state prison at Wethersfield, Massa-
chusetts reorganized
In the 1830s,
its
prison at Charlestown, and Maryland erected a
New Jersey,
Ohio, and Michigan constructed their
new facility at Baltimore.
state prisons,
and
in the
1840s, so did Indiana, Wisconsin, and Minnesota.
Almost
all
the states adopted the
Auburn
plan, eager to realize the rehabilitative influ-
ence of the prison without incurring the greater costs required by the Pennsylvania system. But the
fact that
they were prudent in terms of their expenditures should not suggest that the
ideology of rehabilitation was any the less important. stituents lined
up
in support of such
ciating the larger goals of the project,
the prison
it
for
it.
If
the incapacitation of the inmate
would have been unnecessary
organize such elaborate and disciplined routines.
some form
To be see the
of a chain gang sure, there
was
capital
overrode these objections. Too lest
dollars,
To punish
the criminal through service
would have been considerably cheaper and more
were naysayers
had been the
to invest so extravagantly in prisons or to
to the idea of the prison.
Some
burden of taxation increased, and others were convinced
that criminals respected
done
amazingly diverse group of con-
one cannot understand the extent of the investment in
and the degree of enthusiasm
exclusive concern,
An
an expensive and complex undertaking. Without appre-
critics
on
efficient.
did not want to
that the only
punishment
punishment. But a shared sense of crisis and emergency
much was
at stake to
postpone action; something had
to
be
republican order be subverted. In other words, the prison captured support, and
because of
The decision
its
very grandeur,
to build prisons
appear to have sparked
its
promise
was reserved
political confrontations
to
reform the deviant.
to the separate states,
but nowhere does
it
between supporters and opponents. The con-
sensus was broad, undoubtedly because the idea of the asylum had something for everyone.
— 120
David
/
J.
Rothman
Collection of
The
New
prison at
Auburn
1842.
high walls
and
Its
There were those
who supported
convict the guilty
if
York state in
Americans took
in
it
Historical Society
because they thought that juries would not hesitate to
members knew
that a prison sentence, not the gallows, awaited the
convicted; others, probably the majority, advocated confinement because of its rehabilitative
turrets express the
pride that jacksonian
jury
The New- York
potential.
The appeal of the prison was so diffused through
the society that to identify propo-
nents with a party or regional label belies the nature of the coalition as well as
their prisons.
will
it
do
to identify
manufacturing
class. Clearly,
those
who
asts
were people of property, those with
and
their ideas
on punishment
future of the republic as
was
far
more
of the family
its
motives.
much
—
invented the prison and were
reflected their general education
as their
its
most avid enthusi-
social standing in the society. But their leadership
economic
interests.
and
their
Moreover, their
a fear of moral dissoluteness than of class warfare;
it
concern
for the
fear of disorder
was the weakened authority
and the community, not the aggressive demands of a submerged laboring class,
that frightened them. Accordingly, their solutions, as exemplified in the prison routine,
more
Nor
them, as some historians have done, with an emerging commercial or
to individual reformation (in a secular sense) than to the
disciplined labor force in the
As Americans began idea of isolation
new
to build
needs
for a
factories.
and administer the prisons, they learned
that although the
and the general orientation maxims produced by advocates
and Pennsylvania systems did provide basis also required solving a large
looked
compliant and
a general
number
scheme
of specific,
to follow,
for the
Auburn
running a prison on
and important,
details.
a daily
For example,
to wear? How should they be moved from place to place? How should the prison maintain internal security, and how should discipline the refractory
what should prisoners be forced
it
prisoner?
These questions were particularly ing on a
difficult to
answer because Americans were embark-
new venture. "Reform in prison discipline was an experiment," one participant in the
Perfecting the Prison
process noted. Americans "had no model prison to to
warn them of errors or guide them
to truth."
no pioneers
visit;
example, Jeremy Bentham's 1791
United
States,
own
and because of
insularity
were not well informed about developments
design for the
there.
unknown
panopticon was almost
For
in the
although his emphasis on the need for the segregation, employment, and sur-
was consistent with
veillance of the criminal offender
the aims of
end, the Americans' intellectual debt to England was not great.
and even fewer took him for
march of reform,
in the
The English experience could have provided
guidance in resolving these issues, but both because of their their dislike of things foreign, officials
121
/
seriously.
(One should
also
American prisons. In the
Few Americans read Bentham,
remember
that
Bentham had
a genius
spinning off ideas and trying, almost desperately, to give them a practical bent, but there
was always something
fantastic
about his schemes, and the English prison that might be
thought to represent his ideas, Pentonville, did not open until 1842.) In contrived their
own homegrown
effect,
Perhaps the most distinctive feature of American prisons in the pre-Civil
and
certainly the element that
silence that
pervaded the
Americans
solutions.
European
institutions.
visitors
War
decades,
most frequently commented on, was the
The injunction
to isolate the inmate,
an idea that ran
through both the Auburn and the Pennsylvania plans, was rigidly and effectively translated
As Tocqueville and Beaumont noted
into practice.
after their visit to
thing passes in the most profound silence, and nothing
who march,
steps of those
returned to their wrote, it
was
"We
felt
as
we had traversed catacombs;
a desert solitude."
Pennsylvania:
"It is
in 1831, "Every-
heard in the whole prison but the
or sounds proceeding from the workshops." After the inmates
"the silence within these vast walls"
cells, if
is
Auburn
was
The two
"that of death."
there were a thousand living beings,
As would be expected, they found
that the
and yet
same conditions held
uncontestable that this perfect isolation secures the prison from
at
all fatal
contamination."
were able
Officials
overcrowding was not
to a
maintain the rule of silence in part because in the period 1820-50,
problem. Given the promise of reform, legislatures readily appropri-
ated the funds for construction,
and when more
punish, and harshly punish, any inmate
known for the severity of its discipline, assistant
wardens told the
its
rules,
to
were needed, they made the funds
and
this
who broke the rules.
for
it
governed in
home. They must be made
by the most energetic means; corporeal punishments
be effectual must be certain, and inflicted with as
little
chusetts,
and Ohio; Pennsylvania
tied
to
a
man-
submit to
for transgression,
delay as possible."
Other institutions were also more intent on securing obedience than on
and unusual punishments. The whip was commonplace
prepared to
A prison, as one of the
in 1834, "should not be
as a comfortable
fully
Sing Sing was particularly well-
which it made no apologies.
New York legislature
ner as to induce rogues to consider
which
cells
Perhaps even more important, prison wardens and guards were
available.
in the prisons of
inflicting cruel
New York,
Massa-
an iron gag on disobedient inmates, and Maine had
recourse to the ball and chain. The rehabilitative ideal certainly helped to legitimate the severity of the correctional schemes. fied the iron
passions,"
A state
investigation in Pennsylvania unhesitatingly justi-
gag because convicts were "men of idle habits, vicious propensities, and depraved
and because obedience was the necessary
first
step to reformation. "Only relax the
122
David
/
Rothman
J.
reins of discipline,"
commented one
more use here than
in a
and
all
means
prison chaplain, "and a chaplain's labors would be of no
drunken mob." Since the end of rehabilitation was so
of securing
it
were
significant,
The prisons enforced not only rules
buf also
of silence
and the inmate who
regular labor,
shirked his tasks would quickly find himself the object of harsh discipline. Most
compelled the
men
to
work
habits of diligence even as
New York,
for
work
length of the
eight to ten hours a day, a routine that
brought the
state a financial return
example, convicts were up
they then went back to
returned to
it
for
work
any
justified.
prison investment. In
its
forty-five minutes,
facilities
to serve to inculcate
work two hours
at five o'clock to
hours and
for three
on
was
had
before breakfast;
a lunch break,
and
another four hours and forty-five minutes. The only limitations on the
work week were
Sunday and the absence of
a respect for a Christian
artificial
lighting.
Translating the ideas of silence, labor, and discipline into the prison routine inspired
prison officials to adopt quasi-military models. At almost every possible point, they imposed regimentation. Thus, convicts did not saunter from place to place but went in close order
and
single
feet
moving
file,
each looking over the shoulder of the
man in front,
in unison, in lockstep. In fact, the lockstep
faces inclined to the right,
became the trademark
of
American
prisons in these years (and thereafter as well, as attested to by 1930s prison movies).
was a curious combination the shuffle trying to
make
march and
of
shuffle, the
certain that the
men
march aiming
impose
to
It
discipline,
did not become too prideful. With the
prisoners' heads pointed to the right, guards could
make
certain that
no one
on
carried
a
conversation.
The
daily routine also followed a military model. At the
guards opened the
cells,
into the yard. In formation they emptied their night pails, a
few more steps and placed the
shops and worked
at their tasks
on
pails
(the rules ordered
them not
to
common mess
tion, sitting erect
horn or
a
file,
straight.
where they
in lockstep to the
When the bell rang for
ate their
cells (in
of crude
inmates wear uniforms, not
and simple design, with stripes
(to
to increase the likelihood of recapture in case of escape). In
commitment
to military regimentation, the convicts' hair
sparsely furnished with a cot, a pail, the prison guards,
tions
and
insti-
At the bell they stood, reentered formation, and in
humble and
sentries.
some
meals while, by regula-
cells.
to regimentation dictated that
made
went
passed into the kitchen, picked up their rations
hall (in others),
with their backs
The same commitment
They then moved
break step), and continued either to their
lockstep returned to their shops or
egant ones of course but ones
a rack to dry.
bell, the
in lockstep
which they then washed; they took
while sitting in rows on long benches.
mealtime, they grouped again in single
tutions) or to a
sound of
and the prisoners stepped onto the deck and then
and
tin utensils.
was cut
short,
keep the
el-
men
keeping with a
and the
cells
were
Indeed, the military model extended to
who wore uniforms, were mustered at specific hours, and kept watch like
The wardens, who often came
commanding the guards to act
to their positions after military service, issued regula-
in a "gentlemanly
manner," as though they were
officers,
to avoid laughter, ribaldry, or unnecessary conversation while on duty. Guards, as Sing
Sing's rules suffer
them
announced, "were to
to require
from the convicts the greatest deference, and never
approach but in respectful manner; they [were] not
to allow
them
the least
Perfecting the Prison
123
/
A
prisoner punished
with an iron gag
in
Eastern State Penitentiary.
To maintain
der and
obedience from mates,
or-
command in-
many American
prison officials were
prepared
to
use cruel
punishments.
degree of familiarity, nor exercise any towards them; they should be extremely careful to
command
as well as to
compel
their respect."
These characteristics were apparent in the architectural design of the prison. Most of the looked
facilities
and
thick walls
promote
like
medieval fortresses, monumental, as
isolation
noble an experiment. The it
promised
all
very regular and methodical.
appearance and in routine, these were institutions that would inculcate
in
to
and separation. The buildings themselves were long and low slung,
symmetrically arranged with evenly spaced windows,
Thus
befit so
were assurances that the prison was secure, even as
turrets
fixity
and
order.
The tutions
internal
tors of the
and the
the depth of anxiety
of the
fate
new
of separate
and
working
class
and insecurity
owners and
this obser-
new economic
Jacksonian America about
other. In this interpretation, the
in the
their associates
emergence
on the one hand
purpose of the prison was
to segre-
from the criminal element so as to make certain that lawlessness did
not pervade the lower ranks. Thus, by instilling order in
helping to guarantee discipline and regularity in those
They would understand
that there
to ignore or violate the precepts of the
sound of the
in
on social order and new realities but
hostile social classes, the factory
and the workers on the
the
insti-
republic, but the source of these fears they locate not in
the imbalance between inherited ideas
tory gate.
between these
of historians have located the origins of the prison in the
They acknowledge
social order
gate the
affinity
were simultaneously transforming the manufacturing sec-
Both emphasized regularity and punctuality. Indeed, starting from
number
vation, a
factories that
American economy. In appearance and routine, the prison and the factory did bear
a resemblance.
order.
and external design of the prison suggests some
and the new
bell in the factory
its
inmates, the prison was, in effect,
who
arrived each
was no alternative
new industrial
yard or line up
morning
at the fac-
to wage-earning, that
order was
futile.
at the bell in the
They would
prison yard.
an
line
effort
up
at
124
/
David
Although
J.
Rothman
this vision
would be erroneous
to
may have persuaded some
organization and needs of the factory. their workers. Surely the to ignore the
West
—where
fact, in
than owners bringing discipline to
ha'd sources of recruitment
it
broad enough
be a purveyor of
in a position to
development was
still
—but
through the Midwest and the
also
decades away.
It
seems
far
more
likely, as the
and
factories re-
historian Michael Ignatieff has concluded, that to the degree that prisons
sembled each other,
it
found in the
to be
is
the United States, the prison spread not only through
were springing up
factories
industrial
at stake
and the prison was hardly
felon,
values to the laboring classes. In
—where
More was
manufacturing enterprises
determined
the Northeast
citizens to favor the prison solution,
maintain that the inspiration for the prison
was "because both public order
authorities
and employers shared the
same universe of assumptions about the regulation of the body and the ordering
of time."
Reform Gone Awry From
its
moment
a harshness to
it
the United States,
wrong."
Its
of origin, the
that
went
for critics, for the
to Philadelphia expressly to see the prison
intentions, he conceded,
convinced, did not
men
American prison never lacked
was unmistakable and dismaying. Charles Dickens, on
punishment, prolonged
and found
were humane and reformatory. But
know what it was
that they
were doing. He noted:
immense amount
are capable of estimating the
for years, inflicts
upon
of torture
"I
its
I
system had
1842 tour of "cruel
and
designers, he
was
it
believe that very few
and agony
the sufferers. ...
his
hold
that this dreadful
this
slow and daily
tampering with the mysteries of the brain, to be immeasurably worse than any torture of the body." Concluded Dickens, "Those society again morally unhealthy
Tocqueville and Beaumont were
no doubt," they wrote, "but
who
have undergone
more measured
in their
that the habits of order to
several years, influence very considerably his moral
Perhaps, leaving prison he
is
this
punishment must pass into
and diseased."
summary judgments. "We have
which the prisoner
conduct
is
subjected for
after his return to society.
.
.
.
not an honest man, but he has contracted honest habits." Be-
tween Auburn and Pennsylvania, they preferred Pennsylvania. "The Philadelphia system produces more honest men, and that of
New
York more obedient
notwithstanding, the prisons that they visited did not
fit
citizens."
But these points
with the America that they saw.
"While society in the United States gives the example of the most extended
liberty, the pris-
ons of the same country offer the spectacle of the most complete despotism. The citizens subject to the law are protected
With
by
it;
they cease to be free
when
they
become wicked."
the passage of time, whatever saving graces these visitors could find in the prison
system weakened. At the institutions
were
least for the
faithful to
period 1820-50, the founders could justifiably claim that
reform principles in enforcing the congregate and separate
systems. Whatever reservations one might have had about the validity, or even the humanity, of either of the plans, there
was
a
genuine correspondence between the ideal and the
real,
between blueprint and actuality. However, by the 1860s, and even more obviously by the 1870s and 1880s, the unique arrangements of the Auburn and Pennsylvania plans had disappeared.
Perfecting the Prison
War era became modern,
Prisons in the post-Civil ing, brutality,
that
is,
125
/
characterized by overcrowd-
and disorder. Nevertheless, they continued to occupy the central place
in criminal
punishment. Massive walls enclosed prison space, and heavy gates swung open to admit a steady stream of convicts.
There can be no question of the dimension of the decline. The most thorough account of the nation's prisons in the post-Civil
Dwight
War era was the 1867 report of E.
America
in
which
the reformation of the convicts
of the discipline." By this standard they noted, "There
which
As
.
.
if
mingle with
the object it
.
the one
is
supreme object
not a prison system in the United
New York itself made unmistakably clear,
.
make him
own prisons
him from committing crimes during
member
a better
years later, another commission found conditions
ments pervasive throughout the
state prisons
(it
still
his
may safely again now stand." Twenty
of society so that he
purpose cannot be answered by matters as they
that
.
to
is
the state's
Already in 1852 an investigation had found that the prisons
to this rule.
did serve to incapacitate the offender, preventing "But
is
would not be found wanting."
.
legislative reports in
were no exception
stay.
Wines and Theodore
New York legislature, and their findings were unambiguous: "There is no longer
to the
a state prison in
States
C.
worse. Not only were cruel punish-
was not uncommon to hang convicts by their
thumbs), but so also was corruption (inmates regularly bribed guards to get a more favorable
work assignment). Overcrowding was everywhere the rule of the day. By 1866 even the famed
for
keeping only one prisoner to a
had so many inmates
broke down, the opportunities
dens and guards to become system
on
at
once
fail
longevity?
its
to live
Why
most
the Pennsylvania penitentiary at Philadelphia,
cell,
hold that separation was no longer possible. Wines and Dwight
to
estimated that nationwide roughly one-third of lation
institution
all
up to
the its
all
prisoners were double celled.
more harsh
in their discipline of inmates. But
original ideals,
and why did
And
as iso-
which prompted war-
for prisoner unrest increased,
this failure
why did the
not have any impact
did the reform impulse fade without uprooting the prison from the
criminal justice system?
answer
Part of the
rests in the original
rehabilitation through obedience
name
of reform,
it
plish reform, that
all
beneficial. In other
was
particularly susceptible to abuse. In the
mete out the most severe punishment while satisfying their
own
wardens had
to
do was
still
convenience. By the same
to the belief that incarceration in
and of itself would accom-
to confine the inmate
and the
result
would be
words, the rhetoric of the reform program continued to cloak the prison
with the mantle of legitimacy long Part of the
to
more than
was too easy to succumb
reform design for the prison. The doctrine of
discipline
wardens had the excuse
believing that they were doing
token,
and
answer too
after the reality of
reform had disappeared.
rests in the nature of the prison population.
The Jacksonian
re-
formers had presumed that inmates would not be hardened criminals but "good boys gone bad," fact,
who after a period
the prisons
came
to
of corrective training
would go on
their
way, not to return again. In
hold a very diverse group of inmates, not so
zler as the recidivist
and the murderer
inevitably the prison
became
—and indeed,
the holding
ground
much the
since the latter
petty
embez-
had longer sentences,
for the toughest of criminals.
For example,
Rothman
126
/
of the
839 convicts who served time
David
J.
60 percent were
and attempted murderers
ers
by
all
in the Connecticut state prison
(78), rapists (42),
between 1828 and 1840,
were burglars and robbers (343), murder-
guilty of crimes of violence: they
and
and escaped inmates
arsonists
(45).
And
accounts, the Connecticut experience was typical of other state prisons before the Civil
War. Inmates in the 1860s and 1870s were an even more hardened group murder, robbery, and rape were what brought
men
—manslaughter,
to prison.
This development reflected not only the (understandable) decision of judges to send the toughest cases to prison
—but
ers
—they used
jails
or suspended sentences for the
also the structure of the sentencing process
itself,
more
more minor
offend-
specifically, the very
long
sentences meted out in the United States to offenders. (To this day, American sentences and actual time served are
two
to three times longer than
European ones.) As formulated
in the
1790s, the prison sentence was to substitute confinement for execution, and although no records survive that
tell
thirty years.
And
us
how
legislators initially
murder was worth
if
life,
equated crime with time,
seems
it
likely
it
now brought
then robbery should bring ten or
fifteen years;
went from the top down.
that their reckonings
murder once brought
If
and burglary
rape, twelve or fourteen; assault, seven or nine;
death,
six or seven.
The very long
sentences carried over into the Jacksonian period on the grounds that rehabilitation took time; a felon might well require a decade of confinement in order to acquire the habits of discipline.
Such sentencing practices
filled
of which
all
the actual administration of the prison. For one, guards cal
about the idea of reform, trotting
when
serious offenders were
incentive,
and
discipline.
it
out only
at
For
still
another, as legislators and citizens
All of these
more
from the
number
Irish.
of prison inmates were
States; the
comparable
cent. In the 1850s, the percentage of foreign-born in
44 percent. In 1860,
in Massachusetts
population, in Illinois 46 percent. thereafter. State legislators,
with
to
severity of prison
understand the nature of the be essentially custodial.
critical
development in the 1850s and
drawn from new immigrant groups,
figure
at
Auburn had
from Pennsylvania was 18 per-
New York prisons rose to 32
percent,
by
immigrants were 40 percent of the prison
And all of these percentages swelled in the 1870s and again little
sympathy
making the prisons anything but
good enough
came
wardens and guards had the
and again the
Between 1830 and 1835, 20 percent of the inmates
been born outside the United
invest in
a prison,
kind of criminal?
changes were reinforced by one more
1860s: an increasing
to
and wardens inevitably became cyni-
satisfied to let the operation
to ensure single cells for this
set off a
rehabilitation less relevant to
convenient times and places. For another,
crowded together within
prison population, they became
1860
made
in their eyes the justification, to increase again
Why spend money
specifically
most serious offenders and
the prisons with the
mutually reinforcing series of considerations,
for the
custodial.
immigrant, saw even
As bad
less
reason to
as conditions were, they
seemed
for the Irish.
Thinking about Prisons: Social Control versus Reform An
interpretation that locates the origins of the prison in a profound uneasiness about the
fragility
of the social order
is
often characterized as part of a school of "social control." But the
Perfecting the Prison
127
/
If
label
is ill-suited,
obfuscating more than
studies in the 1920s
promote social
and 1930s. Theorists
it
clarifies.
The term
itself
comes from
George Herbert Mead and
like
and
a sharper appreciation of the role of subjective
E. A.
sociological
An
Ross used
it
to
qualitative values in binding
groups together. Rather than assuming that the good order of the society rested on the
regulatory authority of the prison or the police, they sought to link social stability to shared
values and principles. Social order
became the product not of fiat and
force but of ideas
and
sympathy. Accordingly, they were concerned with other institutions of social control: the family, the church,
ing social
harmony
and the school. In
fact,
they searched so broadly for the elements
that they conceived of social control in a
manner
that
made
guishable from socialization. They found social control everywhere and applauded In the 1950s, the
meaning
of the term changed, actually reversing
itself.
became synonymous not with persuasion but with the imposition of state or
it
its
instill-
indistin-
presence.
Social control class authority
over the lower classes. Social control was equated with repression and coercion, with the formal and informal mechanisms that were intended to compel order and obedience.
with
this negative
connotation that social control
When historians
first
highly useful function.
It
used social control
first
to think
came
It
was
to the attention of historians.
about the prison, the concept served a
helped to stimulate a series of novel questions and served as a
necessary corrective to the prevailing idea that the prison was best understood as a "reform." Until then, the origins of incarceration pulses.
had been interpreted
as the
triumph of humane im-
Good-hearted citizens and generous philanthropists had been appalled
tion of jails, at the use of corporeal
and
capital
introduce a less cruel and more benevolent
by simply describing the innovation logical step in the progress of
1820s and 1830s and
mode
of punishment. But the difficulty
as a reform, historians
humanity; they
at the
condi-
punishment, and had invented the prison
failed to
ask
assumed
was
that the prison
to
that,
was
a~
why the prison was invented in the
why it adopted its special attributes.
Indeed, the subsequent history of
early depiction of
the lockstep, the use of
which would continue in
many American
prisons well into the
1930s.
128
David
/
the prison
Rothman
J.
becomes much more
difficult to
explain
if
one thinks only in terms of progressive
sentiments. By the 1950s, the prisons were anything but humanitarian, so an interpretative
framework
that focuses narrowly
changes in the prison and
on the
benevolence does not help us to understand
spirit of
continuing centrality to the system of punishment. To view the
its
degeneration of the prison as a series of incremental changes that unexpectedly and unpredictably
produced
show
a horror
to avoid the challenge of historical analysis.
is
the moral purity of state intervention all
responsibility for the decline (on the
formers
grounds
that
human
sidestep the important historical questions.
lible), is to
confinement even in the face of declension? In encouraging a group of historians to
benign, that a purported reform might
But
now
control" has
ment it is
value.
It is
if
and
is
are
ill-defined
duty-bound
manner,
to
(this is
it
a
power
weapon
ian impulses
in
its
to buttress the
may be used
as the
that the police are agents of social
may be used in a more sweeping,
it
knowledge nor
clarifies subtle differences.
no doubt
origins of the prison, there should be
had an important place
state-
(secret?) in the arsenal of the ruling class. In all
events, the term in present usage neither advances
As one looks back on the
"social
being invoked as a
classes). "Social control"
or
to
is
an organization that attempted
—meaning maintain public order—
make
liber-
charged to maintain social order), or whether
by coercing or deceiving the lower
equivalent of the formal exercise of state control
was
purposes, benign or not so
been asked, and answered, using the term
not always evident whether the term
being invoked as a proposition
re-
did
to legitimate the practice of
this sense, the idea of social control
start investigating the
of fact (this organization or institution
social order
later,
fulfill.
that these questions have
little
and would-be
Why, even decades
proponents of the prison maintain their positions and continue
ating,
on
insist
institutions are inevitably fal-
Why did the state
to recognize the fallibility of their creations?
fail
To
and paternalism,, to absolve the prison administrators of
history.
However irresistible
that humanitar-
the urge to
make
rigid
dichotomies in historical interpretations, no one would want to dismiss considerations of
humanity or denigrate the benevolent impulses of reformers. The pre-prison modes of punishment practice
and three make eminently
(as chapters one, two,
was
torture
vict origins of Australia are replete
women, children,
often guilty of
and
with heartbreaking stories of what
no more than petty
it
meant
thievery, to be separated forever
to
men and
from spouses,
relatives.
Nevertheless, benevolent motives take us only part of the gins of prisons.
No
matter
substitute for garroting the a
were brutal, whether the
clear)
and executions or sentences of transportation. The accounts of the con-
system of incarceration,
how
empathetic one
may
way
to
understanding the
ori-
be to the reformers' impulse to find a
condemned, the fundamental question
why substitute confinement in segregated
Why channel
still
remains:
why invent
spaces and design a rou-
do good
into
creating something as strange as the prison, a system that, over 150 years later, can
still
tine of bell-ringing punctuality
prompt an inmate
to
want
to
and steady labor?
meet the man who dreamed
it
the impulse to
all
up, convinced that he must
have been born on Mars?
Should the prison be judged an advance when compared with the practices
Was
it
it
replaced?
not an improvement over the gallows and the whip? Even this seemingly self-evident
judgment, however, must be
qualified, for the prison
extended
its
reach and brought into
its
Perfecting the Prison
129
/
many who would have been spared punishment in an earlier era. It is likely that some among the deviant suffered less because of the prison, but some may have suffered more; a number of prisoners who previously would have been shamed before their neighbors and orbit
then is
resume
to
left
their lives instead spent years in a cell.
unambiguous
too exquisite to render an Finally,
is
the history of the prison relevant to our understanding of the present
imagination of the future? Are there lessons that the past ise is
is
The calculus of benefits and
no predictor of the
no warrant
doned. At the same time,
and the
future,
to find that they
we should draw from
fact that
and our
the record? Clearly,
prisons failed to deliver on their prom-
now
have outlived their usefulness and should
we would be
losses
verdict.
be aban-
We
foolhardy not to raise our level of skepticism.
cannot afford to forget that designs that promise the most grandiose results often legitimate the
most unsatisfactory methods. In
who would
burden of proof
light of this history, the
claim that confinement can serve
falls
on those
ends, benefiting both the inmate and the
all
society.
Bibliographic Note This chapter draws on
Order and Disorder
my own work in the history of the prison:
in the
New
Convenience: The Asylum and a fuller discussion of
and Andrew
The two
Republic, rev. ed. (Boston: Little,
Its
Alternatives in Progressive America (Boston: Little,
my ideas and those of others on the
Scull, eds., Social Control
On
the Penitentiary
Carbondale: Southern
and
the State
(New
famous reports by European
rightfully
de Tocqueville,
The Discovery of the Asylum: Social
Brown, 1990), and Conscience and
System
Illinois Press,
York:
visitors are
St.
Cohen
Martin's Press, 1983).
Gustave de Beaumont and Alexis
United States and
in the
Brown, 1980). For
issue of social control, see Stanley
Its
Application
in
France (reprint,
1964), quotations in the text from pp. 79, 90, and Charles
Dickens, American Notes (London: MacDonald and Sons, 1850), quotations from pp. 129, 142.
On
public executions, see Louis P. Masur, Rites of Execution: Capital Punishment and the
Transformation of American Culture, 1776-1865
(New
York: Oxford University Press, 1989).
Other accounts of the pre-Civil War penitentiary include the following: Newgate
to
Dannemora: The
Rise of the Penitentiary in
New
W. David Lewis, From
York (Ithaca: Cornell University Press,
1965); Negley K. Teeters, The Cradle of the Penitentiary: The Walnut Street Jail at Philadelphia,
1835 (Philadelphia, 1955); Negley K. Teeters and John D. Shearer, The Prison Separate System of Penal Discipline, 1829-1913 Prisons:
A
in
Cherry
1
773-
Hill:
The
York, 1957); and Blake McKelvey, American
History of Good Intentions (Montclair, N.J.: Patterson Smith, 1977).
For other antebellum Order
(New
at
efforts to control the deviant, see Paul S. Boyer,
Urban Masses and Moral
America, 1820-1920 (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1978), and John R. Sutton,
Stubborn Children: Controlling Delinquency California Press, 1988).
in the
United States, 1640-1981 (Berkeley: University of
CHAPTER FIVE
Victorian
T:
Pri;
England, 1865-1965
Sean McConville
If
I
had the means of giving every man who
amount
the full
no man
alive
of discipline
could bear
—Major William
ictorian
I
it: it
is
sentenced to hard labour in Stafford prison
am empowered
would
kill
to
do by Act of Parliament,
the strongest
Fulford, governor of Stafford
man
for
two
years,
in England.
1863
jail,
imprisonment embodied several curious contradictions. Arrive
in
prison as the result of a minor offense, and you would be treated more severely than
had you committed one of the
fense (short of murder),
Commit
great crimes.
a grave of-
and you would be punished ostensibly more with
an eye to reformation than had you been modest in your crime. Commit no offense at
all,
markedly
less
other than destitution, and as pauper, you would have workhouse food
generous than that which Her Majesty granted
Victorians got themselves into this tangle ideas, policy, administration,
is
to
convicted felons.
How the
only one part of the fascinating history of
and personages of
this
hundred years of punishment.
Terminology Penal history tions,
is
littered
and punishment
subject
is
therefore
with unfulfilled promises, abandoned hopes, and discarded instituis
a process that
most people find unpleasant
apt to prove confusing because of different American instructed
many
may
apply
it
anachronistically. Prison
devices that hold captives.
A house
neither term can be used generically. appellations,
all
would be
clear
Had
is
and
be altered.
British usage
contemplate. The
of correction legislators
is
all
institutions
a type of prison, as
is
a jail
and
—but
and administrators been consistent
and simple, but government has obvious needs
when
little
is
and because the un-
the generic term for
use terms suggestive of progress and change, especially will
to
crowded with euphemisms and forsaken designations. The word prison
to
in
choose and
or nothing has been or
The interior of a cellblock of
Dartmoor
Prison, photographed in
1954.
132
/
SeAn McConville
Today in the United States, prison
is
reserved for state and federal institutions that receive
more than one
offenders sentenced to imprisonment for
One
year.
might,
the same, look
all
in vain for state use of the term: correctional facility or correctional institution have replaced
most
penitentiary in
no longer have
jurisdictions, just as penitentiary replaced prison. States
prison departments, preferring departments of correction, though the federal government
has stuck to
its
Bureau of Prisons. But name changing means
make no concession
the Bureau of Justice Statistics. These to prisons
and
Whether
little,
to penal
especially in the tables of
cosmetics and refer only
prisoners.
and the
or not the Americans
mon language,
as Oscar
Wilde suggested,
it
British are
two great peoples divided by
the apparently familiar that confuses
is
barrasses transatlantic communications rather than the unusual and arcane.
word jail
use the is
not what
remanded
it
(often spelled "gaol") to
seems. There are,
(pretrial) prisoners
when
called local prisons or,
officially,
the United States
would be
modern usage felon became than
was between the
felon
is
misdemeanant
imprisonment
liable to
legal currency, are
imprisonment
the United States
is
Convict,
when
form of
prisoner,
the term
is
which
everyday speech in the
in a state or federal prison for
felon in a year, a
who was
to a year.
lost its precise
meaning and
is
There
is
not to be executed
misdemeanant went
the term most used in Britain.
the Atlantic, prefer inmate to prisoner
A
more than
up
in a local (county or municipal) jail for
used today, has
is
in
almost archaic in Britain.
responsibility of central government, but a
this, as in
truer to eighteenth-century tradition
connection here with past practice in England, where a felon
was the
and the misdemeanant. In
very likely as a contraction of convicted felon. In
convict,
The terms felon and misdemeanant, which appear
to
or centers.
called simply prisons.
United States and are certainly
a
remand prisons
known as training prisons or long-term prisons, which in
of other English usages, the United States
Britain.
is
as jails, holding
offenders. These institutions are
they hold only pretrial detainees,
Historically, the only distinction of note
number
still
in Britain
few terminological niceties about the inhabitants of these places.
Finally, there are a
a
no jails, but some prisons function
com-
British
mean imprisonment. But imprisonment
and short-sentence convicted
Prisons for long-term prisoners are
The
a
and em-
to a local
jail.
usually an emphatic
The squeamish, on both
sides of
and may even urge the use of the thoroughly evasive
resident.
The Victorian English Prison System By the back
early
to
1860s there were two
historically distinct
components, the
cussed elsewhere in this book but
modern It
times, the
jail
These sentences were
was therefore flogged
brief. It
trial
a
and the house of
for detention
and those found
likely to
more common
guilty
be corporal or
was common,
on the same day. From the
became
jail
local prison. This
may conveniently be
was primarily used
held people awaiting
seas
distinct types of prison in England.
Saxon times and probably beyond, was the
for
older, stretching
was made up of two
correction. Both of these are dis-
described here. In medieval and early
and much
less often for
punishment.
and awaiting the execution of sentence.
capital,
and the period of
example, for a person
to
early seventeenth century
fate for felons,
The
posttrial detention
be sentenced and hanged or
onward, transportation over-
who would wait in jail
until they
were delivered
The Victorian Prison
to the central
government collection depot. Later
and convicted
tuted for transportation,
still,
penal servitude at
would wait
felons
home was
133
/
substi-
were sent
in jail until they
to a
government convict prison. Jails
were also used
sionally, to protect jails
were also used
until
to detain witnesses
them or prevent to enforce the
he paid or otherwise
amount
whose appearance
their subornation.
payment of private
satisfied his creditor.
of punitive jailing, but corporal
and
debts,
was
at trial
From the
in
doubt
or, occa-
fourteenth century onward,
by means of holding the debtor
There had probably always been a small
capital
punishment and fining were preferred.
It
how often jail was used as a punishment, but the practice common over the centuries, though even by the early eighteenth gradually become more did is
impossible to be precise about
century those given
The
sentences were apparently the minority of those held.
jail
history of the house of correction
December 1556. Bridewell became
the
model
which were concerned with the apparent offenses,
and other petty
is
shorter.
The
and opened
palace at Bridewell, in the City of London,
was located
first
(or shut)
for similar institutions in other English
towns,
inefficacy of traditional remedies for beggary,
criminality. Elizabethan legislation allowed
magistrates to provide a bridewell
in the former
doors for business in
its
(now known by its general and
of correction) in every county. At this point
moral
and encouraged
the
name as a house the house of correction was used more to underfunctional
pin social than criminal policy and was intended especially to suppress idleness and vagrancy.
A
law of James
in
I
1609 made
a
house of correction obligatory
The Prison Act of 1865, which was law, formally
amalgamated the jail and the house of correction.
by
had ceased
this time
prison. Because there
ons and to to
refer to the
The
to denote a difference.
were other prisons in existence
the confinement of convicts
—
it
became customary
government prisons
It
for
prisoners. But they also
abolished a distinction that
resulting institution
—those run by
to
speak of the
as convict prisons.
The
perform the functions of jails: the detention of those awaiting
condemned
for all English counties.
the major consolidator of nineteenth-century prison
was known
central
new
as a
government
for
hybrid as local pris-
local prisons did not cease
trial,
debtors,
now served as places of punishment
and
for those
capitally
sentenced
terms of up to two years. Local prisons were
their judicial role, the
owned and administered by county and borough magistrates.
Besides
county magistrates had constituted the rural local government of En-
gland and Wales for several centuries (and continued to do so until the advent of elected
county councils in 1888); the borough magistrates were usually also members of their municipal corporation or council. Local prisons
were
with, from the mid- 1840s onward, a significant
ernment.
Some
local prisons also contracted
largely financed
from the
rates (local taxes)
and increasing subvention from
central gov-
with the army and navy, which paid them to
hold soldiers and sailors sentenced by courts-martial. In 1867 there were 145,184 committals to
126
local prisons in
The convict system natics,
and
ons had a
in
England and Wales.
1867 comprised nine convict prisons, an asylum
a refuge (a prerelease prison) for female convicts.
much
shorter history than either the
jail
for criminal lu-
These central government
or the house of correction.
pris-
They dated
back no further than 1776, when the loss of the American convict depositories obliged central
government
would provide
to take a reluctant
hand
a penal alternative to
in prison administration. Believing that providence
America, the government simply extended
its
holdings
— 134
SeAn McConville
/
of hulks
—disused and decommissioned warships—which had previously been used
shal the convicts before their transportation to the nal,
American
and similar work during the day, convicts returned
own kind
These prisons provided their
to
mar-
colonies. Put to dockyard, arse-
hulks for sleeping and feeding.
to the
of security but were also prone to corruption
abuse of all kinds. They were managed by a private contractor, to
and
whom the government paid
a fee.
The apparently irremediable condition
tentiaries" in the last
ment
to set
up
its
of the hulks (though they could, in fact, be run
administrations showed), and the enthusiasm for "peni-
fairly decently, as later civil-service
decades of the eighteenth century, eventually persuaded central govern-
own
land-based prisons. The
of these
first
was
the General Penitentiary, a
massive, costly, impractical, and mock-medieval pile erected on the Thames, at Millbank.
This received
its first
was a constant source of administrative,
prisoners in 1816 and
and health problems until it was pulled down in 1893.
was used
after demolition, its sixteen-acre site
work
for
some
Until the
for
financial,
Two good things came out of Millbank:
housing the poor, and
its
leveling provided
of London's unemployed.
end of the nineteenth century, the two prison systems
—
convict and local
continued as largely separate administrations. There were fewer of both types of prison than in earlier decades. This
was
the result of falling committals
and shorter sentences and of
increased central government pressure on the localities to improve their prisons or to amal-
gamate the smaller ones. So administrations, that there
were
distinct
was
was run. A white-collar offender who (as convict
imprisonment was then
the law required, he a convict prison. At
warders and
was held
officials,
in the late
called)
locally
Newgate
from convict prisons, and so separate
local
great ignorance, even
during his
staff,
1870s received
noted
(the City of
by the
this
trial,
London
of
five
how
years of penal servitude
mutual ignorance in his memoirs. As
and
after
sentencing he was removed to
local prison)
he found that "everyone,
were perfectly ignorant of the system and discipline pursued
convict establishments. Not one
knew anything
In the late nineteenth century there
their
the other's system
of convict
was heated controversy about the decline
prison committals. Administrators claimed that falling
at the
life."
numbers were evidence
that,
in the
among
other things, convict and local prisons were doing their job, deterring or reforming criminals. Skeptics,
on the other hand, saw the
whole picture was complicated by such as
failing to
send one's child
introduction of several fines).
A careful
means
falling
numbers
as the result of shorter sentences.
a rising general population, the creation of to school or for vaccination,
and
at the
new
same
The
offenses
time, the
of curtailing the use of imprisonment (probation, time to pay
sifting of the statistics
by an 1894
Home
Office committee concluded that
although sentencing changes had undoubtedly played a major part in the reduction of prison
numbers, crime had also diminished. In retrospect, this
fall is
hardly surprising, since in those years
all
the institutions
and
instruments of order and socialization were being refined and extended in England. The effects of the
and
crude mobilization and exploitation of labor, and the consequent
social disorganization,
to fade. ability
which marked the
Working people began
first
to enjoy a higher standard of living, together
and security in their circumstances that
civic
upheaval
phase of the industrial revolution, began
wedded them more
with a predict-
firmly to the status
quo
(to
The Victorian Prison
and disgust of
the increasing despair
deed the status quo was tation being
itself
—
Engels).
And
and
Add
to the picture vast sanitary, transportation,
social security
changes and a proliferation of civil or-
political, labor, religious, cultural, recreational,
and
self-help
—and one has
elements for stabilization, incorporation, and empowerment, elements that today's
on both
cians,
sides of the Atlantic, might envy.
in late Victorian
in-
changing, with ever greater political participation and represen-
extended to working people.
educational, financial, municipal,
ganizations
Marx and
revolutionaries, such as
135
/
It is
salutary
and humbling
politi-
to reflect that
England, prison closures, with their attendant loss of local employment
and
trade, constituted a recurring criminal justice
and
bitterly fought.
problem and
a source of quarrels, long
Penal Servitude and Progressive Stages
The convict
prisons,
which had grown out of problems with the transportation of convicts growing belief that trans-
overseas, eventually replaced transportation altogether. Expense, a
portation
had
little
deterrent value,
and an antipathy to the practice
colonies were the principal reasons for
its
demise. The
last
in
some
of the Australian
batch of convicts arrived in West-
ern Australia in January 1869, but by then the flow had dwindled to an annual selection of
some 600
suitable long-sentence prisoners. (The last
consignment numbered 279 and
in-
cluded 63 Fenians from the abortive 1867 uprising in Ireland.)
From
first to last, it is
to Australia.
estimated that about 162,000
men and women were
Between 1719 and 1772 some 30,000 had been transported
colonies from England alone. Although the flow of convicts overseas
over a period of years by weeding out those
was understandable public alarm
home
of all convicts. Political
at
who had
transported
to the
American
was gradually reduced
shorter sentences or were unfit, there
the prospect of the retention
and judicial opinion, transmitted
and eventual
to the public
release at
through inflam-
matory journalism and the Victorian equivalent of "true crime" pulp publications, portrayed transported convicts as the most dangerous and wicked of offenders. These convicts were
compounded by an
seen as a national threat, people whose implacable criminal natures were animalistic sexuality
and profound immorality and who were therefore
dangerous subversive
would
class.
Any
alternative to transportation
had
to
likely to
expand
quiet public fears.
For several decades prison administrators had experimented in managing penal pline
a
be cast in a form that
by means of "progressive
restrictive
stages."
and punitive parts was
disci-
Breaking the prisoner's sentence into successively
a feature of the
regime
at the
less
pioneering (and prototypical)
and this approach was adopted when central own penitentiary at Millbank. The penal discipline at Pentonville penitentiary, established in 1842 to embody and exemplify the latest elements in penal thought and prison design, also included progressively easing stages. The notion was simple. Good penitentiary established at Gloucester in 1791,
government
set
up
its
behavior assured the authorities that the prisoner could be trusted in easier conditions of
confinement and earned him advancement. The system was supposed to deter
—
test,
encourage, and
the last because a lapse in behavior could result in degradation to a lower stage.
Pentonville convicts were supposed to be the pick of the criminal crop health, relatively inexperienced in crime,
and
carefully
chosen
—young,
in
good
for reformation. All
who
136
SeAn McConville
/
entered Pentonville at this time (the early 1840s) were exceptionally severe test of eighteen
nine months because of the
toll it
months
doomed
to
be transported
after the
of separate confinement (eventually reduced to
took on physical health and
sanity).
The prisoner was
to
be
softened up: the chaplain spoke of softening hard hearts; critics referred to a softening in the head.
Once
the prisoner
was in a compliant and cooperative
would be
basics of a handicraft trade,
prepared for
life
terrorized
ways be
in other
The best behaved were not spared transportation but were granted
overseas.
—
The obdurate and ill-conducted were delivered
came
he would be taught the
allowed conditional release almost immediately on their arrival in Australia.
a certificate that
British
state,
by preaching, and would
to Devil's Island
—
in chains to a penal colony
the nearest the
for several years of debilitating toil, harsh living,
and crushing
discipline.
The philosophy of progressive by Lord
in a declaration cinctly
ing in
embodied
and penal servitude was
stages
Stanley, secretary for
and
the thinking of this
war and the
set
out in
November 1842
colonies. His statement so suc-
several successive generations that
it is
worth quot-
full.
We
do not
.
.
.
contemplate a
which the
state of things in
convict, suffering
under the
sentence of the law, should ever be excluded from the hope of amending his condition by
blameless or meritorious behaviour, or from the fear of enhancing the hardships of
misconduct.
On the contrary,
to
keep
every stage of the progress of the prisoner of the discipline to
an invigorating hope and
alive .
.
.
a salutary
it
by
dread
at
appears to us to be an indispensable part
which he should be subjected. Further, we contemplate
the necessity
of subjecting every convict to successive stages of punishment decreasing in rigour at each ,
successive step, until he reaches that ultimate stage ... of a pardon, either absolute or conditional, though not ever entitled to
demand
the indulgence of right. (Correspondence
on Convict Discipline, 1843)
Twentieth-century tyrants have
made
full
use of the terrible properties of separate con-
finement. Nineteenth-century penologists were every bit as aware of its capacity to break the
even though they were ignorant of the psychological mechanisms involved. The Rev-
spirit,
erend John Burt, sometime assistant chaplain to the
world (or
at least to the
at Pentonville, in
how-to-do-it group of magistrates
ship): "The passions of the criminal by which he
is
1852 proclaimed separation
who
constituted his reader-
chiefly actuated, are usually excessive
and
malignant. Penal discipline finds the will vigorous, but vicious, propelled powerfully, but lawlessly.
It is
discipline. plastic
.
.
.
by the
this vicious activity that is
The will
is
.
discipline.
.
.
subdued
.
.
.
The
will
.
.
.
is
subjugated by protracted seclusion and wholesome
bent or broken, and the moral character bent in
its
direction;
virtue, its vicious activity is
suppressed only to leave
The nine-month duration
of this
sought
—
a rebirth, a
and ready
new
first
open
it
it is
broken
its
is
.
.
.
made
resistance to
to the control of better motives."
stage in penal discipline suggested
being, a person purged of criminal instincts
for the carefully
in
what was being
and malign
attitudes
graduated series of rewards and threats that constituted the
later
stages of the system.
This system of inducements and threats, and a period of
became Britain
the basis of the
initial
purging and breaking,
home-based convict system. The numbers of convicts retained
were gradually increased by transporting only
fit
in
males with the longest sentences.
The Victorian Prison
/
137
An 1888
engraving of
a ticket-of-have
man
reporting to police
headquarters.
A fore-
runner of parole, the ticket-of-leave system granted early release only to those
who
displayed complete
submission to prison authorities.
1853
In
this
informal practice, which had been based on the use of the Royal Prerogative and
executive discretion,
was put on
a
proper legal footing and called penal servitude.
Prisoners are most animated by the prospect of freedom, and giving the duration of their confinement lease for
is
them
at
that a convict
home
way to affect re-
good behavior was the basis of the convict system proposed as a substitute for trans-
portation by Sir Joshua Jebb, chairman of the Directors of Convict Prisons.
1853
a
powerful form of behavioral control. Accelerated
a
who would have
served fifteen years
for eight to ten years; a ten-year
man might
if
transported
be released in
It
was agreed
in
would be imprisoned six;
and
a seven-year
sentence could be served in Britain in four. The proportion of time that could be remitted was
changed again
on
in 1857,
a sliding scale of
from one-sixth
for the shortest sentence of penal
servitude to one-third remission for those serving fifteen years
and more.
There was some ingenuity in Jebb's system. Nine months of separate confinement would be followed by time
at a
public works prison, where the prisoner
posedly) carefully controlled
company
work
—building
the convicts performed
tually) reclaiming
marginal farmland.
to obtain early release.
A book,
A
fortifications, laboring at
three-stage
progress. Sentences were converted into marks,
the
naval dockyards, or (even-
promotion was necessary
liberty.
for a prisoner
and prisoners were informed of the
Jebb insisted that
should be reminded of the book and of the conduct
the three stages
the (sup-
names from
rather like that of the recording angel, noted every convict's
number standing between them and ers
would be allowed
of his fellows. These prisons got their
it
"at
total
every opportunity" prison-
ineluctably charted. Each of
was denoted by conduct badges. Every prisoner had
well as that of his fellows, constantly thrust before him. In addition,
his
own
status, as
bad behavior
forfeited
marks already earned; very bad behavior incurred flogging and the appalling discomfort and
138
/
SeAn McConville
aggravation of living in chains. Even indifferent behavior could cause one to wait out the
whole of a sentence. Energy, commitment, and complete submission were the supposed prerequisites of early release.
Nor,
when he
hopes and
left
the prison,
was
the prisoner finished with the calculus of invigorating
salutary dreads. Except for the recalcitrants
was conditional, on
knew that they were being watched and could be
lease
not criminal.
who
sat
out their sentences, release
who won
Those
a "ticket of leave" (the forerunner of parole).
recalled even
if
their
early re-
misbehavior was
A recalled convict served out the unexpired portion of his sentence, often under
even more punitive conditions.
The Local Prisons While penal servitude was being established, consolidated, and refined transportation, local prisons (as
we may
conveniently
correction) were also undergoing great change.
the strengthening of central government,
took the
first
call the
as a substitute for
combined jails and houses
which
consequence of the 1832 Reform Act
as a
Hard on
steps toward representative democracy.
the heels of national political
reform came an overhaul of local government, then immensely more important to the the nation than
Among numerous
now.
of
The administrative source of that change was
changes, the reform-minded
life
Whig government
of
es-
tablished a national inspectorate for local prisons. Simultaneous legislation obliged local authorities to
improve prison management and
Treasury coated the that since central
pill.
to tighten discipline,
government was mandating expensive changes,
of the costs. But like
all
and grants-in-aid from the
These subsidies were wheedled out of Parliament with the argument it
ought
Theoretically, the local authorities could refuse the grants
and maintain
practice, they incorporated the grants into their financial expectations
lived
up
to their
income. The
bined with regular and
to help
meet some
such bounties, grants transformed the donor-recipient relationship.
new
their
autonomy. In
and then generally
standards of management imposed by legislation, com-
and growing
effective inspection
financial
dependency, brought ex-
tensive changes in the local prisons.
The was
first
and most obvious of these was
available that
years that the
it
a
wave
of closures. So
little
reliable information
was only after central government inspectors had been working for a few
number
of local prisons could confidently be stated. In 1812, James Neild, the
prison investigator and reformer, reported that there were 317 prisons in England and Wales.
Seven years cate
later a
parliamentary return gave the
an increase but was rather the
result of an
number as 335. This probably did not
indi-
undercounting by Neild. Central government's
inspection and regulation exerted such pressure on localities, however, that by 1862 the judicial statistics reliably reported only
number had dropped The
193
England and Wales. By 1877
right of a county, municipality, or liberty to operate a jail or
valued for several reasons.
It
confirmed
an amount of patronage; and through
benefits
this
were outbalanced by the
house of correction was
and importance and usually provided
civic identity
legal business, the provisioning of the prison,
spending of salaries, a jail was a stimulus to ties,
local prisons in
to 112.
local trade But for
legal
.
and
some
and the
of the very small authori-
financial obligations. In 1862, for example,
one-third of local prisons in England and Wales admitted fewer than twenty-five prisoners in
The Victorian Prison
the
whole
year,
and one-seventh received fewer than
six prisoners.
Some
139
/
were
local prisons
completely unoccupied. But, empty or not, the prisons cost money. The fabric of the building
had
to be
and
to
made
maintained and improvements
meet the requirements of the inspectorate and
by combining several municipal
offices) staff
and separation
to allow for classification
had
to
legislation.
Somehow or other
(usually
be retained. The honor and benefits of
being a prison holder in these small jurisdictions simply did not justify the cost to the local taxpayer.
But one could not simply close up shop and
The
own and
right to
the courts send the prisoners elsewhere.
let
operate a jail, a right often secured by strenuous effort and maintained
with extraordinary tenacity, required an act of Parliament to be extinguished. ity that
grew
ments were
dissatisfied
either to
with
who wished
prisoners elsewhere.
A local author-
bargain had to pay to get out. The least complicated arrange-
amalgamate with another
Whether amalgamation taxpayers
its
or contracting
local prison or to contract.
was chosen, the principle was the same:
local
accommodation of
their
to discontinue a prison
Amalgamation was
more
a
have a local prison. Contracting held out
had
to
pay
for the
drastic step, since
it
terminated the right to
at least the possibility of the
resumption of
in-
dependent authority. The usual type of arrangement was for a small municipality to contract
with the county authority
—
a
county town such as Worcester,
for
example, would
contract with the county of Worcestershire. National improvements in transportation (particularly railways)
and
a desire to cut costs also led
some
counties,
which had operated more
than one jail or house of correction (such as Berkshire, which had jails
at
both Abingdon and
Reading), to close the smaller of their two establishments. Closures, contracting,
and amalgamations adjusted prison populations
distribution of the general population, changes that tion
and urbanization took hold. But
for a
to
changes in the
grew ever more marked as
time the flow of prisoners was not
industrializa-
all
one way. As
counties and small towns lost their populations, the occupancy rate of their prisons declined. In the 1860s, therefore, a few of the
counties to receive
some
overcrowded industrial towns and
of their overflow.
To make
this cost-effective,
cities
contracted with
only longer-term pris-
oners (those serving several months rather than a few days or weeks) were dispatched to the country. In time, contracting, closures, and amalgamations might have led to a fairly cient, flexible,
and
rational distribution of
nificant overall decline in the
number
accommodation, especially since there was a
of prisoners. But difficulties remained, of course.
effi-
sig-
Even
with populations and levels of crime increasing rapidly, some industrial towns, such as Newcastle and Liverpool, were unwilling or unable prison numbers. There was also nicipal administrations,
some
which clung
Decisions were sometimes
made on
to build or to contract for their
irrationality in the existing
swollen
system of county and mu-
to age-old prerogatives, boundaries,
and
privileges.
the basis of sentiment, custom, or inertia rather than
efficiency.
Nationalization oj the Local Prisons
The phrase "improvements
in transportation" vastly understates the changes
wrought
in
England by the railways between the 1840s and the 1870s. Journeys that had taken days, and were apt
to
be hampered by weather, could by mid-century be
made
in comfort, with a very
140
SeAn McConville
/
high degree of reliability, in a matter of hours. This assisted prison authorities in the rational-
accommodation and was incorporated
ization of their
therefore
its
punishment, had become
greater mobility
and
better
From
its
argument
that crime,
and
communications were causes of the breakdown of localism
England, from which emerged a profound change in
crime and
into the
a national rather than a local responsibility. Indeed,
in
how people viewed the world, including
punishment.
the origins of Anglo-Saxon policing (in its original broad sense) the precept that
communities should themselves be responsible
for the
maintenance of law and order was
fundamental. Over the centuries this notion was buttressed by numerous experiences confirming fears that central government
would abuse power and could not be
peacekeeping, which for safety's sake had to remain a function of the ing, this is
why
continental countries had state-controlled police services
before the English,
consent to their
localities.
who
had been taken, police forces were Police being the exception).
many
departure from what
many
centuries
were, against their very strong instincts, cajoled by Sir Robert Peel to
professional city police force in 1829.
first
trusted with
Broadly speak-
locally
Even when
managed and financed
(the
that
hesitant step
first
London Metropolitan
The very notion of a national penal system was therefore politicians
—Tory and Whig
alike
—considered
to
a radical
be the ancient
constitution of England.
But a change in opinions about the balance of local and national responsibilities began in
1842 when Peel repealed the protectionist Corn Laws,
Bowing
trade.
consequences
to the for the
argument landed
interest, Peel
burden of property taxation by paying
and
and
civil
had
still
prisoners, for staffing,
and
to find the
some
of the
law and order expenses out of central all
local prison costs
government thenceforward paid maintenance costs
misdemeanants. Localities
free
would have adverse
his supporters agreed to relieve
a proportion of
government revenues (which were not property-based). Not over, but central
cheap food and
in the interests of
that the abolition of agricultural tariffs
for
bulk of prison funding
—
were taken
both felons and for
for capital costs: the ratio of local to central
unsentenced funding was
about 85 percent to 15 percent.
An important constitutional line had already been redrawn, and the country had become comfortable with the
new arrangements, when in 1872 it was proposed The economy as a whole had
that there should be
a further redistribution in prison costs.
entered a period of
unparalleled prosperity, yet agriculture was beginning to experience clear intimations of what
was
become
to
its
prolonged decline. The vast extension of the electoral franchise in 1867
through the Second Reform Act, and the undoubted wealth of industry, were put forward as reasons for the removal of prison costs from local taxation. The franchise reform had granted the vote to virtually
burden
was it
all
adult males, and the reasoning
as taxpayers. This
locally raised, the latter nationally.
was
further argued,
was
that they should
meant another shift from property
The
assume a greater
to personal taxation: the
proliferation of central
former
government regulations,
had reduced the magistrates who administered the
local prisons to the
status of agents of the central authority.
There was also
a criminological
argument
in favor of the cost redistribution.
creased mobility of criminals, thanks to the railways, supposedly
The
in-
made them a national prob-
lem, and their punishment became a central rather than a local responsibility. These arguments
The Victorian Prison
drifted
around
for a while.
were considered costs,
to enable central
To their
stopped well short of an actual appro-
politicians
and was based on
—by then
civil
servants agreed
and uninfluential group
a marginal
—added
comparative severity of local punishments. Criminals, with an eye
to the
—which became received wisdom—was purely anecdotal
a gross overestimation of
most criminals' capacity
to plan
and decide. But
sounded plausible and gave an indication of how crime might be suppressed,
locali-
vied with each other to be feared by criminals and vagrants. The argument for uniformity
in prison discipline
was strengthened by these preoccupations and by the contention
localities attracted criminals
and
also failed in their broader duty,
the national repression of crime.
amount
of central direction, this
And
The inspectorate of
argument dovetailed with those urging a national redistribu-
it
was inequitable
the prisons
and the
for
much
longer than the notion of
punished in
that similar crimes should be
proliferation of laws
imprisonment had largely been born out of
ment had wide
a
Disraeli
and concerns came together
formed
his
second (and
cautious and vague but had included taxation.
and national regulations on
this concern. Parity in
sentencing and punish-
appeal and no theoretical opposition.
political
All of these interests
that
by a greater
Why should mere geography determine the amount and type of punishment?
dissimilar way.
government
that lax
to contribute to
since uniformity could best be ensured
Another version of the argument had been current uniformity as deterrence: that
Benjamin
which was
and power.
tion of penal costs
and
and senior
caught, supposedly planned their depredations for a jurisdiction with a "soft"
if
prison. Evidence for this theory
it
all
herbs and condiments. There had long been abroad the notion that crimes were
to their fate
ties
to take over a greater proportion of prison
funding should be matched by greater government control.
this stew, various penologists
own
planned according
since
government
by central government, although both
that increased central
141
They had an abstract plausibility but little urgency. Various schemes
but no decisions were made. These proposals
priation
/
last)
in
1874 and were given urgency when
government. His election platform had been
unambiguous promises to reduce
local rates
and central
We now know that he had little idea how he would honor his pledges
he asked the various members of his cabinet to make suggestions. There were in-
creasingly urgent political pressures from the agricultural interest,
market stagnation and
ment became
falling prices.
attractive as a
retary Richard
means
Assheton Cross
was given cabinet permission
The case looked
which was
suffering from
The removal of prisons completely from
of bringing swift
(a politician
who had
relief.
local
Accordingly, in 1876,
govern-
Home
Sec-
never previously held ministerial rank)
to bring in the necessary legislation.
attractive.
There were apparently sound criminological and penological
reasons to enforce greater uniformity in prison discipline. The exclusive links between localities
and law enforcement had already been weakened by
tation revolution.
there
would be
fiscal
To these was added a clinching argument:
if
changes and by the transpor-
local prisons
were nationalized,
a net saving of expenditure, thus reducing the total tax burden, local
and
national.
This
last
argument, which time and experience would show to be fallacious, was put
forward by the person
Edmund Du
Cane.
Du
who had become
— Colonel
the government's chief penal adviser
Cane's experience of local prisons was minimal.
He was chairman
of
142
SeAn McConville
/
and the two systems,
the Directors of Convict Prisons,
inclined to acquaint themselves with each other. ers,
and the management problems and Having spent
ferent.
a
contempt But
it
for local
we have and
priorities of convict
for the
seen, were not in the least
dif-
in civil administration,
Du
personnel and machinery of central government and
government, which he saw as amateur and
was Du Cane's nationalization
inefficient.
proved
calculations, that
be amateur. His figures
to
were flawed and misleading, yet the cabinet accepted them uncritically.
had no experience of central government administration and ment,
much more
of prison-
were very
local prisons
whole of his careefas a soldier
virtually the
Cane had an overly high regard
as
They received very different types
finance,
Home Secretary Cross
and members of Parlia-
taken with the penal and constitutional issues involved, proved incapable
of dealing with the financial side of the decision. Leaving aside the largely theoretical argu-
ments about
local
and national
rationality of criminals,
of prisons
on the
most trusted
we
punishment, and the supposed
responsibilities, equity in
find that Disraeli's
government embarked on the nationalization
basis of a misleading prospectus
drawn up by one
advisers, a prospectus accepted uncritically
of
its
most senior and
by the home secretary and
his se-
nior officials and passed unchecked by Parliament. At every stage the checks and balances
work.
failed to
When viewed in retrospect, the financial projections verge on the absurd, but even at the time, their weakness
probe. By closing
would have been apparent
down
to
anyone
half the local prisons in the country
who had
taken the trouble to
—thus carrying conway— Du Cane hoped to a logical
clusion the process of contracting and amalgamations already under to save a
sum
of
money almost
equal to the extra expense of taking over the running of the
remaining prisons. Something, in other words, could be had self-deceiving ingenuity,
Du Cane
such as the crank and treadwheel,
for nothing.
With the speculator's
also calculated that confining unproductive penal labor,
to the first
month of a sentence,
instead of the three
months
required by existing legislation, would cause a substantial increase in revenue from prisoners'
enhanced
industrial productivity. This increased revenue
would
further offset the costs of
nationalization.
These computations and projections were riddled with In the
had
first
its
place, there
was no uniform system of accounts
own bookkeeping
which had been arrived
at
system. Balance sheets were
Having
To
and omissions.
no more than
estimates, each
one of
according to local custom and practice. The claims that were made
for the profitability of the prison industries
than wishful thinking.
fallacies, errors,
in the local prisons: every locality
were unreliable, often
extrapolate from this
dealt previously only with convicts,
ductive capacities of short-term prisoners.
Ill
Du
reflecting
nothing more
mishmash simply added whimsy
to fantasy.
Cane did not understand the minimal pro-
health, lack of work experience,
poor skills, low
motivation and rapid turnover, and the psychologically depressing effects of the harsh prison
environment were ish
all fierce
brakes on productivity. More generally, this was a period in
economic history when handicrafts, and even small-scale workshop
labor,
Brit-
were in an
increasing and irreversible decline in competition with capital-intensive production.
There was another inexcusable error in the reckonings. Any commercial enterprise thinking of an acquisition consisting so substantially of buildings would have insisted on a thor-
ough inspection by an independent surveyor. By omitting
this
elementary precaution,
Du
The Victorian Prison
143
/
Convicts ofMillbank Prison work
in the
garden ground, circa 1870.
Cane lumbered
central
government with a penal
estate in
need of substantial and urgent
investment. Since the prisons had been built at different times to meet diverse prison legislation
and according
to the crotchets
ization entrusted the
Newgate dated back early medieval times.
opened.
a
wonderful architectural cross-section of English
form of hopelessly costly encumbrances.
history, in the
it
and nostrums of various groups of magistrates, national-
government with
such as Oxford, dated to
Newcastle was modern but was jerry-built and inadequate even before
Among those
gerous sanitary
to the eighteenth century; other prisons,
in apparently
facilities.
good condition, some had inadequate health and dan-
Nationalization in one form or another had been sufficiently dis-
cussed for most of the 1870s to console some local authorities in their assumption that there
was
little
point in improving, or even maintaining, buildings that could soon pass to central
government. Certified as adequate by the surveyor-general and inspectors of prisons, the prisons had not been inspected to see
if
they should be purchased but only to judge
if
met the limited requirements of the various prison acts. And even the inspectorate had
they
lost its
energy in the 1870s, with nationalization in the offing. Central government, for political and legal reasons,
could not afford to be as lackadaisical as the local authorities. Takeover meant
major improvements in those buildings that were Unrelated
fiscal
and
political pressures,
to
be kept in operation as prisons.
and the policy vacuum of
Disraeli's
second
administration, thus created the pressure to go forward with this half-baked scheme.
The government's
chief adviser,
who should
at the
very least have acted as an impartial
broker, was apparently motivated by that pervasive passion, bureaucratic empire building. If this
were not enough, he was given
promise of a very large cash bonus
a further
push toward unbalanced judgment by the
to carry the thing
through
—and Du Cane was
particularly
144
/
SeAn McConville
responsive to the stimulation of money.
ments
banking
that the
was there
headstrong
for a
civil
It
was from
a plethora of
such bonus-based judg-
sophisticated 1980s emerged, after
crisis of the
so
all;
what chance
bemused
servant serving ill-equipped ministers and
parlia-
mentarians in the 1870s?
Du Cane much of the first decade of nationalization covering his financial tracks. Although his tactics now look obvious, they were effective at the time, and he had the great good fortune to serve a succession of home secretaries who were inept, inexperienced, or indifferent to prison administration. The higher civil servants, who should have alerted ministers, were ferociously kept at bay by Du Cane, who Despite his flawed calculations and ill-considered judgments in this matter,
was
intelligent,
hard working, and resourceful. He spent
headed the commission Office
encroach on
to
Du
attention.
flair
and
Has
fully exploited in
Home
ability to force
more than
to
Du
Office
merous improvements vided abundant
in
official
—
for distracting his
and prison reform
sixty prisons into a
basis
a curious oversight
was
was long
correspondence. The fetish of uniformity,
leaders)
new
implicit
some
were impressed by his Procrustean
health, sanitation,
and buildings pro-
and self-congratulatory annual
reports. All this
condemnations of the old order.
on which nationalization was represented
to the
and the country has been overlooked by prison
home
secretary,
historians. This
and needs some explanation, since the government's takeover of the
the major penal event of the late nineteenth century, with consequences
being
felt
today.
The inaccurate and tendentious accounts
government, accounts written by
Du Cane and by two
of English prisons
important committees of
inquiry (the Carnarvon Committee of 1863 and the absurdly overvenerated Gladstone mittee of 1894-95), have
—
least
senior civil
administrative framework. That and nu-
management procedures,
the cabinet, the Parliament,
were
for a
mas-
support nationalization, also served to divert. Even the
grist for lengthy, detailed,
The misleading
local
Du Cane had possessed,
Cane's persona and performance (including
work and every innovation were
under
Home
to begin seriously
of immunity from criticism? This dispensation
annual reports and
servants in the
still
By the time the
and confidence
there ever been a takeover, political or organizational, that has not
sympathetic observers of
that are
local prisons.
essential in higher civil servants
new boss a honeymoon
local prisons
run the
finance issues can be boring; in addition
—seemingly
which had been employed
is
to
There was the useful old routine of revelation, shock, and hand-wringing over
the previous regime.
afforded the
up
set
sufficient prison expertise
Cane's territory, he escaped through retirement.
Management and time, a conjurers ters'
had been
that
mandarins had acquired
become
the conventional view instead of being seen for
respectively, the misrepresentations of a zealot
This strange reading of penal history
is
and the dabblings of
Com-
what they
dilettantes.
readily explained. Scholars (and
it
is
a small
troupe that has taken on this topic in history and public administration) have almost invariably espoused the doctrine of centralization and state supremacy. First in this succession
were Sidney and Beatrice Webb, with cal
their impressively researched English Prisons under Lo-
Government in 1922, which remained the substantially unchallenged
years.
The Webbs were wholehearted and unabashed
reformers, but they were also naive
elitists
statists.
and, like so
many
text for
some
They were distinguished
fifty
social
of their generation, were besot-
ted with the benign possibilities of social engineering through the centralization of authority.
The Victorian Prison
washing accounts of Joseph tion?,
and
empire, under the
remove the question mark
to
was
in their
And
since
it
Communism: A New Civiliza-
Of course
was part of an
performed the obligatory
who
Du Cane
followed
ritual of castigating his
the
Webbs welcomed
inevitable progression,
view morally and organizationally superior
Others concurred. Evelyn Ruggles-Brise, glish prisons,
Soviet
for successive editions.
the centralization of the English prisons. centralization
title
145
many white-
This worship of power led them in 1935 to publish the most voluminous of the Stalin's
/
what
to
it
replaced.
head of the En-
as the
predecessor in his version of
prison history. Prison Commissioner Lionel Fox did the same thing to Ruggles-Brise
when he
wrote for his generation. But both took care to uphold the shibboleth of prison nationalization
and
government. By the 1930s the ascendancy of central over local
to disparage local
government was so complete in England, and the ties,
state
was so imbued with benign propergovernment would have
that a defense of the achievements of nineteenth-century local
appeared quixotic. Both "progressive" and
official
opinion accepted the superior virtues of
prison nationalization as dogma, and to this day not a single voice of dissent has been raised.
The passage of time confers centuries,
is
own
its
legitimacy. Chronology, even in this bloodiest of
all
only too easily seen as progress.
Hard Labor, Hard Board, and Hard Fare It is
impossible fully to understand imprisonment in England in the
out a knowledge of
administration. Uniformity
its
last
was an argument
two centuries with-
for nationalization, a
human
defining characteristic of the punishment, and a statement of beliefs about
The punishment had
made The
sense only
life
if
to
be of such a character that
it
one adopted a general view of prisoners' capacities
of the prisoner
was
directly
for choice
and
shaped by the notion of uniformity and the
that nationalization offered for achieving
It
also
means
that activities
"how much?" commands as
"how
painful?,"
punishment
The
is
"how
it.
difficult
a
officials'
high degree of quantifiability, since
precise answer than qualitative questions such
degrading?," and
much more
latter, as shall
must have
much more
a
actions.
possibilities
In any institutional action, the quest for uniformity necessitates a curbing of discretion.
nature.
could be made uniform, and uniformity
"how encouraging?" To
attain a
uniform end in
than to pursue uniformity in administering punishment.
be seen, can be reduced to quantities, to be directed and monitored with
comparative ease.
And
there are other
ways
lingering localism of English familiarity
in
life,
which administration
even
and sentiment between
grounds, and places allowed vanish entirely, of course,
local officials
officials
when
affected a prisoner's
after the railway revolution, there
and
and offenders
the local prisons
to
their prisoners.
life.
Given the
were apt to be
ties
of
Family names, back-
meet on a human plane. This did not
came under
national administration, but
the requirement that senior prison officials should be rotated through several prisons in the
course of their careers inevitably meant that prisoners and subordinate staff would be treated
more by
the
locality.
The
tions
book and
less in
rationale, after
terms of their individual characteristics or the customs of the
all,
for
moving
officials
and managers through
and departments on promotion was the same then
organization,
and above
all,
as
now
homogenize the administrators.
—
different institu-
to teach, test,
bind
to the
146
SeAn McConville
/
Uniformity was also more likely to increase severity than to promote
argument
the equity
crude behaviorist assumptions. Criminals, risk of pain
and
it
was theorized, acted
maximize pleasure or the prospect of
to
lenity.
gain.
Apart from
was based on
(similar crimes deserve similar punishment), uniformity
minimize pain and the
to
Uniformity in punishment
throughout the country would remove the possibility of matching risk to
locale.
But
it
was
inconceivable that in striving for a uniform level, administrators would reduce punishment
even to
to the level of the least severe locality or
punishment was
that
which was most
severe as public sentiment
and
political
To
the^ average level.
opinion would
tolerate.
locally ad-
bound to mean
in severity.
no national lobby
Since there was
when he
only praise
be as
likely to
The move from
ministered local prisons to nationally administered local prisons was therefore
an overall increase
good
a behaviorist,
and the most deterrent was
deterrent,
for the
Du Cane earned how he was mak-
mollycoddling of criminals,
described in his annual reports and numerous articles
more severe. He was no penal innovator, nor did he need to He developed and refined an approach that had been advocated in 1863 by a Lords' Select
ing punishment ineluctable and be.
Committee led by Lord Carnarvon. Under
hysterical political pressure, the proposals of this
committee had been largely acceded
a reluctant
to
by
a severely deterrent regime based
nerable certainty of one dentally,
who had
on hard
labor,
home
secretary
and were embodied
by means of codified
the Prison Act of 1865. This set out in great detail,
rules
hard board, and hard
fare.
in
and regulations,
With
the invul-
experienced a religious revelation, Carnarvon (who, inci-
was a leading campaigner against
cruelty to animals)
had come
to believe that
crime
could be repressed and the growth of a swelling criminal class reversed by making imprison-
ment
truly deterrent. Because of the "low, brutish nature" of offenders this could be
accom-
plished only by working on the senses to produce a state of constant misery, discomfort, and
even some pain. Taking
this basic
assumption and formula,
Du Cane
national penology for the last quarter of the nineteenth century all
the local prisons that
By the the 1850s
last
had come under
and
set
fashioned
it
into a
about applying
it
in
his control.
decades of Victoria's reign, and with the science-versus-belief controversies of
and 1860s
left
largely
behind or at
primacy in public debate because of
its
least
put to one side, science had begun to claim
purported intellectual and moral superiority.
Its as-
cendancy incorporated a misunderstanding of the ethical content of scientific judgment, leading to evil
and disastrous consequences
scientists
in the twentieth century.
and medical men, Du Cane refined and legitimized
rangements
to fashion the penal discipline to
Using committees of puppet dietary, labor,
which Carnarvon had aspired as
and
living ar-
a national goal
but had only glimpsed in practice.
Imprisonment with hard labor had become a near universal substitute other corporal punishments by
more than working hard; magistrates
it
the middle of the nineteenth century. "Hard labor"
and
meant
denoted an intensification of the pains of imprisonment. The
who ran the local prisons before nationalization were equivocal about too doctri-
naire an implementation of the punishment, since
they were
for flogging
bound
to interfere
if
the rules were conscientiously followed,
with prisoners' industrial labor. This, in turn, would prevent the
profits of prisoners' productivity
from being applied
to the local tax
burden. The phrase
The Victorian Prison
"hard labor" was, however, helpfully vague, and in to
be hard labor. To close
demanded 1865
this loophole,
and
labor that quickened the breath
by
statute
listing
to
147
/
many localities industrial labor was deemed
compel uniform penal
and opened the
labor,
Carnarvon had
was embodied
pores. This
in the
examples of approved hard labor, including the treadwheel, the crank,
and the capstan. The obligation
to enforce this type of labor
was
a
major feature of the 1865
Prison Act.
Noting vise
on
requirement,
this
Du Cane
appointed a medical and
committee
scientific
the quantity of daily hard labor that could safely be extracted.
With
to ad-
fitting gravity
and
authority, the committee concluded that prisoners sentenced to hard labor should daily as-
cend 8,640
was an
feet
on
the treadwheel (equivalent to six ascents of the Sears Tower). Because this
objective scientific judgment, touching
on quantity and physical
capacity, the basic
notion of hard labor was taken for granted by the committee. Yet what this amounted to
was
the coerced application of a vast quantity of labor to completely nonproductive pur-
poses. (The coercion
was
the threat of the
whip and
starvation.)
And
as a bonus, providing a
mental dimension to the torment, the prisoners had the galling and demoralizing knowledge that their toil
was completely wasted. This was scarcely
veiled torture
with hardly a
murmur
and
plates the
of dissent from penal reformers
150,000 or so people then annually committed
When
one contem-
fit
for the treadwheel,
and
treading and grinding uselessly for six hours a day, one realizes that at times even the most
cruel
and absurd of practices
The full
prints
will
and photographs
be countenanced
that
if
presented with appropriate authority.
remain of prisoners on the treadwheel
fail
to capture its
penal properties. They do not convey the motion, the noise, the palpable strain and smell
To go on the wheel was to be
of intense physical effort.
and
injury or even death to the novice,
cast into a
machine.
A slip could bring
very least the experience was grueling. Yet
at the
despite the claims of enthusiasts that the wheel inexorably extracted labor from
enced prisoners apparently learned of
with
to the English local prisons,
perhaps 100,000 sentenced to hard labor, 75,000 being declared all
and yet was accepted
journalists.
to coast
on the labor
men incapacitated through drink A prisoner who served a sentence in the late
Glasgow prison, beginners or
trying,
if
not dangerous."
himself go to the wheel, "pitied the treadwheel
men
all,
experi-
of others. According to the surgeon
as they
found the wheel "very 1870s, but
went out
who did not
to their labour"
and
how they sweated when they came back in. Sometimes, big strong prisoners would be led away crying. It is ironic that today gymnasiums can command large fees from devotees of noted
physical fitness for allowing ers
may imagine
remembered
them
to use
that the prisoner's
life
that in the local prisons of
modern
was not
versions of the wheel, and thus
as
hard as
I
have suggested. But
some
it
1870s England, the customers were more
read-
should be
likely to
be
emaciated than overweight, and they performed their wheel labor for six hours a day on a diet of oatmeal, bread,
and water,
after nights
and days of extreme discomfort.
Other bodily vulnerabilities were diligently exploited. lished. This
provided
scientific starvation.
for
And
to constitute
since local prison sentences were so short, few prisoners stayed
long enough to get beyond the "It
A "progressive" dietary was estab-
an allowance of food so meager in the early stages as
appears to us," pronounced
first
Du
or second stage to a marginally improved allowance.
Cane's scientists, "to be a self-evident proposition that
148
/
Sean McConville
Men
labor on the
treadwheel while others rest between sessions at the Clerken-
well
House oj Correc-
tion in 1874. Like
most
nineteenth-century depictions of the tread-
wheel, this engraving
underplays the physical
pain exacted by the device.
imprisonment should be rendered
and
strength."
The penal
as deterrent as
is
consistent with the maintenance of health
dietary might, they reflected, be seen as a benign infliction:
matter of universal experience that partial abstinence from food for a limited period
only safe under ordinary circumstances, but frequently beneficial, and diet is all that is necessary for a prisoner
give
more than
a
minimum
diet, the
nity for the infliction of salutary
undergoing
it
would
commission of petty crimes." Laxness, indeed, "would
a
not
think that a spare
"to forego
constitute an assist in the
is
few days or weeks." To
a sentence of a
committee cautioned, would be
punishment;
we
"It is
an opportu-
encouragement
to the
manufacture of the ha-
bitual criminal."
But since these experts were to science and medicine what tancy
when he
foisted nationalization
on the government,
dations inevitably and conveniently overlooked
drawn from demented,
the lowest sections of society.
filthy,
lousy,
and
some important
Many came
Du Cane had been to accoun-
their conclusions facts.
and recommen-
Prisoners were generally
off the streets
—
starving,
drunken,
tubercular, suffering from mental and physical illnesses and
weaknesses associated with long-term malnutrition and dissipation. These
facts
were so ob-
much overlooked as selectively interpreted. Near-starvawhen punishing those already hungry, to deter them from
vious that they were perhaps not so tion
was justified
as unavoidable
committing crime and from using the prison as a boardinghouse. Yet the
effects
of dietary
The Victorian Prison
were considered in relation to a well-fed person, not only safe
.
.
.
but frequently beneficial."
And
whom,
to
of the drunks, beggars, tramps, prostitutes, nuisances,
were habitual offenders. They would go
local prisons
149
indeed, "partial abstinence ...
was not the only
that
/
sleight of
hand.
is
Many
and petty thieves who populated the to prison for a
week or two on mini-
mum diet, debilitating labor, and depressing conditions, would come out for a day or two of free-range starvation
and sleeping rough on the
streets,
and would go back
inside for another
dose of the same, scientifically administered. The cumulative effects of the prison dietary on
such people, "serving
life
by installments," as
it is
sometimes described, were devastating and
destructive.
There is
Du
insufficient space here fully to discuss
is
indicative of the
Cane's
temper and penal methods of those
utilitarianism, the scientists
and
officials
were not
recommended
prisoners nauseous
had
it
a smell, taste,
and even
which
with meals that provided mini-
satisfied
mum nutriment. They issued detailed instructions on how to cook such ingredients that
dietary,
years. Consistent with their crude
it
in
such
and consistency so repulsive
a
that
way and from it
made some
These experiences run through prisoners' memoirs,
diarrheic.
from the persistent driving hunger of imprisoned labor leader John Burns in the 1880s to Oscar Wilde's gastrointestinal troubles
at
Reading Gaol
1890s (and neither was on the
in the
lowest diet).
Burns never forgot the hardships of his six weeks of imprisonment. (Du Cane might have argued that eventually
his politics
after his incarceration,
he told
streets to the
the meal
In what, for
all its
had ten hours
I
that his formula
House
of
Commons.
worked.) Burns
There, ten years
"I am not ashamed my hands with my spittle, and
MPs of his experience with Du Cane's dietary:
down on my hands and knees on
crumb from
punishment proved
of
from the
one or two o'clock in the morning
to say that at
gone
remembrance
this lasting
moved
sentimentality,
1
have wetted
the asphalted floor in the
hope of picking up
a stray
before." is
one of the great prison poems, Wilde,
who served
a
two-year sentence in local prisons for sexual offenses, wrote in The Ballad of Reading Gaol of
"Lean Hunger and Green Thirst." release, that the
He
reported to friends, and in articles published after his
food was revolting and insufficient, that diarrhea was so
common that astrin-
gent medicines were issued as a matter of routine, and that on three occasions he had seen prison staff vomit in the cells,
when they unlocked cells in the morning.
and the prisoners were issued chamber
(There was no integral sanitation
pots.)
Michael Davitt was one of several Irish revolutionists turned constitutional politicians
who
House
sat in the
of
Commons
interest in prison matters arose
from
in the last decades of the nineteenth century their
eight years of a fifteen-year sentence of penal servitude).
of scientific starvation." cruel than
—
hunger
gnawing,
human
thinking of the sufferings of the body, and tending to a denial of the
elementary cravings of nature." The
Davitt recalled the
marrow
described the dietary as a "scale is
feeling
make
life
no bodily punishment more which
tortures the
an unbearable
mind
infliction
in
under
Commons and the nation were shocked as
how he had seen men devour candle ends, the grease provided for their boots,
of the putrid bones they
tice retrieved
He
Hunger turned life into misery: "There
that remorseless,
and whose
own experiences with the system (Davitt had served
had been
set to
break and grind, and even a used poul-
from the prison garbage heap by the cesspool. Thus the measure of Du Cane's
150
SeAn McConville
/
extremism and the indolence or irresponsibility of his political masters were eventually broadtime
cast, for a
country.
at least, to the
Without the aid of
committee or Shakespeare,
either a scientific
Du Cane
grasped the
He endorsed Carnarvon's decree that, as far as possible, of care" was to be left undone. Low brute natures would surely
penal possibilities of denying sleep. the prisoner's "ravell'd sleave
—
not
—be permitted
particularly not
the indulgence of "sore labor's bath,
Balm of hurt minds."
Punishment could be pushed past the boundaries of consciousness by obliging emaciated prisoners to chase sleep on a hard board. to doze, relax, or
was
the crank
ment, to
sit
by requiring the prisoner, under
foiled
on
The hours of repose were
a backless stool or his
upturned slop
and any attempt
even more drastic punish-
threat of
pail
curtailed,
on the treadwheel or grinding
into a reverie after six hours of laboring
fall
and by
setting as a cell task a stiff
quota of oakum picking. Wilde told a friend that the plank bed caused him to shiver all night long and that, as a consequence of
its
he had become an insomniac; Davitt made the
rigors,
same complaint.
Low brutes were,
of course, gregarious. Misery might be diminished
was also corrupting. The crushing oppressiveness of the
discipline
by company, which
was intensified by keeping
the prisoner alone to the greatest extent possible. This sequestration extended outside the prison; only the small minority of long-term prisoners could earn the
ment of
and
a letter or a short visit from family
friends.
On
boon and encourage-
same
the
basis, the solace of
reading was restricted to the Bible or to books of religious exhortation whose turgidity comple-
mented
the contrived nauseousness of the maize stirabout.
From
the convict service,
local prisons. Progress
eight days
had
Du Cane
introduced progressive stages and marks into the
was by means of merit and the passage of time combined. Twenty-
to be spent in a stage in order for a prisoner to
be
be promoted;
eligible to
promotion was obtained only by earning the required number of marks. The stage
actual
system was supposed to provide inducements and to enable the prisoner of his punishment
by good behavior.
who passed through the local prisons,
In fact,
it
was
some charge
no matter how
since their sentences were so short that
win no improvement
well behaved they were, they could
to take
irrelevant to the vast majority of those
in their circumstances. In 1877, for
example, three-quarters of the prison sentences in English magistrates courts (which handled the vast bulk of criminal work) were for one
handled the most serious criminal
were
for three
months or
month or less. Even
in the higher courts,
cases, over one-quarter of all sentences of
which
imprisonment
less.
For the tiny minority of prisoners whose sentences were long enough to allow them to
win promotion
to the highest (fourth) class, the
summit, they were allowed in reading material.
month
to
They had
work
also earned,
they could have a half-hour
inducements were
together and received
visit
by
and
paltry.
At this disciplinary
some improvement
in dietary
a letter,
and on
their release they
and
Each
this time, mattresses instead of boards.
were given
a
slightly larger discharge gratuity.
Most important, people sentenced tences
up
sentence. tence,
to
to
imprisonment
in the local prisons (that
two years) did not have the inducement and advantage of
A man
or a
woman sentenced
to
two years of imprisonment served the
no matter how good his or her conduct. Progressive
is, all
sen-
a remission in
entire sen-
stage easements were not so
much
The Victorian Prison
positive
inducements as the removal or easing of conditions
the prisoner to the extreme limits of physical
that, in the earlier stages,
and psychological endurance. This
151
/
took
still left
a
lengthy sentence of local imprisonment as an extraordinarily severe punishment. Very rarely
1877 there were only two such cases) a man might be sentenced
(in
onment
—
the
maximum
penalty on two counts.
A
prisoner
who
to four years of impris-
served time in the 1870s
described such a sentence as "the severest punishment, with the exception of death,
known
who passed such a sentence remarked man died, in the other he went raving mad; and believe it a sentence that no man can survive and retain his senses." in the English law."
According
to his account, a
judge
he had given the sentence only twice before. "In the one case the
that
I
In\erting Deserts
Although the
local prisons
had a harsher regime than the convict establishments,
be imagined that conditions in the
latter
sioner Alexander Paterson in the 1930s as a
punishment, not
for
were
easy.
it
must not
The reform-minded Prison Commis-
made much of his aphorism
—"Men
are sent to prison
punishment." Victorian administrators believed the opposite: that
imprisonment and penal servitude were intended
to
be active punishment, not simply the
absence of freedom. The convict prisons, therefore, although in some respects less harsh than the local prisons,
With
were
still
might obtain
for himself
and with constant obedience and good behavior,
employment
that
was not too arduous, but
he would almost certainly spend some time
was conducted
and grinding punishment.
places of onerous
the passage of time
in large, closely
at
Where work quotas were
were
frantically driven
allotted tasks
on by
fit,
guarded gangs. Labor might involve sea or riverbed excava-
set, as in
heavy "spade labor" on marginal farm-
the excavation of
their guards,
who
Chatham dockyard,
the prisoners
themselves would be in trouble
if
the day's
were not completed.
Convicts endured a dietary that
men engaged
propriate for
he was physically
manual labor on the public works. This work
tion for a dockyard, the building of fortifications, or
land.
if
a convict
peated criticism from
in
Du Cane and
his meanspirited advisers considered ap-
prolonged and heavy manual labor. This did not prevent
members
of the public, certain politicians,
re-
and even prison reformers
who complained about excessive generosity. William Tallack, of the prison-reforming Howard Association,
was an
artless believer in
from crime. In one of his many
harsh punishment as a means of deterring prisoners
letters to
The Times, in the cause of what he saw as penal
reform, Tallack argued that there was overfeeding of convicts: that certain classes of prisoners are so well fed
of
due deterrence
ened."
and well-treated
for the protection of society
He went on to quote
a prison chaplain
"Humane
prison officers state
that the necessary conditions
from crime and violence are thereby weak-
who had compared convict dietary with that of
able-bodied paupers in the workhouse. The convict was given 280 ounces of solids a week, the
pauper 166. This was the obvious and widely accepted inversion of punishments in
England. Sentences of penal servitude were a
maximum
of
two years in the
of three years, as
local prisons. But after nine
(during which convicts were in easiest stage of local
minimum
some ways
treated as
months
late
Victorian
compared with
the
of separate confinement
though they had reached the
final
and
imprisonment), the pains of the sinister-sounding penal servitude were
152
SeAn McConville
/
A
team of convicts excavate the Chatham To meet daily work quotas, guards Basin.
drove prisoners at
a grueling pace.
lighter than those of local tiated the
would
punishments.
serve only
imprisonment. Even the duration of confinement scarcely differen-
A
well-behaved convict sentenced to three years' penal servitude
two years and
six
months because he could earn up
of sentence; the two-year prisoner in the local system, allotted
punishment.
And many
of those
who went
by
to one-sixth remission
contrast, served every
to the local prisons
day of
were caught
his
in the
revolving door of repeat offending, serving years in installments of days or weeks.
How was such an apparently absurd system justified? The notion of proportionality was deeply embedded in English sentencing policy, whatever obeisance deterrence or reform
might
extract.
But there was also a widely accepted line of reasoning that justified the harsher
treatment of the minor offender. Sir Joshua Jebb,
who dominated central government's penal
policy from the late 1840s until his death in 1863, raised this notion to the level of national policy. flict
He contended
that since
punishment had several
with others, the best way to reconcile them was
The
tence to the different ends.
used
first
some
evidently in con-
nine months of penal servitude, for example, would be
imprisonment would see a diminution of
to achieve deterrence or retribution; later
retributive elements
objectives,
to dedicate particular parts of the sen-
and an increased emphasis on reformation.
This reasoning was applied by
Du Cane
in his joint
management
of local
prisons. After he gained a few years' experience of local imprisonment, he
came
and convict to argue, not
implausibly, that sentences of imprisonment (as distinct from penal servitude) were so short that reformative efforts it
was misguided
ers.
And
because
were wasted. Since
to distract it
them
was from
it
was
futile to
at
deeper into crime. Should deterrence
at
to deter petty offend-
were
an early stage might prevent the offender from slipping fail,
or should an offender leapfrog into serious crime,
prolonged detention would be appropriate, and
might be made
which was
the hordes of lesser criminals that the greater offenders
thought to emerge, harsh treatment
that efforts
attempt reform in the local prisons,
from their principal task,
reformation.
it
was during
that
extended confinement
The Victorian Prison
Politicians, judges, magistrates,
and others were
sufficiently taken
by
/
153
this theory to over-
look the contradictions and inconsistencies. There was no logical reason, for example, even if
one accepted the "short and sharp" and "prolonged and reformative" bifurcation,
why
the
two types of imprisonment should not be integrated and the resulting continuum be made available to sentencers. But
custom has
in the administration of
haps
recently, for
more
per-
(Until relatively
and life-imprisonment matrix, which originated two hundred years ago,
in the days of transportation,
and was passed on
another generation would the
after
life.
example, long-term sentencing in England was inordinately affected by the seven-
year, fourteen-year,
Only
a powerful effect in shaping perceptions,
law than in any other department of public
greater offenders be
somewhat
leveled out,
to
imprisonment through penal servitude.)
disparities in the
full
and even then,
as
punishment of minor and
we
shall see, the Victorian
inheritance continued to exercise a powerful influence.
Closing the Prison Gates
From
his surviving correspondence, official papers, publications,
mony
to
committees of inquiry,
inferior to the convict service.
came alike
it is
When,
into his hands, he fiercely
—and imported
were adapted to the
clear that
Du Cane
his testi-
after nationalization, the staffing of the local prisons
guarded his prerogatives
convict-service officials to local prisons,
and the tenor of
always regarded the local prisons as
fill
—from
ministers and colleagues
many key posts.
Convict-service
methods
and the various prison advisory committees were well
leavened with convict-service functionaries. Since
at least the late
eighteenth century, the
English magistrates had been a continuing source of penological debate and innovation, yet
overnight they were shut out of the prisons, confined to a marginal inspectorial and advisory role
(which they miserably
failed to
develop) and discouraged
they were meddling and uninformed amateurs
back on them, scornfully dismissing piece of administrative
The
gates
at
every turn. Convinced that
"the great unpaid"
their opinions
at least the late
and with
Office.
pliant magistrates.
was an astonishing
large.
Under local govern-
1860s, there had been a vigorous and effective system first
fearless energy.
and government made no attempt by the Stationery
his
It
and personal arrogance.
government inspection. The
duties impartially
—Du Cane turned
and experience.
were slammed against the magistrates and society at
ment, from 1836 until of central
—
generation of these inspectors pursued their
They were not overawed by
to censor their
local bigwigs,
annual reports, which were published
They delivered numerous public rebukes
to dilatory or
noncom-
These reports (which had no equivalent in the convict prisons) brought
together a mass of information and
opened the
local prisons of the
country to the educated
world.
Not
all
interest in the prisons
was commendable. There were numerous occasions when
magistrates treated their prisons as freak-houses or
and entertainment
for visiting notables.
human zoos, places of diversion for friends
(Newgate in particular was a type of entertainment
park available to the Lord Mayor and Corporation of London: distinguished foreigners came to expect a tour as
one of the sights of London.) Turning prisons into places of amusement
indefensible, but the
the press.
It is
showmanship was generously extended
doubtful
if
to legitimate inquirers
and
is
to
any respectable middle-class person who knew a magistrate directly
154
/
SeAn McConville
or indirectly
would have
failed to gain entry into
Henry Mayhew and John Binny's
an English prison under
compiled in the 1850s, shows the freedom of access then routinely permitted. appeared during
lication
Du
firmly established, rationalizations so finely honed,
and
and
and public and
pub-
politicians so acquiescent
investigators did not again
and 1980s. Yet the public has many legitimate
sensitive state service,
No such
Cane's years or since. Traditions of prison secrecy became so
that reasonable access to journalists
able until the 1970s
government.
local
lavishly illustrated conspectus, Criminal Prisons of London,
become
regularly avail-
interests in this expensive
and these dark places in our system of government have been
notorious for their abuses through the ages. They always need the check of responsible scrutiny
and
publicity.
Disdaining, impeding, and dismissing the magistrates
watch on
his prisons,
and with scarcely
less
concern
held an unprecedented sway over English imprisonment
The
inevitable occurred:
man's personality. teeth
among
He
—
local
and convict alike
radical
—
unchecked authority amplified the strong domineering
until 1895.
the
traits in
outwitted politicians, terrified his subordinates, and sowed dragon's
the ranks of the increasingly formidable higher civil service.
changed and a
new home
secretary
a rebellious chaplain, that the prisons also
who had
who were supposed to be keeping Du Cane achieved and
for politicians,
to bear the age-old
was convinced, by had
a
When
the times
campaigning journalist and
to change, all criticism focused
on Du Cane,
consequences of gathering unto oneself all power and authority
and of carelessly making enemies. After a year spent malingering
to avoid
committee of inquiry (which in the end he handled masterfully),
Du Cane was compelled to
exit
on the very day he reached retirement
appearing before a
age.
The Twentieth Century and the Victorian Inheritance Twentieth-century imprisonment in England has been marked by a tenacious Victorian heritance, both in affirmation
Never
in English history
and repudiation.
have so
adapt to
was bricks and
in-
bars.
prisoners were expected to gather. if
The
but few workshops, dining
local prisons
sites
were par-
that allowed the prisoners to congregate.
galleries of cells
dayrooms. Chapels were the only part of
originally in city centers;
this
special (and expensive) design. These
new types of discipline
There were long and easily supervised
were
major part of
many prisons been built or rebuilt as during Victoria's reign.
The separate system required buildings of a ticularly difficult to
A
added
halls, or
where any appreciable numbers of
to the difficulties of adaptation.
Many
prisons had been put on the outskirts, development had
gone on around them. Expansions, rebuilding, and reconfigurations were in some places
all
but impossible.
And
in these years funds
demographic, and
and then World War
numbers was
II
for other needs. First
World War
and the destructive impact on
started to rise,
the vast
were urgently required
political devastation of
I,
came
the
human,
next the depression of the 1930s,
British cities.
When,
after
1945, prison
two considerations stood in the way of increased funding. The
and pressing program of repairing war damages; the second was the
social
first
and
penal reformers' assurance that successive governments could not be blamed for wanting to
/
155
yield to social
ame-
The Victorian Prison
believe
(it
was indeed
lioration, that
prisons
it
would
have seemed a dramatic
was
part of their election message)
decline.
folly of
The low
level of
England and Wales were then being held
Victorian administrators, politicians
and
end of the 1970s. The majority of prisoners
in
1900 and
in forty-two establishments built before
who
twentieth-century, purpose-built. Even a casual visitor
and towns immediately sees a century and cannot
to be struck
fail
"What experience and history teach is this
unmistakable
by the abiding Victorian nature of
Walls and bars most certainly
in England.
glimpses English prisons in the
style of architecture that bears the
this prison
system make.
Hegel could have been replying to an invitation to contribute to expostulated,
Caught between
in 1978.
between 1900 and 1939. Less than one-quarter of accommodation was
in another four built
last
42,000
to
investment through most of the twentieth century was evident
in the ages of the buildings in use at the
imprisonment
for
spending on prisons would
British prisons inevitably declined to levels of
shamed
sordidness that would have appalled and
stamp of the
need
that the
wishful thinking combined disastrously with
1945 and
inadequate funding and increased demands,
hearts of cities
that
and
crime and in prison numbers. In 1927 there were about 11,000 people in
the English prisons. This rose to 15,000 in
public alike.
would
that crime
The temper of those years was such
hope betrayed. This
like a
rise in
—
part of the passing turmoil of wartime upheaval,
—
that people
this
volume when he
and governments never
have learned anything from history, or acted on principles deduced from
it." If
this
century
has seen English prison administrators grapple with their Victorian inheritance, their decisions have
been erratic, uncertain, and marked by periods of administrative
sophical coma. the
word
With
all
the hubris
progress, penal history,
and delusion
where
congratulation rather than of warnings. jected their objects
We
and philo-
that the twentieth century has invested in
has been studied
it
inertia
at all,
has been a source of
self-
continue to use Victorian prisons but have re-
and methods; renouncing some of their prison-keeping axioms, we have
put nothing adequate in their place. Victorian administrators, for example, had good reason to
abhor the congregation and
ize
prisons led to an
free
abandonment
In consequence, prison riots,
occurrence in England. Even administrators consider
it
all
movement of this
destructive
when we
of prisoners. Unthinking attempts to
human-
some maximum-security
prisons.
wisdom, even
in
and some murderous, have become
a regular
attempt to invent and adapt, neither reformers nor
worth while seriously
to
ponder the experience of
earlier genera-
tions.
Selective incapacitation, a
1890s and given
legislative
ing repeat offenders,
its
origins go
continuum, special treatment penitentiaries. Parole
nostrum of the 1980s, was mooted throughout the 1880s and
form in England in 1908. In the practice of cumulatively sentenc-
back
to
for the less
grew out of the
medieval times. At the other end of the criminal
hardened offender was one of the rationales
ticket-of-leave
which
are intended to bring to heel the subversive
tested
methods of separation and progressive
about virtually
some changes of the
all
that
reforms, but, of course,
it
schemes of the 1840s. Control
and
recalcitrant prisoner, use the time-
stages. History offers
needs to be studied
were presented as innovations
is
for
units,
a useful
main currents of twentieth-century imprisonment
way
important lessons
carefully.
to get
A
closer look at
an overview of some
in England. In
comparison with
— 156
SeAn McConville
/
developments in the
century,
last
many more modern
penal schemes seem both pallid and
meandering. Yet those are not necessarily bad qualities in themselves, since
on
much depends
the available alternatives.
Preventive Detention
The idea of preventive detention was simple. Those who by
their repeated criminality dis-
dained or otherwise showed themselves
immune
imprisonment would receive treatment
different frorh that of "ordinary" criminals.
was
ject
to the deterrent or reformative
A
social protection rather than deterrence, reform, or retribution.
of sentencing
was established under
The ob-
two-stage system
Crime Act of 1908. The offender,
the Prevention of
having been found to be a habitual offender, was
elements in
liable to
an add-on of
at least five years
of
preventive detention, to be served as well as whatever the court had determined was a suitable
punishment
supposed
to
Conditions in the special preventive detention prison were
for the crime.
be superior
to those of other prisons, since neither retribution
nor deterrence
(nor even reformation) was being sought. Evidently the image in the minds of the politicians
and administrators was of graying habituals cure bucolic setting as the quality of tainees
were
still
"old lags"
although those in the quantity were not. Preventive de-
free people.
for
The only
difference
was
But Winston Churchill's liberal and
recoiled from the concept of imprisoning
for the
someone
values
—
officials, "lest
"I
home
there
is
assume
a very grave
in fact a
essentials,
but
it
have serious misgivings," he
all
preventive detention
is
danger that the administration of the law should under softer names
more
severe character."
Churchill's inquiries turned
up
scores of cases where grotesquely heavy sentences had for stealing
food and
trivial
amounts of property.
told judges that preventive detention should not be seen as a solution to the difficult issue
of habitual crime but should rather be viewed as "an exceptional
means
from the worst
were
year that he
class of professional criminals." His observations
became home
secretary,
to 53;
altered, all criteria
new
would be changed.
1910, the
by the 1920s the annual average was 31.
There was an attempt in the 1948 Criminal Justice Act frequently the case, a
of protecting society
effective. In
177 sentences of preventive detention were imposed.
The following year the number had dropped
is
in 1910, he
he immedi-
soothes the conscience of judges and of the public and
been imposed on petty habitual criminals,
He
When,
secretary,
the institution of preventive detention should lead to
a reversion to the ferocious sentences of the last generation. After all
his sense of Englishness
for preventive reasons.
an investigation of the brave new sentence.
penal servitude in
were being punished
new scheme and energetically touted
humane
succeeded Herbert Gladstone (son of the famous statesman) as ately ordered
and privation and ex-
that they
what they had done.
The prison commissioners were enthusiasts
wrote to one of his senior
their years in a se-
of crime dwindled into embers. Actual differences in the
trivial,
what they were rather than
virtues.
its
—whiling away
prisoners, subject to control, restriction, repression,
cluded from the world of for
fires
punishment were
—
to revive preventive detention.
generation of enthusiasts believed that
if
the small print
As
was
In this case they thought that they could refine the qualifying
and thus equitably and accurately remove serious offenders from circulation
long time. But the same disappointing results ensued.
A
few big
fish
were landed,
for a
in the
The Victorian Prison
/
157
A gymnastics
display
by the inmates of a Borstal, circa 1920.
Taking English public schools as their model,
Borstals sought to re-
form juvenile
offenders
by encouraging a sense of personal responsibility
and by fostering
in-
stitutional loyalty
through sports and other group activities.
company
of shoals of pathetic repeat offenders,
whose harm
to society
amounted only
to
annoyance. The sentence underwent various modifications, but the fundamental notion was so flawed that supervision. tical
clothes
it
Its
petered out in the 1970s as an order that ensured compulsory postrelease
revival in the
United States two decades
later,
with a smart
and bearing the impressively scientific-sounding name of
tion," predictably
acknowledged no
historical
new
set of statis-
"selective incapacita-
provenance.
The Rise and Fall of Borstals The
call for central
government
to involve itself in juvenile reformation
was made during
hearings of the 1894-95 Gladstone Committee on Prisons. Judicial statistics
showed
the
that
criminal propensity peaked from the mid-teens to the mid-twenties. Herbert Gladstone took the view that central establishing a
managed by taking
new
government should break the cycle of offending and imprisonment, by
type of reformatory. This
central
government
young criminals up
(as distinct
would
differ
from existing
to the age of twenty-one, including repeat offenders.
Opinion was divided. Using
his
chairmanship of the committee, Gladstone repeatedly
up endorsements
cajoled
and led witnesses
report,
he gave the scheme a quite insupportable prominence.
to conjure
opinion on the matter (and in the superior
institutions in being
from private philanthropic bodies) and also in
it
for the idea.
And when he wrote up the interesting to note how
It is
did not amount to much) divided. With his deeply held belief
management powers
of central government,
Edmund Du
Cane, commenting
from the sidelines of his forced retirement, had no trouble giving approval. retirement, former
Home
Office
—perhaps
the opposite view
of his professional career.
Permanent Under Secretary
in part because he
He was
A
colleague in
Sir
Godfrey Lushington, took
had seen Du Cane
in action for the better part
distrustful of the existing reformatories,
which
for their
158
SeAn McConville
/
own
financial reasons, he suggested, unnecessarily
prolonged confinement. The whole
prospect of extended incarceration for the young, whatever
not like prisons much, but in some respects
would I
far rather
send a lad of 17 or 18
would shut him up
that a
in a reformatory
I
it
them
prefer
was called, dismayed him.
"I
do
to reformatories; that is to say,
to a comparatively brief
between 18 and 21." He
I
term of imprisonment than
also disputed the naive belief
change of name would make a difference in the way the prisoners and society saw the
same stigma would attach
proposed
institutions; the
a prison,
he asserted. Even though the private reformatories claimed they were not penal,
they could not help being so.
But the Borstal idea got
its first
to a
government-run reformatory as
to
He added, "1 think they are a great deal too much so." (The name came from the village in Kent where the scheme
won out. Ten
full-scale trial.)
years later Herbert Gladstone
became home
secretary
and
immediately ordered work to begin on the unimplemented recommendations of his committee.
Among
was the government reformatory, which
these
ceeding on a limited
trial basis.
The
results
were deemed
in the
to
meantime had been pro-
be promising, and Gladstone's
enthusiasm was undimmed. In 1908 Borstal institutions were put on a statutory footing.
The novel
feature of the
cans had been using
it
new measure was
more than
for
the indeterminant sentence (although Ameri-
thirty years, at
New York's Elmira Reformatory).
nals age sixteen to twenty-one, convicted of offenses for
which they could be sent
Crimi-
to penal
servitude or to imprisonment, might instead be sent to a Borstal for between one and three
The Prison Commission, which administered the
years.
any time
after six
Whatever tions,
and
conduct
months
their
months
for girls)
Borstals,
and could
An
ability to inspire
who in 1922 became
to
a prison
social
spirit in
which they
greatly affected in these
is
ways by
commissioner. Paterson was never chair-
he was the leading light of the Prison Commission
be one of that very select group
Drawing on an experience of
by the
enthusiasm within and build support without
and through them the prison system, were
for the following quarter-century
and proved
at
purposes and structure of management, the success of most organiza-
their affairs.
Alexander Paterson,
could release on license
also recall for misbehavior.
especially those that deliver services, will be determined
critical. Borstals,
man, but
(or three
who might be described as genuine innovators.
work going back
to his
undergraduate days
at
Oxford,
new generation, just then coming into power, by World War I. With a showman's flair, Paterson
Paterson refashioned the Borstal system for the
whose
social ideas
had been traumatized
promoted the
Borstal as a
support from
political leaders
form of
and
social service for the
also
middle
classes,
and he won
solid
from the communities in which the Borstals were
located. in the early Borstals, Paterson substituted del-
For the military type of training, followed
egated authority and encouragement of personal responsibility. This device had been heart of the ethos of the English public school
of the nineteenth century.
One
(i.e.,
of his aphorisms
at the
private boarding school) since the middle
showed
the transformation he sought: "You
cannot train lads for freedom in an atmosphere of captivity and repression." (The term "lad"
was Paterson's preference;
it
was
later revealingly
replaced by the bureaucratic "trainee.") By
being given more responsibility in the institution, the lads could only by making their
own
make more
decisions.
It
was
decisions, Paterson believed, that people could change: this could
not be imposed, only offered and encouraged.
The Victorian Prison
The methods and
Paterson introduced
style that
now seem jejune. On
159
/
the public school
model, cellblocks were designated as "houses" by giving names to the various cellblocks.
was
Institutional loyalty
and
social activities,
cultivated through interhouse sports, house-based recreational
distinctive colors. In
who was told that he was expected to work long hours
housemaster,
a close interest in the lads. All staff
aged
know
to get to
to
civilian clothes,
the lads individually. This
revolutionary in the 1920s,
were forbidden
wore
speak
when
and
keeping with the formula, each house had for little
pay and
and subordinates were
now seems unexceptional,
but
a
to take
also encour-
was thought
it
prison officers, under pain of disciplinary proceedings,
to prisoners except to issue orders.
The introduction
of the post of
matron, to oversee housekeeping and to provide a softening, feminine influence, was another indication of
how
closely Paterson stuck to the public school design.
As the Borstals gained experience and public esteem, Paterson's colleagues on the Prison
Commission agreed
to allow experiments.
ment and support from senior
Cross-country walks and camping were started in
No one
1924 and were immediately successful. officials,
ran away, and there were
home
including the
secretary.
visits of
endorse-
These experiments
culminated in a long march in 1930, which became one of the high points of Borstal history.
Led by the charismatic Borstal governor
Bill
miles across the country, from Feltham to estate as a
new
Llewellin, a
group of staff and boys marched 150
Lowdham Grange, where they took over a country
and constructed further accommodation.
Borstal
Success and public esteem peaked between the wars. The Borstal formula seemed to
work, and innovation and success were self-propelling. Because the Borstals were part of the Prison Commission, versa. In the
for
to
move
Dartmoor prison,
The
—
bility
Grew, was moved
after his first three years of
a convict establishment with a fearsome reputation for toughness
were training grounds
Borstal notion
—
for staff, as
much
hard to gauge.
An
impressive
amount
of
approach
to
spirit of their
and responsi-
The extent and
commitment and Subordinate
staff
But there was could be hard
imprisonment, especially one based on the subtleties of
personal relations, and the keenest of expectations and highest of hopes faltered
by
institutional inertia
movement
Two
was supposed
and methods, the converse could happen, and
become cynics and
when
faced
and the repressive miasma of the Victorian prisons. And although the
of housemasters into the prison system
Borstal values
the depth of
esprit de corps
to senior positions in the adult system.
A prison, to paraphrase Lushington, is a prison.
for a reformatory
change the
training prisoners through personal relations, trust,
was achieved, and housemasters rose another side.
to
as for inmates.
gradually had an impact on the prison system as a whole.
that influence are
win
from a Borstal into an adult prison and vice
By such transfers, the prison commissioners sought
brutality.
service. Borstals
to
staff
example, the newly recruited deputy-governor of Rochester Borstal
the original Borstal), Major Benjamin
(i.e.,
service to
and
was easy
it
mid-1920s,
to lead to a
idealistic
permeation of
young men could
timeservers.
Borstal elements were, however, transplanted into the adult system, with long-
lasting effects. In
1936 the
first
minimum-security (open) prison was established
Hall, near Wakefield. This initiated other
open prisons and
that the prison populations could (and should) be settings. In turn, this
also
accommodated
meant acceptance of the likelihood
that
marked
at
New
the realization
in a variety of security
some prisoners would abscond.
—
With few guards sight,
Sean McConville
160
/
$1
$//:*'-
in
prisoners set out
*r ;
$£k
*^jjs
to begin their day's
work
at the
minimum-
security, or "open,"
prison at Bcla River
in
1954. It..'
"
.
* '"*?
'
;'''"'"
•'
SS»„'.
&
1
j
1 )
^3|yi JH
^P""P
Commissioners,
politicians,
and the public proved willing
that anything very serious occurred during
The other successful officials
were treated
transplant
—helping with
as before.
resettlement.
a prisoner's
work, family,
effects
The whole period
And
it
was
rare
was the housemaster. Renamed assistant governors, these
social,
be undertaken during a sentence, instead of being ies,
and
as governors in training and were given responsibility for a section of an
adult prison. As in the Borstal, they were expected to
work
to take the risk,
one of these escapades.
in prison
left
know and
assist their prisoners.
and personal problems
Case-
—thus came
to
to the discharged prisoners' aid societ-
could be seen as a preparation
dealing with a prisoner "in the round" inevitably had
for release
and
some humanizing
on policy and administration.
The
spirit of Borstal faltered after
declined. Paterson died in 1947, in prisons, politics,
1945. Success rates (as measured by reconvictions)
and although many ardent believers in the system remained
and the community
—
there were
among them no
innovators capable of
adapting the basic doctrine and Edwardian techniques to meet the needs and opportunities of the times.
A whole generation of senior prison officials was Borstal trained.
Borstal language
years of the in crime
and methods but could not regenerate confidence and
end of the war, moreover, penal
priorities
began
to
This preserved
vigor.
Within
a
few
be driven by steep increases
and prison numbers. The administration of Margaret Thatcher acted unimaginatively,
perhaps, but not particularly ideologically when, in 1982,
it
formally abolished the Borstal
system: this was simply a long-delayed interment. The Borstal was replaced by a determinate
sentence of imprisonment for young people. this field,
Euphemisms
are ubiquitous
—de rigueur—
in
and the new-old prison hid shyly under the appellation "Youth Custody."
Postwar Developments The
Borstal restatement of reformatory imprisonment,
and attempts
to restrict the use of
imprisonment, had an unintended consequence. Since the mid-Victorian years, various steps
The Victorian Prison
had been taken toward fines, a
imprisonment
easier bail, probation, time to
more
curtailment of imprisonment for debt, and
niles,
—
These diversionary measures made
it
facilities for
glish
the insane
easier to treat the
hard core, unequivocally deserving of punishment. In 1928,
tary Sir
pay
reduction in time to be served for a partial payment of fines, reformatories for juve-
bitual drunkards.
as a
a lesser use of
161
/
for
and
for ha-
imprisoned residue
Home
example,
Secre-
William Joynson-Hicks described Dartmoor convict prison as "the cesspool of En-
He went
humanity."
on,
help will ever improve." In sented the opposite view
"I
suppose there must be some residuum which no training or
itself,
and
in
influence
its
and resurrected the
on the adult prisons, the
Borstal repre-
possibility (buried in the collapse of the peni-
1840s) of reformatory imprisonment. The combination of the two
tentiaries in the late
apparently contradictory tendencies
—one promoting
incapacitation, the other reform
tributed to a lengthening of sentences. Neither for deterrence nor for reform
—con-
was the short
sentence acceptable. This convergence constituted one of the elements in the English prison
crowding still
crisis,
which became acute
in the
1970s and 1980s and with which the country
is
wrestling.
Alexander Paterson was influential across the whole range of penal measures. He and his colleagues tion
drew on
on punishment
their ideas, experience,
in 1938.
and discussions
to
frame comprehensive
The measure was deferred by war but reappeared
removed some of the
nal Justice Act of 1948. This
last vestiges
legisla-
as the Crimi-
of the old dual system of
imprisonment, by formally abolishing penal servitude. The division of imprisonment into hard labor, without hard labor, and various classes of misdemeanants was also discontinued. Flogging, as a prison punishment, had been the
1898 Prisons
Bill
on the verge
was before Parliament, but
of abolition
fifty
years before,
when
survived even in the 1948 act and was not
it
discontinued until 1967.
Other types of sentences and new institutions were established. Some were half-baked, conceived out of a theory or even a desire for symmetry and launched without a jot of evi-
dence
to
form that
support their underlying assumptions. Crude deterrence
may have coaxed
actively punitive
a smile
from
Du Cane 's
comeback,
in a
and
a
youth prisons were established and misleadingly called detention centers. girls)
who were
shock"
— another
These were intended to subject boys (and, halfheartedly, some
on the verge of a custodial career to and
made
ghost. Highly regimented, overtly
a last-chance "short sharp
ahistorically introduced into the
United
States,
thought to be idea recently
under the wholesome and nostalgic name
of "boot camp."
An
idea that
possibly for the
1948
had
great practical potential for changing the English prison system,
and
way
into
making it more just, appeared
act.
in the
1938
draft bill but did not find its
This was a proposal to establish completely separate institutions for pretrial
prisoners. These
would be
country was
digging
still
custodial but nonpenal institutions. Unfortunately, in
itself
1948 the
out of the debris of total war and had no funds or sympathy to
spare for unconvicted detainees. Thick skins and short purses ever since have ensured that
English pretrial prisoners were treated worse than they were for virtually
and
all
of Victoria's reign
much worse than their fellows who were convicted and sentenced. The spectacle
prisoners
crammed
into a cell,
which was
built a
hundred years ago
to
of three
house one and from
162
Sean McConville
/
which the
sanitary facilities originally provided
lowed them out of
this disgusting
civilized country. Several parliamentary
conditions, but relief In
came
had been removed, and of
committees and politicians affected shock
was long delayed and
in places
is still
at these
awaited.
1963 the Prison Commission was abolished, and the management of the prisons be-
the direct responsibility of the Prison Department of the
Prison
a regime that al-
confinement for only one hour a day was a disgrace to a
Commission dated
when
to 1850,
Home
give unified control over central government's several convict prisons.
were nationalized
Commission was
in 1877, the Prison
headship of both organizations was then held by
Sir
established to
Edmund Du
One
Office.
the Directors of Convict Prisons
part of the
was established
When
to
local prisons
manage them. The
Home
Cane, until 1895.
Office civil servants took an increasingly active role in mediating the relationship between
these
two bodies and the home
secretary. After
Du Cane's departure, the Directors of Convict
Prisons was fully assimilated into the Prison Commission, although the joint to
title
continued
be used.
Over the
Home
years,
Office civil servants continued to build a corporate experience in
prison management. The elements of independence and the direct access to the tary, together
unacceptable
—thus
the
1963 decision
borne with the twists and turns so par excellence, the truth that
ment, published
at
the
all
to abolish the Prison
far will realize that
secre-
Commission. Readers
— 1990s
ideas endlessly circulate.
style,
who have
penal thought and policy exemplify,
A review of prison service manage-
end of 1991, recommended what amounts
Commission
the Prison
home
with the inconvenience arising from another layer of management, became
to the reestablishment of
of course.
Progress and Lessons Learned? It is
difficult to assess the
progress that occurred in the hundred years between the Carnarvon
Committee of 1863 and the mid-1960s, not
least
because this century has taught us to be
extremely careful in our use of the word progress. Perhaps the best way to end this brief excursion
is
to
look
at the daily life of the
prisoner in the 1860s and then of his counterpart
in the 1960s.
In the 1860s
we would occasionally have
class
misdemeanant by the magistrate or judge.
more than
the loss of liberty.
He wore
his
many local prisons, people who were who had been given the status of first-
found, in
not convicted of a criminal or shameful offense but
own
Life for
such
a prisoner usually involved
clothes, could order food
no
from an outside
kitchen and a ration of beer from an inn, and had a very liberal allowance of visitors and letters.
He could pay
ment no longer
to
existed
have an ordinary prisoner clean his
by the 1960s.
A criminal
offense
cell.
was just
This category of imprisonthat, irrespective of
and context. The direct-action campaigner against nuclear weapons be treated in exactly the same way as a person
who robbed
or animal cruelty
a pensioner or
motive
would
committed some
disgusting act of personal violence.
The unconvicted prisoner of the 1860s was usually allowed clothing, bedding, restraints
on
visits
and any other
to
provide himself with food,
necessities or to have the prison allowance.
He had few
or letters. By the 1960s these entitlements for the unconvicted prisoner
The Victorian Prison
163
/
The Surrey House of Correction, circa
1860. The prisoner
is
operating the crank, a
form that
of hard labor had to be per-
formed
in the solitude
of the cell for several
hours a day. Also
vis-
are the water
ible
closet,
handbasin, gas-
and on
light, rules,
the
floor, possibly, his
rolled-up
had shrunk
to the right to
allowance of
visits
and
the convicted prisoner
buy cooked food from outside
Any apparent advantages
letters.
would
largely have
been
the prison
and
hammock.
to receive a liberal
had over
that the pretrial detainee
nullified because of his other conditions of
confinement. Solitude would have been insisted on in 1860, but in 1960 the pretrial detainee
would very
likely
By design, or by pressure of work,
prisoners.
be cold by the time in
its toilet)
with two other
his privileged free-world food
would probably
have to share that same Victorian
it
arrived;
and
it
cell
(minus
could hardly be appetizing to eat the food on a bunk bed,
an atmosphere permeated with body and waste smells.
The 1860s debtor had much the same regime that civil
as the first-class
misdemeanant, except
he had the additional privilege of use of a dayroom, in which he could mix with the other prisoners.
earnings.
He could
also,
within reason, follow his trade and retain the whole of his
By the 1960s, there were very few
the pretrial detainee. restricted,
and
prisoners
civil
in the official
view they were
The convicted and short-sentence
little
derwent hard punishment in most jurisdictions.
ten.
and
their regime
was
their privileges
that of
had been
better than criminals.
petty criminal prisoner of the 1860s undoubtedly unIf
pronounced
would perform hard labor on the treadwheel or crank more than
left,
From the time of the Gladstone Committee on,
for
fit
by the prison surgeon, he
not less than six hours a day or
For the balance of the day (and gaslight was welcomed as a means of extend-
ing the hours of punishment) he toiled alone in his cell at second-class hard labor
—usually
164
SeAn McConville
/
oakum
picking
separation
(teasing apart "junk," as the pieces of tar-encrusted rope
would be
as absolute as practicality
keep him alive. He would sleep on
would allow and
were
called).
his diet barely
no visits or letters, and have only the
a board, receive
His
enough
to
Bible
to read.
The convicted
work
1960s would very
local prisoner of the
of the simplest kind
—boring but
from its starchy and
better than that of his predecessors and, apart
was not
in
any way penal. He had good access
to
would be considerably institutional character,
books, newspapers, and magazines. Out of
he could purchase indulgences such as tobacco, confectionery, and
his earnings
Several forms of recreation
would be
available,
relatively free association of prisoners
from physical education
prisons).
A social worker would be
helping to find him employment and,
But the
to bullying and ex-
many big American jails
problems affecting his
available to deal with if
toiletries.
to television.
exposed the weak and unpopular
tortion (though not at this time to the appalling extent prevailing in
and
and would have
likely share a cell
certainly not arduous. His diet
release,
necessary, accommodation. Except for the sordid
conditions of confinement, and possible fear of his companions, his lot in prison was definitely better than
months
it
would have been
a
hundred years previously, but he would serve
several
rather than days or weeks.
The convicted
felon of the 1860s
had
a
minimum
day would depend on his stage and the privileges separate confinement, he unfit convicts, or
was put
to
it
sentence of three years to serve. His
conferred.
heavy manual work, in
Once
past his nine
a public
works
months
of
prison. Older or
educated prisoners, might be assigned to some form of institutional main-
tenance, such as cleaning, working in the kitchen or library, or clerking for the chaplain.
Communications with the few and the
visits of
conditions. At
all
free
world would also depend on
his stage, but they
would be
and
restrictive
short duration, conducted under unpleasant, degrading,
times he
would be under
close
command. Clothing had been
carefully
designed to be uncomfortable and to humiliate, as were the regulations concerning his appearance. Hair was cut to the "convict's crop"; faces were Covered with stubble, since prisoners
were not permitted a razor, and
and
institutional property
all
facial hair
was removed with clippers. His clothing, boots,
were marked with the government's broad arrow.
In the strict sense of penal servitude, there were lents
were the long-term prisoners. Stages, with
ished,
and the quality of
Those considered a prison
to
institutional
life
no convicts by
the 1960s; their equiva-
their associated privileges,
was determined by one's
had been abol-
security classification.
be the greatest risks lived in the close confines of a very secure section of
and were subject
oners, such as informers
to
numerous
restrictions
and sex offenders,
and constant
Infamous
pris-
they be attacked. Should offense and record place a prisoner
apart
and always guarded,
at the
opposite end of the security classification scale, his
lest
surveillance.
lived in a prison within a prison, always kept
life
able from that of the free citizen in a residential institution.
would be almost
indistinguish-
Twice a day he would have
to
He might sleep in a dormitory but could probably aspire to a room to which he had the key. He would have to work at his assigned task anything from printing to pigkeeping and would constantly be reminded of his position subordinate to the staff. He answer
roll call.
—
—
could be in part-time or even full-time education in the prison and would receive counseling
— The Victorian Prison
and social-work support.
Home leave was possible, with a good prison record and reasonable
proximity to release. Letters and the staff regularly paid for
What are banal,
165
/
and
visits
ate
it
were
liberally granted,
and food was good enough
hundred years of imprisonment? Some
lessons have been learned from these one
such as the periodic dangerousness, even wickedness, of those
good intentions as sufficient warrant
that
as well.
for action.
and Reading prisons, Oscar Wilde uncannily drew of the paradoxes that so delighted him: "As
who
take their
own
Four years before he himself entered Pentonville this lesson,
one reads history
.
which he fashioned .
.
one
is
into
one
absolutely sickened
not by the crimes the wicked have committed, but by the punishments the good have inflicted."
Another lesson
ening ourselves
—
at this
grand
level
—and who knows whether we
the seemingly inexorable gathering of
is
all
power
are not just fright-
into the center, despite
the terrible lessons of the twentieth century. Other implications of prison history during this
period are shocking, but perhaps less worrisome because tion
—
the occasions
on which personal,
trivial,
we can hope
to avoid their repeti-
and even accidental considerations moved
the levers of public policy.
But surely
it
is
to the prisoners
Wilde, the wickedness of both
is
and
their keepers that
abundantly obvious in
we must
inevitably return. Pace
this history, as are their occasionally
who
displayed virtues of endurance, courage, and compassion. The exhausted vagrant fruitlessly
and
worked
his pores
opened, marked his
politicians, reformers,
him. The warder
and
own shame and degradation and, just as surely, that whose imagination and human sympathy had so
officials
of the failed
who risked his tiny wage and good name to give a morsel to a child prisoner
did something to redeem the just purposes of punishment. Churchill's famous 1910 nition to the
so
the handle of his cell crank, or trod the wheel until his breath quickened
House
of
Commons, one
of
many such
declarations
made
in that place
admo-
by those
who have known imprisonment, remains the best justification for the study of penal history: "The mood and temper of the public in regard to the treatment of crime and criminals is one of the most unfailing tests of the civilization of any country." Where may we rank ourselves? Bibliographic Note
A good though Beatrice
"progressivist"
Webb's
and
certainly statist overview
English Prisons under Local
London: Cass, 1963). Writing
in the
same
may
still
be had in Sidney
Webb and
Government (London: Longmans, Green, 1922; reprint, tradition, but
with more emphasis on liberal values,
Sir
Leon Radzinowicz and Roger Hood take the story up to 1912, with great virtuosity, unraveling numerous strands of penal policy and skillfully placing imprisonment in its broader setting in A
They do not, however, deal with the The first volume of my own History of English Prison Administration (London: Routledge
History oj English Criminal Law, vol. 5 (London: Stevens, 1986). local prisons.
and Kegan Paul, 1981)
volume
—
is
a study of convict
English Local Prisons
1860
to
and
local
imprisonment up
1900: "Next Only
to
to 1877,
with a second
Death" (London: Routledge, 1994)
concentrating on the local prisons.
Readers will find Christopher Harding History (London:
short guide
books. The
Croom Helm,
and overview first is
et al.,
Imprisonment
1985), exactly what
available.
W.
J.
it
in
England and Wales:
A
Concise
claims to be and probably the most helpful
Forsythe has also produced two valuable and concise
The Reform of Prisoners, 1830-1900 (London:
Croom Helm,
1987), and the most
166
/
recent
SeAn McConville
is
Penal Discipline, Reformatory Projects, and the English Prison Commission, 1895-1939 (Exeter,
England: University of Exeter Press, 1990). David Garland's Punishment and Welfare: Penal Strategies (Aldershot, England: Gower, 1985) history into a broader context of social policy
and
a
is
much
A
History of
acclaimed attempt to place penal
control.
Senior prison administrators have written various histories and biographical accounts of their
systems of imprisonment. Given his many duties, it is impressive that Sir Edmund Du Cane was such
contemporary journals. Most of his
a prolific contributor to
articles
can be located through the
Wellesley Index to Victorian Periodicals. Early in his career he wrote a booklet
Account of the Manner
on penal
servitude,
An
Which Sentences of Penal Servitude Are Carried Out in England (London: Convict Service, 1872). The work is timid, turgid, and clumsily put together. Better and more substantial, but
still
in
heavy-footed,
is
The Punishment and Prevention of Crime (London: Macmillan,
1885). Sir Evelyn Ruggles-Brise, the next English prison supremo, provides an attenuated view of
prison history, and a flattering account of progress during his
own stewardship, in The English Prison
System (London: Macmillan, 1921). Another top administrator,
Sir Lionel
Fox, produced The
Modern English Prison (London: George Routledge and Sons, 1932) and The English Prison and Borstal Systems (London: Routledge and Kegan Paul, 1952). Since then, the very highest Prison Department officials
seem
to
have foresworn publication. This
regrettable, but
is
perhaps in recent years
life at
management has not been the stuff of stirring reminiscences. Sir Alexander Paterson never produced a maj or work on imprisonment but the selection of his writings edited by S. K. Ruck (Paterson on Prisons [London: Frederick Muller, 1951]) gives a good flavor of the man. Sir Rupert Cross, a distinguished lawyer, compared Paterson and his predecessors in Punishment, Prison, and the Public: An Assessment of Penal Reform in Twentieth Century England by an Armchair Penologist (London: Stevens, 1971). Victor Bailey has produced a scholarly and the higher levels of prison
,
substantial account of interwar penal policy toward juveniles in Delinquency and Citizenship:
Reclaiming the Young Offender, 1914-1948 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1987).
Prison governors, fortunately, have been less shy about publication than their
Home
Office brethren
—and
is
it
obvious that
anecdotes. Gerald Clayton was born in
governor in the 1880s.
He
life
Chatham
more
exalted
with prisoners generally produces better
convict prison, where his father was deputy
followed in the family trade, starting as deputy governor at Portland
convict prison injanuary 1920 and retiringjust before the
1
948 Criminal Justice Act came into effect.
Strong (London:
John Long, 1958). Benjamin Grew was recruited by Alexander Paterson two years after Clayton, and the two men
See Gerald Clayton, The Wall
Is
leapfrogged in their postings.
Grew also published
his
memoir,
Prison Governor, in
1958 (London:
Herbert Jenkins) This book is particularly useful for its account of the various postwar ameliorations .
and experiments in the regime of the prisons. One of Alexander Paterson's most
who remained
a
memoir (1/ Freedom Fail [London: Macmillan, 1964]) should be what drove
women
is
that generation of
reform-minded prison
the subject of Joanna Kelley's
Prisoners have produced Servitude,
effective disciples,
major influence in the English prisons until the early 1960s, was John Vidler. His
by "One
Who
When
officials.
the Gates Shut
read by
all
The very
who want to understand
different prison
many instructive, moving, and entertaining memoirs.
Has Endured
It"
(London:
R.
world of
(London: Longmans, 1967).
Bentley,
1878),
is
Five Years Penal
well-written
and
informative, as is the 1883 Her Majesty's Prisons: Their Effects and Defects, by another anonymous (but
presumably unrelated) author, "One variation
on "One
(London:
F. E.
and
Who
.
.
,"
Who Has Tried Them" (London:
we have "No
7,"
who
or,
imprisonment
for his part in a
fellow convicts.
Irish patriot
in
a
Seventeen Prisons
who suffered a lengthy
Fenian conspiracy. His memoirs, Leaves from
Lectures to a "Solitary" Audience, 2 vols. (London:
impressive for their lack of bitterness and
Sampson, Low, 1881). As
wrote Twenty-/ive Years
Robinson and Co., 1903). Michael Davitt was an
particularly brutal
a Prison Diary;
.
many astute
Chapman and
Hall, 1885), are
observations on crime, punishment, and his
The Victorian Prison
The
Constance Lytton was determined to go to prison
socialite
The
activities.
keep her out;
tried to
and
authorities found her high political this
167
/
for her female suffragist
social connections
an embarrassment and
enraged her, and with a suitable disguise she managed to get convicted
and to do her time. Her story is given in Constance Lytton and Jane Warton, Prisons and Prisoners: Some Personal Experiences (London: W. Heinemann, 1914). A more recent prisoner's account of female imprisonment is given by Jane Buxton and Margaret Turner in Gate Fever (London: Cresset, 1962).
Stephen Hobhouse and Fenner Brockway were imprisoned activities
during World
War I, and
three of their
books are worth
for their pacifist beliefs
and
attention. English Prisons To-day:
Being the Report oj the Prison System Enquiry Committee (London:
Longmans, Green, 1922)
is
a
massive description and policy analysis by both men. Stephen Hobhouse's Forty Years (London:
James Clarke and Co. 195 1 ) has a chapter on his imprisonment and another on the writing of English ,
Prisons To-day.
Fenner Brockway 's Inside the Left: Thirty Years of Platform,
(London: George Allen and Unwin, 1942)
Among
postwar memoirs,
1958), though
it is
most
I
Peter
was
in the
1950s and 1960s
Wildeblood was imprisoned
and
sensible,
like
probably more a work of
imprisonment in the 1940s. One of the imprisonment
is
his Against the
for
Brendan Behan's art
than a
Borstal
and Parliament
Boy (London: Hutchinson,
strictly factual
best, least sentimental, is
Press, Prison,
also valuable.
account of the playwright's
and most impressive accounts of life
given by "Zeno" in his Life (London: Macmillan, 1968).
homosexual
offenses, in the days
when
the law thought that
Law (London: Weidenfeld and Nicolson, 1955)
is
an eloquent
account of imprisonment in postwar England. Philip Priestley
and expertise
in
is
heavily addicted to prison
two very useful anthologies:
memoirs and shares
the fruits of his enthusiasm
Victorian Prison Lives: English Prison Biography,
1914 (London: Methuen, 1985) and, dealing with the
later years, Jail Journeys:
Experience since 1918, Modern Prison Writings (London: Routledge, 1989). the
first
at the
sociological account of an English prison
that
Kegan
and Pauline Morris's
itself
Pentonville
interest
become an important
(London: Routledge and
Paul).
Lastly, there are the various parliamentary
and
official
papers. Both the Carnarvon
1863 and the Gladstone Committee of 1894-95 had axes
effect,
A book that started off as
provoked much controversy and
time of its publication in 1963 has now, with the passage of time,
part of prison history: Terence Morris
of
and
1830-
The English Prison
and produced tendentious
insights into
reports. Their
contemporary practices and
minutes of evidence nevertheless
attitudes.
Two
Committee
to grind, selected their witnesses for
offer valuable
inquiries into penal servitude (1871
and
1878) give a similar quantity and quality of information. These and numerous other committees,
and
a great variety of
documents touching on English prison
the Commissioners, the Inspectors,
history,
and the Directors of Convict
such as the annual reports of Prisons,
may be
located by
consulting the index to the British Sessional Papers. Finally, because the activities of members of the
House
of
Commons
sometimes landed them in prison,
radicals, socialists, Irish Nationalists,
indeed on
many
and
their speeches
and the interventions of
political eccentrics are instructive
on prison matters
(as
other subjects) and are well worth reading, especially for the years 1880-1920.
These are available in Hansard, which has excellent running indexes.
CHAPTER
SIX
The Failure of Refor United States, 1865-1965
Edgardo Rotman
n 1867, Enoch Wines and Theodore Dwight, having concluded an extensive survey of
American prisons, published
isting
monumental
a
system and proposing remedies
Commission
for
extensive survey,
for
it.
report describing the flaws of the ex-
One hundred years
Law Enforcement and Administration no
less
later,
the President's
of Justice published
own
its
discontented with the state of affairs and no less enthusiastic
about the prospect for reforms. Indeed, over the hundred years that elapsed between these
two
reports, other
would-be reform groups proposed
about ongoing problems, a
lofty idealism,
and
a
their
own initiatives,
dogged optimism
sharing a despair
that prisons could be im-
proved. The cycle seems never ending: exposes, reports, proposals, then more exposes.
Although the
fate
of reform efforts
successor with scandals to correct
—
distressingly similar
is
the
models
that
—each generation provides
would-be reformers
set forth
its
over the
period 1865-1965 frequently differed one from the other. The original design of the prison in pre-Civil
War America,
as
we have
seen, called for the systematic isolation of the inmate
both from fellow prisoners and from the society
at large. In this
way, prisoners would be
shielded from contaminating influences, allowing the influence of religion, steady discipline,
and regular work
to transform
unruly criminals into law-abiding
citizens. After
1865, the
emphasis on seclusion and isolation was relaxed, and a gradual liberalization took hold, providing incentives as well as deterrents to shape obedient behavior. By the opening decades of the twentieth century, a frankly therapeutic
were
to
normal
model was
in effect: offenders
be "cured" of their criminality in a setting that approximated, as society.
During the same period,
became popular. Crime was the
a parallel social learning
result of learned behavior,
and
were
"sick"
and
far as possible, a
model of prison reform
rehabilitation
programs
in a
prison setting were to compensate for the inadequate socialization that followed family breakup or neglect.
None ties
The prison was of these models,
of prison
life.
to
become
however
a
problem-solving community.
attractive conceptually, altered the ] r
Most of the experiments
fundamental
that constitute the history of prison reform
reali-
were
„
prison cellblock in
Ramsey in
Prison
Farm
Texas in 1967.
170
Edgardo Rotman
/
isolated, pioneering
undertakings
at
odds with a prevailing repressive system of punishment.
The concrete manifestations
of the rehabilitative idea thus were only a small factor in the
overall field of crime control.
The reform programs do
number
reality of a
few limited successes in particular institutions
wider and more fundamental changes. In
to avoid
mated
testify to the
benevolent impulses of a
of would-be innovators, but the very existence of the rhetoric of reform and the
a prison system that
was
too
all
commonly
may well have
effect, the
abusive.
provided an excuse
language of rehabilitation
As
a result, the core
one-hundred-year history of American prisons after 1865 portrays a grim tent but ultimately unsuccessful effort to ameliorate
reality
legiti-
theme of the and a persis-
it.
The State of the Prison, 1865-1900 By 1865, the elements of the religious conversion,
original penitentiary design, based
and steady
labor,
had been subverted by
on regimentation, a pervasive
isolation,
overcrowding,
corruption, and cruelty. Prisoners were often living three and four to a cell designed for one,
and prison
discipline
was medieval-like
in character, with bizarre
and brutal punishments
much deny this awful reality as explain it away, attributing most of the blame not to those who administered the system but to those who experienced it. Because the prisons were filled with immigrants who were ostencommonplace
sibly
hardened
no choice but
in state institutions.
Wardens did not
so
crime and impervious to American traditions, those in charge had
to a life in
to rule over inmates with
an iron hand. In
fact,
the closing decades of the
nineteenth century were the dark ages for America's prisons.
The adult
incarcerative facilities of the United States in the immediate post-Civil
War
period consisted of state prisons, county jails, and prisons of an intermediate grade between the state prisons
and the county jails.
held people arrested and awaiting
State prisons confined sentenced convicts;
trial,
county jails
along with those awaiting transfer to a state prison or
serving out relatively short sentences. In the intermediate prisons, called houses of correction or workhouses or bridewells, prisoners were generally guilty of lesser crimes (such as va-
grancy) and were required to perform menial labor. In organizational terms,
most
state prisons in the post-Civil
selves as operating according to the principles of the
Auburn,
War decades described them-
Auburn, not the Pennsylvania, system.
as originally designed in the 1830s, isolated prisoners at night but placed
them
into
congregate workshops under rules of silence during the day; Pennsylvania, on the other hand, isolated the prisoners for twenty-four hours a day, providing rials for
labor in their
in Philadelphia's
cells.
Cherry
Hill penitentiary.
burn plan, mostly because able.
them with
Almost everywhere
common workshops seemed
tools
and raw mate-
persist, albeit in attenuated fashion,
to
prisons followed the Au-
else,
make
prison labor
But a debate that had once divided penal experts into warring camps had
almost irrelevant.
made no
When
inmates were packed two or three into a
sense to talk about the reformatory impact
theory but by budgets, by
Small
cells
within
cell
more
profit-
now become
designed for one,
it
of silence or isolation.
in the post-Civil War period was not driven by ideas about penal how to confine the largest number of inmates at the lowest possible multitiered blocks were the common answer, but the cells were so
The design of prisons
cost.
The Pennsylvania system did
The Failure of Reform
171
/
small as to endanger the physical health, as well as the psychological well-being, of the inmates.
The
cells in the
feet long, three
prison
at
and
Jackson the
feet high.
Connecticut
cells
were three and
and about seven
feet high. In the
a half feet wide, six
and
and two-thirds
and
a half feet long, four
feet high. In addition, large
average Auburn system
and three-quarters
The administration of the prisons was
Wherever
and
were
secure.
little
possible,
Wardens
accomplishing anything
wardens
on guards
relied
lives.
Some
were empowered to
than in the
accomplish these goals, giving them practically unlimited power over
central state authority exerted general
ticular prisons.
light
as inadequate as the physical structures.
more than keeping inmates quiet and
inmates' bodies
at the
wide, and seven
feet
windows admitted much more
to their jobs than in
line staff to
state
and seven
cell.
were generally more interested in holding on
No
Michigan
a half feet long,
At Charlestown Prison near Boston, which was considered a model prison
time, the cells were eight
and other
example, were seven
state prison at Whethersfield, for
a quarter feet wide,
states, like
visit
power of control and
Massachusetts and
and
the prisons
more than advisory, and
if
to issue
New York,
direction over the par-
had boards and agencies
that
recommendations. But even these boards
they did offer findings on punishments or proposals for
change, they had no power of enforcement. Moreover, most board
with no expertise or commitment. In
effect, the
staffs
were part-time workers
administration of the prisons was
left to
individual superintendents.
Whereas most county
state prisons
were grossly deficient in
their operations, conditions in the
were even more deplorable. The overcrowding was severe, the
jails
ventilation primitive,
and the food
scanty.
Not even the most rudimentary
filth
awful, the
classification of
inmates existed, so that the old mixed with the young, the hardened criminals with the offenders.
The jails were unable
to provide opportunities for
majority of the inmates were presumed innocent of nothing
—made
the circumstances
all
the
—
that
is,
few hours
after their arrest until
miserable that the
jail
for education.
first
That a
were awaiting trial and as yet guilty
more scandalous. There were
police lockups, also called station houses or guardhouses, for a
work or
where inmates
also
numerous
typically
remained
being brought before a judge. These lockups were so
might actually have seemed
a relief.
The Wines and Dwight Report
many
Despite the tions
—most
inadequacies of American prisons and despite the novelty of the institu-
of the prisons were
no more than
thirty years old
—very few
observers, whether
they belonged to reform societies or to state legislatures, were ready to abandon a system of incarceration.
The more common aim was
to
improve the prisons. In
reform reflected a belief that specific improvements would in part too,
it
appeared that the most
likely alternative to
make
part, the insistence of
incarceration
work
better;
punishment by confinement would
be a return to corporal and capital punishment, which was unacceptable to well-meaning citizens intent
on doing good. But
to achieve far-reaching changes.
in part too,
With
1865 seemed an especially propitious moment
the sectional conflict resolved
about the prospects for national development widespread, a tice policies
seemed necessary and
feasible.
new
and
a spirit of
optimism
departure for criminal jus-
172
/
Edgardo Rotman
This engraving of a prisoner enduring the
near suffocation of a shower bath was published in
Harper's
Weekly
in
1867, the
same year the practice was condemned as barbaric in Enoch Wines and Theodore Dwight's influential
Report on the Prisons and Reformatories of the United States and Canada.
With
this
outlook in mind, the
Wines and Theodore Dwight
to
ods. After visiting penitentiaries
tutions in
Canada and
New York Prison Association commissioned Enoch Cobb
conduct
a
nationwide survey and evaluation of penal meth-
and houses of correction
collecting seventy
in eighteen states
bound volumes
and
several insti-
of documents, they wrote their
Report on the Prisons and Reformatories of the United States and Canada. Theirs was a forceful call for
for
prison reform, comparable to the renowned report written in 1777 by John
Howard
England and Wales.
Dwight was
a
Wines represented ologies
and
noted lawyer and educator with a long history of concern a
new
for prisons.
type of professional penologist, interested in behavioral method-
scientific data
but not without religious
zeal.
Wines and Dwight made
a
good
team, and their 1867 report supported their conviction that the whole prison system needed "careful
and judicious
Their
critical
ing the reformation of reformation.
revision."
finding
More
its
was
that not
one of the
state prisons in the
inmates as a primary goal or deploying
specifically, their
pages were
filled
United States was seek-
efficient
means
to
pursue
with a litany of shortcomings. They
criticized the inadequacies of the physical plants, the lack of training of the staffs,
and the
absence of centralized state supervision of the systems. They strenuously objected to the regular reliance vestigated
on corporal punishment
employed
the
for disciplinary purposes. Six of the states they in-
punishment of the
lash;
New York used
the yoke
—putting inmates
The Failure of Reform
heavy
into a contraption that consisted of a
neck and wrist manacles.
ring for the
together, putting the
flat
bar of iron
five
and would have them banished from
The reform agenda
all
"at
once cruel and de-
prisons."
that they laid out in the Report on the Prisons called for a variety of
and so on. But they
for release
under the knees and
a stick
Wines and Dwight found such punishments
particular changes: enlarge the size of cells, train guards, set
ons,
or six feet long with a center
punished prisoners by "bucking": tying the wrists
arms over the bended knees, and forcing
across the elbow joints. grading,
also
It
also
by allowing them
had
to
up
boards to inspect pris-
state
should prepare inmates
a larger vision for reform: prisons
demonstrate and earn their advance toward freedom by mov-
ing through progressively liberal stages of discipline. This reformative methodology
It
became
Dwight but
also
and by
was
1840 by Captain Alexander Maconochie
spired by the bold experiment carried out in
Australian colony of Norfolk Island in 1854.
173
/
development
its
by
in Ireland
Sir
in-
in the
Walter Crofton
American reformers, endorsed not only by Wines and
the rallying cry for
by the resolution of the National Congress of Penitentiary and Reformatory
Discipline held in Cincinnati in 1870.
This congress declared, "Neither in the United States nor in Europe, as a general thing, has the problem of reforming the criminal yet been resolved." The majority of inmates left
the prison "hardened
methods need
to
be changed.
system of
isolation, lockstep,
and deleterious Turning
to the
this
reform
stated,
to give
back
to
him
fear,
theory into practice, the congress explained, required that "the prisoner's
own hands; he must be able through his own own condition. A regulated self-interest should be brought
So the convention framed it
as humiliating
robbing inmates of their manhood.
destiny should be placed, measurably, in his
than
should be
manhood." The inher-
and striped uniforms was now perceived
effort, in effect
exertions to continually better his into play."
his
still
"Our aims and our
[In the first instance,] the prisoner's self-respect
and every effort made
cultivated to the utmost, ited
and dangerous." Therefore the congress
its
.
Sixth Principle: "Since
hope
.
.
is
a
more potent agent
should be made an ever-present force in the mind of the prisoners, by a well
devised and skilfully applied system of rewards for good conduct, industry and attention to learning. Rewards,
more than punishments,
The rewards were
to
are essential to every
come through a revision
1870s, sentencing in the United States fixed only a
minimum and
a
maximum
particular sentence,
a prison term.
What
term of imprisonment)
for
penalty (European codes set a
each offense. Once a judge selected a
a governor's pardon,
to serve
which was sometimes used
it
to completion.
to partially
reduce
reformers like Wines and Dwight, as well as others such as Franklin
Sanborn and Zebulon Brockway, wanted wherein the actual term tion but at a later date
to substitute
to be served was not set
was an indeterminate sentencing,
down by the judge immediately after convic-
and with considerable range by another body, such
or other sentencing authority.
Under
this
inmates with incentives to participate in
mate of
maximum
was immutable, and the convict was bound
it
The only exception was
good prison system."
of the existing sentencing system. Until the
their organizers.
as a parole board
scheme, indeterminate sentences would provide
activities that
were reformative,
at least in the esti-
Thus, the congress resolved that sentences should be limited only
"by satisfactory proof of reformation."
174
Edgardo Rotman
/
The Elmira Reformatory The
ideas discussed at the Cincinnati congress received their
practice
by Zebulon Brockway
opened
in 1876,
became
a
Elmira Reformatory in
at the
model
for other institutions
most publicized translation into
New York. The institution, which
and exerted
a
worldwide influence on
prison reformers of the period. Brockway's system combined indeterminate sentencing and release
on parole with an institutional commitment to educational programs. At Elmira, howwas not
ever, the indeterminacy of sentences
leased early, but
no one had
who
absolute; inmates
more than
to serve
the
maximum
did well could be re-
sentence established in the
criminal code.
At the core of the design for Elmira was an educational program that drew on the ideas
and contributions of college
professors, public school principals,
and lawyers. The program
included classroom coverage of general subjects, sports, religion, and military less capable,
Elmira offered vocational education in which
phy, and printing were taught. Indeed,
it
tailor cutting,
drill.
For the
plumbing,
telegra-
was the emphasis on education,
either trade train-
ing or academic, that was the hallmark of Brockway's contribution to post-Civil War penology.
He graded inmates according to their educational accomplishments and their work performance as well as their conduct. High marks earned eligibility for privileges and for release through parole; low marks brought penalties and longer periods of confinement. But Elmira never did quite approximate a school. Brockway, on occasion, did allow guards to resort to physical
punishment, and as
Elmira was not consistent with to believe that rhetoric
and
a state investigation revealed in 1894, discipline at
proclaimed humane
its
attitude. Indeed, there
institutional realities diverged widely.
is
good reason
Order was maintained
at
Elmira largely through the fear of severe corporal punishment, not through the promise of
rewards
One
for educational
achievement or good behavior.
reason Elmira did not
live
up
to its
promise was the grave
difficulties
it
faced in
carrying out a reformatory program under conditions of major overcrowding. By the 1890s,
Elmira held two times as tive rehabilitation
that
many inmates as it was designed
programs as well
Brockway had expected. The
sixteen
and thirty-one years of
of the inmates.
for
—which
institution
had been intended
were not the type
for first offenders
between
age, but in practice recidivists always constituted one-third
Brockway apparently could not control admissions;
keep the novice from entering
militated against effec-
as discipline. Moreover, the inmates
a
life
of crime
had
to serve older
a
program designed
and much more
to
seasoned
offenders.
Despite the shortfall in achieving
1890s,
it
was
sachusetts,
the
model
its
goals, Elmira inspired
for institutions at Ionia in
and Huntingdon
in Pennsylvania, as well as at Saint
in Illinois, Mansfield in Ohio,
and
many
imitators.
During the
Michigan, Sherborn and Concord in Mas-
Cloud
Jeffersonville in Indiana. But
in Minnesota, Pontiac
most of these
institutions
confronted and failed to resolve the very same problems that affected Elmira. In the twenty-
odd reformatories
for
men
in the
first
decades of the twentieth century, the average age of
inmates, their criminal records, and their length of time served were not substantially different from the age, records,
and time served
in regular, adult prisons. Indeed, the reformatory
buildings resembled ordinary prisons both in design and in size, the labor system in both places involved less vocational training than
buddy work, and
disciplinary regimens
were
The
Failurf. of
Reform
/
175
A
sign-painting class at
the Elmira
Reforma-
tory in 1898. Offering
vocational
and aca-
demic education
to
youthful offenders,
«\
««flk ^TO^y,^
Elmira was considered
a model prison by advocates of the prison-
reform movement of the late nineteenth
century.
equally harsh.
No wonder,
then, that Sheldon Glueck
and Eleanor Glueck, among the
lead-
ing criminologists of the period, pronounced the reformatory experiment a failure.
Prison Conditions in the Late Nineteenth Century
The reformatory movement of the 1870s tered in the state reformatories
Most prisons continued the
new
—did
—
little
as
a dreary life of their
reformers. Brutality
advanced
in the
1870 congress or
as adminis-
to halt the deterioration of the country's prisons.
own, unaffected by the ambitious proposals of
and corruption were endemic; overcrowding and understaffing
were also omnipresent. In such chaotic prison atmospheres, wardens often resorted
and unusual forms of punishment tory abolishment, corporal
to
to cruel
maintain their authority over the convicts. Despite statu-
punishment
to enforce institutional discipline
continued to be a
generalized practice for the rest of the century, mainly in the form of lashing.
Rudimentary educational programs, prison
libraries,
and the intercessions of
official
chaplains affected only an insignificant portion of the prison population. Various inmates'
accounts of
life
ness, arbitrary
in prison during the period describe the pernicious effects of enforced idle-
punishments, and persistent overcrowding. But in 1890, even more so than in
1865, the high percentage of foreign-born and first-generation inmates, especially in industrial states,
lessened the public reaction against the substandard prison conditions.
There were, states,
including
it is
true,
New
some changes
in prison administration after 1870.
York and Massachusetts, did
A number
of
centralize prison oversight in statewide
commissions. Better methods of prisoner identification lent some weight to expanding parole
on
release.
reliance
There was more use of grades and incentives to control behavior, with greater
on "good time" laws, which reduced, even
obedient inmates.
And
there
vances were too modest
was some
if
only
slightly, the length of
greater specialization
when compared with
among
terms for
prisons. But these ad-
the inadequacies that remained.
176
/
Edgardo Rotman
^-^ M*
-
Two chain-gang prisoners work on a
Kr ^^>
*"
54-^
rock pile in Georgia in
**+>
1937.
V
;3?*"
»' v b ..
^w » B-'
1
*
.
* i
•
\**n* \
H
HJ
|
'
-
The
history of
institutions, in
and
interest in
'^'*MBWte»
TT
^
-Ji
/.. ,-CL
A
xrwM
'
^^
,^Sa kr{
jjMjjMf
|Sp.
fcfeW i#vH
w-
American prisons
SS ^>3^
in the southern states
is
a glaring case in point.
which blacks made up more than 75 percent of the inmates, took
ration from slavery.
dignity
j)2k
^ M ^^^I
\
^
Pf .
1
»«£*'-
.
;
5-'
1
^
k* NS
lives.
The
The
result
was a
These
their inspi-
ruthless exploitation with a total disregard for prisoners'
states leased prisoners to entrepreneurs
them, exploited them even worse than
slaves.
who, having no ownership
During the day the prisoners, orga-
nized into chain gangs under the watch of armed (white) guards, typically built and repaired roads. In the southwestern states, prisoners were plantations. In Mississippi, practically
farm
at
twelve
Parchmann, known
camps
for
as the
men and one
all
inmates were engaged in agricultural work. The
women.
for
camp were appropriately called
prison discipline even
they were called
more
All of
cages.
them were surrounded by barbed-wire
The buildings
that
A peculiar feature of the
harsh: surveillance
—who were every
bit as cruel
housed the convicts
Mississippi system
was performed by prisoners
and unyielding
as the guards
From the Progressive Era to World War The Progressive Era was
large farms or
Sunflower Farm, was a 16,000-acre spread, divided into
fences dotted with strategically placed guard posts.
each
more commonly used on
a period of extraordinary
—or
in
made
trustees, as
who were
hired.
II
urban and industrial growth and of un-
precedented social problems. The assimilation of immigrants and minorities into the industrial
urban centers was particularly
difficult to achieve, creating a
deep anxiety about
social
The Failure of Reform
order
among many Americans. Some of them responded by advocating exclusionary policies,
such as immigration
and
state
in
But others sought answers in a paternalistic version of the
restriction.
broad reform plan. These Progressive reformers shared
in the articulation of a
government
ments
to carry out ambitious social undertakings
to resolve social
and individual
agenda
Progressives'
life.
In her
book
War who
full
women
of vermin of every
In Prison (1923), she
known
sort,
could permanently dislodge"
over the dining tables, nibbled
spent fourteen months
depicted the
Mis-
at the
as-
area as "very dirty and,
cell
which no amount of scrubbing on
(p. 63).
dining
room was
covered with long
fifteen years'
wooden
the knives
equally
filthy;
Rats "overran the place in swarms, scampered
,
down
or
hung
far
above their reach"
the walls were "streaked with grime,"
accumulation of dead
flies.
tables infested with cockroaches.
to
and the
chewed up
(p. 65).
The
ceiling
was
The inmates were segregated and seated
"The dishes were of rusty battered tinware,
and forks of cast iron, and the spoons were non-existent.
spoon she was compelled
the part of the
the food] played in [the] dishes, crept into bed,
[at
shoes and carried off everything not nailed
a
I
1919 and 1920, vividly described some negative
most essentials, shabby and unsanitary." She wrote, "Every crack and crevice of the cellhouse
was
at
a faith
a faith in scientific achieve-
conflict.
Kate Richards O'Hare, an opponent of World
pects of prison
and
reform included ambitious plans to transform the prison.
for social
souri penitentiary in Jefferson City in
in
177
/
buy it with her own money and
carry
If it
a
woman wished to use
about in the one pocket
she possessed, along with her pocket handkerchief and other movable property." Health conditions were seriously neglected.
No
effort
was made
to separate
inmates infected with
contagious diseases, nor were disinfectants in use, with the consequence that
all
prisoners
bathed in the same few tubs and frequently contacted highly contagious, even life-threatening diseases. O'Hare recounts a particularly gruesome incident in which she was ordered to
bathe immediately after a throat to her feet she
women infected with syphilis, whom she characterized: "From her
was one mass of open sores dripping pus
dried pus that they rattled
when
been seen working out of the
filthy
.
.
.
with clothes so
A women about whose neck live
she walked.
bandages"
(p. 67).
stiff
from
maggots had
O'Hare was ultimately forced
to feign
taking a bath rather than risk becoming infected herself.
Joseph Fishman, in Crucibles oj Crime (1923), reported another flaw of prison
development of drug addictions by inmates after in
New
Orleans and
at the
filled
facilitated
Drugs were often concealed
with
illegal
life:
the
Doctors at the parish prison
Kansas City Jail acknowledged the existence of widespread mor-
phine addiction in the 1920s, friends.
their admission.
in
by inventive smuggling schemes of the
food
—
especially fruit
substances. In one famous story a jailer stuck a spoon into a large
cream delivered
to
sent in packages
and were hidden
prisoners'
—which was hollowed out and box of ice
an inmate only to dig out a large package of morphine. Drugs were also in belts, in the
hems
of handkerchiefs,
and
in the heals of
hollowed-out slippers. They were even placed in small amounts under the postage stamps of letters or in
pockets
made
inside envelopes.
Drug use by prisoners was not
phine. According to the U.S. inspector of prisons, inmates
substance which [would] give them the desired kick or
opium, yenshee (the residue of smoked opium) and in has any narcotic effect whatsoever."
Some
would
jolt,
fact
avail
limited to mor-
themselves of "any
[including] cocaine, heroin,
anything they can obtain which
prisoners even went so far as to "eat the crust
178
Edgardo Rotman
/
remaining in the bowl of a tobacco pipe
after
it
had been used
from the prison barbershop, and even hashish from India"
for a
long time, to use bay
rum
(p. 21).
In transforming criminal justice programs, Progressives relied heavily
on
the emerging
principles of behavioral science. Confident that the'key to deviant behavior lay in social
and
psychological causes, reformers insisted that an individualized design for the administration of criminal justice, a design responding to each offender's particular needs,
Under
offender and promote the good order of society.
became
as
much
this
banner, the
and
the territory for social workers, psychologists,
would cure
field
the
of penology
psychiatrists as lawyers.
The Psychotherapeutic Model of Prison Reform At the turn of the century, psychiatric interpretations of social deviance began to assume a central role in criminology
and policy making. The success of medicine
of such diseases as tuberculosis
and rabies gave
a
new
in finding the causes
prestige to the entire field; thus those
who labored on its margins, such as criminologists and penologists, began to invoke medical language and concepts in their own areas. As a result, Progressives fully endorsed a medical or therapeutic model of rehabilitating inmates, on the assumption that criminal offenders suffered from
some form
of physical, mental, or social pathology.
Once crime had been diagnosed
as
an
illness,
it
was
logical to use the
methods and
language of medicine to "cure" offenders of their criminality. Indeed, the normal mechanisms of criminal law were inadequate to prevent recidivism.
By 1926, sixty-seven prisons em-
ployed psychiatrists, and forty-five had psychologists. At the same time, of course, the of professional to inmate (one psychiatrist or
sand
cell institutions)
was so small
therapeutic failure reflected just
how
behavior or about
to
as to render the
how
respond
to
little
was
programs
actually
The opening of penology to
no
official
when
to discharge
important,
and jus-
and behavioral
legislature
scientists
spurred on the design
from prison became the equivalent
statutes. Release
legislature
no
less
mechanisms of criminal
psychiatrists
patient from a hospital as cured, so
No
the origins of deviant
effectiveness of the interventions, the ambitions
and appeal of indeterminate sentencing of release from a hospital. Just as
would
tell
should
tell
a doctor
a
when
to discharge a
warden or any other prison
an inmate as cured. The same discretion that the one enjoyed
should belong to the other. In ideal terms, an offender found guilty of an offense fense,
whether major or minor
life. It
would be up
bers, to determine
The
limits
—should
receive the
in that
scheme of things
warden and
the parole board
most frequently invoked "case work."
method tions tic
in the context of criminal justice
The term
"clinical"
was
of-
to
mem-
the individual inmate belonged.
and weaknesses of theory about criminal behavior did not hamper the
cation of the vocabulary of medical science to situations of purely punitive nature.
and
—any
same open-ended sentence: one day
to the prison officials, especially the
where
ratio
hundred or one thou-
ineffective.
known about
the language of the helping professions transformed the basic tice.
five
in therapeutic fashion.
it
however limited the
Nevertheless,
two psychologists per
appli-
The terms
were "individualized treatment"
also frequently used in phrases such as "clinical
of reformation" or "clinical criminology." Despite the therapeutic pretense, prescrip-
were in
model
fact
not very different from the old reformatory methods. Indeed, the therapeu-
of rehabilitation remained, during the
first
decades of the twentieth century,
much
The Failure of Reform
more of a labeling than a curative instrument. So prisons
in the Progressive Era
extended the nineteenth-century practices of giving time
off for
179
/
picked up and
good behavior and keeping
troublemakers in for more of their sentences. The difference was that the "bad" prisoner was
now
the "maladjusted prisoner."
On
the other hand, the
for the Progressive
diagnosis
made
classification a critical
concern
There were an insignificant number of qualified therapists on the prison
to effective treatment. staffs,
new emphasis on
penal system. Classification according to psychological type did not lead
a no less notable lack of well-designed programs, and at the same time, only a primitive
therapeutic methodology. But although classification did not bring about effective treatment, it
did revamp custodial practices.
It
became a
practical device to segregate troublemakers
ranged from
to create categories, within the prison system, that rity,
depending on the degree of surveillance.
Minimum
and
maximum to minimum secu-
security brought confinement in
barracks or colonies in which rules rather than walls and turrets kept the inmates from escaping;
honor farms might be freestanding
main prisons
(as at the Stateville
(as at
Allenwood
and Menard Prisons
in Pennsylvania) or attached to the
in Illinois).
very secure cells and exercise yards and well-guarded walls. In
Maximum
tended the range of incarcerative institutions, loosening up security ening for
it
at the other.
good behavior
a
was
tight-
the reward
maximum-security regime, which, in turn, justified harsher treatment
for those classified as untreatable in the
became
meant
one end and
at the
In this way, transfer to a minimum-security institution
in a
security
effect, the classifications ex-
maximum-security
setting. In short, classification
powerful tool for institutional order.
Classification also fostered special consideration for mentally disabled offenders, segre-
gating
them from the
what constituted
rest of the
a "defective delinquent"
years of experimental classification
aimed
at
mentally normal. The
New York, the State
prison population.
had no uniform meaning and
work were needed before prisoners
first
who were
A leading scholar at the time declared that
a clear understanding
that several
not considered insane but could not be classed as
special institution for defective delinquents
was opened at Napanoch,
in 1921. In 1922, a special department for the mentally defective
Farm
at
prerequisite for
Bridgewater, Massachusetts. In
commitment
more
would emerge. But
New York,
as a defective; a charge
was opened
until 1931, conviction
and an arraignment
for a
at
was not
a
crime were
considered sufficient. In Massachusetts, a 1928 law allowed commitment as a defective delin-
quent
for first offense
if
the court
felt
that the individual
before conviction. In effect, the prevailing medical
model
had
a
tendency
to recidivism,
that equated prisons
even
and hospitals
allowed commitment for an indefinite period of time, not on the basis of a criminal act but
because of a state of mind.
The Social Learning Model: The Opening of the Prison
However
to the
Community
often Progressive penologists invoked the hospital to justify broad discretion in
sentencing practices, they took their design for the everyday routine of the prison not from the hospital
itself
but from the community. Reformers tried not only to reinforce offenders'
bonds with the community but
also to instill in
them
a sense of responsibility for their
tion of the inmate into a free society. This vision
was best
own
way
for the future reintegra-
realized in
Thomas Mott Osborne's
conduct. The prison should be democratized so as to pave the
180
/
Edgardo Rotman
Thomas Mott Osborne, a proponent of inmate self-government, addresses a gathering of
prisoners outside Au-
burn Penitentiary
in
1913. The insistence
on isolation had given
way
to the
"freedom of
the yard."
attempt to introduce the concept of inmate self-government into the penitentiary. Osborne
was inspired by the operation of the George Junior Republic, which sought The "Republic," located
of self-government to juvenile delinquents.
held one hundred delinquent boys and half as
many
girls
and
to
apply the idea
in Freeville,
tried,
New York,
with some success, to
incorporate such democratic practices as voting, officeholding, and peer participation in
deciding guilt and punishment of those
who broke its rules. Osborne had also participated in
settlement house programs that had sought to Americanize immigrant
them
the
American way
In 1913,
in
newcomers and teach
government.
Osborne became chairman of
a
commission
for the
reform of the
New
York
penal system and set about applying the idea of self-government and self-support to adult
inmates of the Auburn prison. His motto, borrowed from British Prime Minister Gladstone, was
"It is
liberty alone that
fits
men
for liberty."
W.
E.
The Mutual Welfare League,
which Osborne established at Auburn, included a committee of forty-nine prisoners appointed
by
among
secret ballot
the prison's fourteen
hundred inmates. This committee participated which
in the planning of disciplinary procedures, for entirely of prisoners
was created.
In
1
a special grievance court
where he organized another Mutual Welfare League. He was institutional approach,
which replaced
rigid
and
and movies. At
least for a time,
also a pioneer of the later anti-
away
the stripes)
Osborne achieved
the inmates could develop a sense of responsibility
politicians
and the introduction of
a prison
atmosphere in which
by trusting each other
ingful decision-making powers. Eventually, however, opposition
and
with a more varied prison
stultifying routines
day, including both a change in dress (putting recreation
composed
9 14 Osborne was appointed warden of Sing Sing Prison,
to exercise
from correctional
mean-
officers
brought about Osborne's departure and the collapse of his Mutual Welfare
League in 1929.
The Failure of Reform
/
181
Innovations in Prison Management: The Norfolk Prison Colony
Another outstanding example of the innovative prison based on the Progressive creed was the
way
Norfolk Prison Colony in Massachusetts. The building of Norfolk began in 1927 as a alleviate
overcrowding
model prison
old Charlestown prison, which
at the
in the nineteenth century.
Howard
seeing the construction of the outside wall oner-laborers provoked in Gill
making Norfolk
idea of
an enthusiasm
into the
to
had been considered a
an economist, was in charge of over-
The contact with these
laborers.
and committed him
for rehabilitation
model reforming prison.
Gill
would apply
pris-
to the
the ideal Progres-
based on psychological and sociological cate-
sive medicine: individualized treatment
gories in
Gill,
by convict
itself
an institution that should emulate as
far as possible the
atmosphere of the normal
community. Specifically, Gill's
aim was
add new
to
social,
medical, psychological, and educational
techniques to the traditional reformative, industrial, and religious instruction. The plan con-
templated the classification of prisoners and their division into small groups of under as to
manage inmates and
under the supervision of its
fed separately,
have an individualized physical, mental,
own special
house-officer,
social, vocational,
groups would also be the organizing basis
ment" but was
a
it,
so
for the
and every man would
and avocational program. The
Norfolk Council, which operated on the
principle of joint officer-inmate responsibility for the governance of the institution.
concisely expressed
fifty
problems in small cohorts. Each group was to be housed and
their
the Norfolk system
was neither an "honor system" nor
system of cooperation between
staff
As
Gill
"self-govern-
and inmates. The group system of hous-
ing and supervision promoted both individual programs for effective treatment and the
development of Gill,
social responsibility.
encouraged by the prominent criminologist Thorsten
institution for research purposes.
Norfolk over 1932 and 1933 as tional staff.
In the
down through
set
The pages offer a very special insight
the fate of a
most
first
significant penal
—and
into the fate of a reform enterprise, clarifying
House
between the treatment
officers supervised the
they, not unlike other prison guards,
who
activities at
interviews with and entries by the institu-
instance, the diary reveals the conflicts
the social workers,
kept a diary of his
experiment in the period.
custodial staff over decision-making authority.
housing units
Sellin,
"The Diary of the State Colony" recorded daily
had
little
staff
and the
inmates in their
respect or tolerance for
ran the educational and training programs. The house officers con-
sidered the social workers too soft
found the guards ignorant and
and coddling of
cruel.
Although
prisoners; the social workers, in turn,
Gill tried to side
with the social workers, the
guards had an enormous day-to-day authority and were well positioned to undercut the ter
and the
spirit of rehabilitative
Moreover, the social workers did not have a very powerful armamentarium posal.
They lacked
the
let-
programs.
know-how and
at their dis-
the resources to change people's lives. In the end,
rehabilitative measures, applied tentatively
by
a staff lacking reliable
methods, did not funda-
mentally alter the punitive structure of the prison or have any leverage on the custodial and disciplinarian tone that differentiated a prison
The
basic flaw in Norfolk's design
timately reveal the cause of crime
and
was
from
a hospital.
the Progressive illusion that casework
would
ul-
dictate the course of treatment. This belief colored the
182
Edgardo Rotman
/
Norfolk treatment
classification,
categories: situational cases,
ment was not
cases, represented staff
by the mentally
ill.
And
had
particular inmate
would go
to
Gill
fit.
to educators, asocial cases to
true at Norfolk, imagine
head of the
many
institution, in this case Gill,
how
ineffective they
to take in a large
number
of
agreement with the
of hard-core
and
originally stirred Gill's high hopes,
its
predecessors,
fell
victim to the
could not control admissions into the state
commissioner of correction,
difficult inmates.
the types of prisoners subverted the casework methods.
had
was supposed
prisons.
institution. In violation of his original Gill
of
were neither diagnostic nor predictive and had
was
this
if
Ultimately, the Norfolk experiment, like so fact that the
composed
and personality
But the categories were ill-defined and overlapping,
assigned; for example, situational cases
more ordinary
to physical illness;
five
treat-
determine the type of practitioner to which each inmate
classifications to
only the most minimal value. at
were divided into
plan. Inmates
which crime was connected
psychiatrists. But in fact, the classifications
were
SCAMP
ended up disagreeing on where any
had intended the
would be
as the
possible because of age or mental insufficiency; asocial cases,
sociopaths; medical cases, in
and the
known
comprising occasional offenders; custodial cases, in which
Both the numbers and
The amendable type of inmates, who
were replaced by
a core of
hardened prisoners
who
forced Gill to shift the primary concern from rehabilitation to custody and enforced disci-
inmates became so unruly that
Gill
had
bread and water to restore control. In 1934,
Gill
himself was dismissed in the aftermath of
pline. In fact,
several escapes
he
left,
and general
criticism that Norfolk
Norfolk had revealed
many
to resort to solitary
was too
soft
on
confinement with
criminals. But even before
of the weaknesses of the prison-reform agenda.
Alternatives to Imprisonment Progressives also attempted to devise a tion
—the
ing prison time earlier,
new
range of alternatives to incarceration. Proba-
release of a convicted offender to the
—was one
essential
community under supervision without
component. Invented
probation was invested with a
new seriousness and energy by Progressives, making it
a basic tool of the flexible individualized sentencing strategy. At the
mode idly
serv-
in Massachusetts half a century
of conditional release from prison
became
the indispensable
same
time, parole as a
complement
of the rap-
expanding indeterminate sentencing. Both procedures revealed the dangers inherent in vesting wide discretion in criminal
justice officials. Judges, in practice, tended to give sentences of probation to those earlier
period would have been given a suspended sentence or
in effect, probation
became more of a supplement
They were
arbitrary to a fault, with the
view. Moreover, supervision, whether
an alternative
board exercising
on probation or on
parole,
its
making assistance or surveillance
same
practically impossible. At the
revoke the probation or parole status without going through a
The
result
officers
several hundred,
time, the officers could
full trial
was a system that usually neglected
disciplined in capricious fashion.
it.
authority without re-
was minimal. The
numbered
it
to
are reflected in the record of parole
themselves rarely were professionally trained; their caseloads
rigor of due process.
who in an
with a verbal warning;
to incarceration than
The abuses and inadequacies of the procedure of parole hearings.
let off
or satisfying the
the offender, except
full
when
The Failure of Reform
Because of the
visibility of
crimes committed by parolees, the institution of parole was
constantly attacked by the press and
cause
became highly unpopular. Judges
also
opposed
required them to surrender sentencing prerogatives to the administrative
it
183
/
the parole boards. Police chiefs, in turn, resented the boards' lack of
it
be-
power
of
communication regard-
ing the location of parolees in the community. Parole boards withheld the information to protect parolees against police harassment. In the event of a crime wave, for example, the police might have
been tempted
to bring in all
tors,
prison wardens backed parole because
it
known
up
cautionary behavior as hostile, and they lined
parolees. But the police defined this
group of detrac-
against parole. Unlike this
was used
as a
reward
for
good behavior and,
as
such, contributed to a smoother administration of their institutions, helping to keep peace
among
and
the inmates
to
prevent
riots. Legislators also
new
prison overcrowding and avoid appropriations for
favored parole, as a
way
to alleviate
prison construction. District attor-
neys were supportive of parole because of the encouragement of plea bargains that would
have been hindered by the prospect of long sentences without parole and also because of the absence of impediments to a prompt return to custody in cases of parole violations.
was an
It
evenly balanced match, but more often than not, the proponents of parole had their way.
and Assets of Progressive Reforms
Liabilities
The Progressive prison-reform movement its
main
considerably short of its aims. The adoption of
fell
tenets in the areas of classification,
work, discipline, education, and vocational
ing was partial and uneven. Rehabilitative programs were rarely executed. ideal of treating rather than correcting criminals
treatment hardly affected daily practices and,
model prisons on
over, despite reformers' efforts to
markedly
different.
more profoundly rity
was
still,
life
an
facilities,
application. Psychological
never went beyond diagnosis. More-
the
community, the routines remained
lack of space, inadequate opportunities for work,
life
behind bars fundamentally
in the free society. In effect, custody prevailed over treatment.
prison was as maladaptive as
its
and
under the eyes of guards in which secu-
institutional routine lived
most important consideration made
the single
ent from
Shabby
had only scant
at best,
train-
The Progressive
differ-
The Progressive
predecessors.
Although some historians and sociologists believe
that this dismal record of
reform was
an inevitable by-product of incarceration, that the very idea of trying to carry out reform
behind bars in
is
flawed from the
ongoing prison
policies.
start,
the causes of the Progressive failure
little
possibility existed for
advancement or higher emolument. As one
port noted in 1929, the position of the guard salary but also long
was well-nigh
annually in
officers
New York prisons. To make
were directed by wardens
for that matter, in
in line. If the
by
found
doing much
Illinois re-
intolerable; not only a
hours behind the walls meant that he, no
prisoned. Not surprisingly, the turnover in the ranks staff
also be
environment. Wages for prison officers were
possibility of creating a rehabilitative prison
low, and
may
For one, badly paid and incompetent personnel subverted the
was high:
less
for
meager
than the inmate, was im-
example, 50 percent of the
matters worse, these unskilled and uneducated
who had no serious interest in promoting rehabilitation or,
else
than maintaining a secure
wardens had any expertise
at all,
it
was
facility
and keeping the inmates
in maintaining security, as
their previous careers in police or military service.
demonstrated
184
Edgardo Rotman
/
Not only guards but
also
be desired. Despite some
would-be teachers and
their educational
efforts, particularly in the late
grams, and despite some particular advances (as in the federal prison
and
ington,
at
San Quentin Prison in
great majority of prisons lacked
change was
California),
programs
left
much to
1920s, to increase the level of pro-
at
at
McNeil
Island,
Wash-
most modest. In 1928, the
any vocational education programs; indeed, they offered no
opportunity for schooling beyond the lower grades. Austin McCormick, a highly renowned prison educator, declared in 1929 that prison education was a failure; he was unable to cite a single well-structured If
and
education program in American prisons.
effective
prisons offered no chance for improvement, were they at least safe for inmates?
hoped
bodily integrity protected? Progressive reformers
corporal punishment, and most states did officially prohibit
whipping books
in Delaware's prisons
was
it.
But not
until 1972. In Colorado, in early 1925, the Civil Service
ging a legal form of punishment. The Colorado
them wear
a
heavy
ball
and chain,
all states
and the law sanctioning
in 1954,
Was
to effect the gradual extinction of
officials also
it
did; the last
remained on the
Commission declared
flog-
punished prisoners by making
riveted to the ankle, for ninety days or for even longer
periods.
Even where solitary confinement had officially replaced corporal sanctions, punishments remained unfair and even
brutal. Physical force, either surreptitiously or
controlling unruly prisoners, continued to be applied,
practices in use.
The National Society
penitentiary at Frankfort, Kentucky, the cell door
and the other cuffed
that the prisoners Solitary
it
found
most primitive
dozen
a
men standing with one hand
cuffed at
supporting the upper gallery; the report noted
remained so throughout the working hours,
for five to
twenty days.
confinement of very long duration was also commonly used during the 1920s
and 1930s. The
"pit" or the "hole"
was
a dark
deprived of decent food, exercise, and any at
under the pretext of
find the
Information reported that in 1929 in the state
for Penal
to the post
and one could still
and unventilated
human
contact.
cell
where prisoners were
The Wyoming
Rawlins, in the late 1920s, placed inmates in pitch-black underground
State Penitentiary cells.
In 1926, in
Ohio, prisoners in solitary confinement stood eight or more hours a day confined in a closefitting
on
semicircular steel cage. In the prison at Joliet,
a diet consisting of four
lasting
from a day
to a
ment
slightly better in
men were
held in solitary
a day, the
week. In addition, they were cuffed to the door of the
hours a day. In Nevada, these
were
Illinois,
ounces of bread and one quart of water
some
cells
cells
confinement
cell for
twelve
were infested with mice and gopher snakes. Conditions
way
eastern prisons: darkness gave
to light or semilight confine-
cells.
Over these decades, prisoners depended situations
—and
that goodwill
was
entirely
on administrative goodwill
to rectify
any
rights or
in short supply. Inmates could not claim
protections in courts of law. Invariably judges refrained from intervening in prison manage-
ment, deferring to the expertise of the wardens. The only limit on wardens' discretion was the inspections of state prison boards, but the boards rarely held
wardens
membership was more
and
to account.
Although Progressive reform
fell far
short of
its
goals,
destructive practices of the inherited system. Prison vestiges
honorific than meaningful,
life
it
did mitigate some of the most
became
less depersonalized.
The
from the Auburn system, such as striped uniforms, lockstep marching, and the rules
The Failure of Reform
185
/
Inmates crowd inside the mess hall at
Ohio
State Penitentiary, circa 1920.
of silence, were eradicated.
The new "freedom
of the yard" allowed intercommunication
exercise during the break period. Prison routine
was
also mitigated
by
sports, movies,
and
and
music, a beginning of what would gradually lead to the admission of radio and television.
The Progressive prisons encouraged correspondence and prison
life.
Thus, these innovations gave
initial
visits,
which
also
became
part of
content to the future roster of prisoners' rights.
The Big House Progressive reform resulted in the "Big House," a als
instead of short-term political appointees
new
type of prison
and designed
managed by
profession-
to eliminate the abusive
forms of
corporal punishment and prison labor prevailing at the time. These prisons coexisted, ever, with state prisons that
how-
maintained late-nineteenth-century practices. The Big Houses
were large prisons that held, on average, 2,500 men, prisons such as San Quentin in California,
Sing Sing in
New York, Stateville in Illinois, and Jackson in Michigan.
In
1929 there were
two prisons with a population of more than 4,000 inmates each; there were four with more than 3,000 each; six with more than 2,000 each, and eighteen with more than 1,000 prisoners.
Despite amenities such as
cell
furnishings and decorations, cell blocks overall were de-
scribed as stenchy, noisy, and excessively cold in the winter and hot in the
House exemplifies tion with the features
were
the National
open
summer. The Big
the superficiality of Progressive reforms in recreation, work, society. Indeed, in the
stultifying routines,
granite, steel,
monotonous schedules, and
and
assimila-
and cement, the dominant
isolation.
The 1931 report
to
Law Observance and Enforcement pointed out that in most inmate was controlled for the prisoner, giving him or her no chance for
Commission
of
prisons, the
life
initiative or
judgment. Penal
istence, did
little
of the
world of
institutions,
to prepare for the
with their treadmill and mechanical quality of ex-
resumption of
a law-abiding social
life.
186
Edgardo Rotman
/
The Big House attracted the at
Menard,
a
interest of sociologists.
maximum-security prison
The
first
study was Donald Clemmer's
cused mainly on analyzing the internal group
life.
The predominant criminal type was
fo-
the
Thieves composed a group with a special status in the prison and with a rigid code of
thief.
who
conduct, built on the basic prohibition of snitching. Thieves and those rules
Clemmer
in southern Illinois, in the late 1930s.
were called "yeggs," "Johnsons,"
types, ranging
from prison
"right guys," or "regulars."
to "rapos"
and
lived
by
their
series of other
and "gamblers," who controlled and
"politicians," "merchants,"
exchanged prison commodities,
There was a
"stool pigeons,"
who were,
respectively, child
sex abusers and snitches. All these categories were organized in a hierarchical order, which
was associated with power and
privileges. Social stratification generated various internal
codes
of behavior.
New Jersey State Prison, Gresham Sykes in 1958 saw in the prison a unique social
At the
system that accommodated the interests of the administration and those of a number of prison leaders,
who
ministration.
obtained power and benefits in exchange for their hidden allegiance to the ad-
Through
a corrupt
group of
leaders,
who
falsely
appeared as antagonistic, the
number
administration was able to keep under persuasive control a larger bellious inmates.
of potentially re-
The pressure of prisoners' problems was controlled by a system
informally legitimized and
empowered
of roles that
prison leaders and validated their arrangements with
prison authorities. In 1963,
ing in ties
its
John Irwin and Donald Cressey argued
that the prison
impact on most prisoners as to obliterate their preprison
was not so overwhelm-
identities.
which maintains and organized
that the inmate
criminals.
The
model
of prison could be better understood through an "importation"
social reali-
of corrections,
code was imported into the prison by professional thieves
The past "deprivation" or "adaptation" model
closed organizations, with a particular code of
norms
to
interpreted prisons as
which prisoners had
to
adapt in
order to cope with deprivations inherent in total institutions. The adoption of the "importation"
model
led to recognition of the need for action at the social
reorganizing the
community and
and
cultural levels, such as
neutralizing the action of gangs.
The Emergence of the Federal Prison System Until the late nineteenth century, the U.S. government housed prisoners convicted of federal
crimes in state penitentiaries. In return, the state penitentiaries received boarding fees and
were permitted
1885
to
number
of federal prisoners began to
rise,
As
a result,
it
outlawed the practice of contracting federal prisoners
many
state penitentiaries
un-
from 1,027
2,516 in 1895. Second, Congress in particular became uncomfortable with the
ing system; in 1887, ployers.
Two problems
to use the federal prisoners in their prison labor system.
settled the arrangements. First, the
to private
in
leas-
em-
began refusing federal prisoners.
In 1891, Congress decided to enter the prison business.
The
first site
chosen
for the
construction of a federal prison was Leavenworth, Kentucky. Construction of a twelve-hundred-cell institution began in ers sleeping in
1897 and
lasted for
some
thirty years,
with
many of the
prison-
dark basements on cots or on beds arranged in double rows along the corridors.
The Failure of Reform
As one would expect, idleness was rampant. Thus
at
Leavenworth, there was not
/
187
much
to
distinguish the federal penitentiary from state penitentiaries.
But the federal system soon began to depart from the state mold. In 1902, Atlanta be-
came
the site of the second federal prison
and broke with
several traditions. Atlanta
was one
of the earliest prisons to feed prisoners in a dining hall at eight-person tables, instead of
on one-way bench
relying
guards. In 1928 the too
had some innovative
in cottages,
tables. Atlanta also
federal
first
features.
eral prisoners the
tions,
built at Alderson,
West
for prison
Virginia,
and
it
Alderson lacked a surrounding fence, housed the inmates
and decorated dining rooms and
In 1910, President William
ushered in the eight-hour workday
women's prison was
Howard
living
rooms with
Taft signed the
first
curtains.
Federal Parole Law, giving fed-
opportunity for parole. To promote uniformity
among
the federal institu-
the superintendent of prisons was designated as the chairman for each federal prison
board of parole; the remaining two positions on the board were
and chief medical to serve
officer. In addition, the
on the parole board
filled
by the
prison's
warden
superintendent of prisons traveled to state prisons
for federal prisoners
held in state institutions.
Federal prisons erected in the early 1900s were generally run as separate entities without
any central organization. The problems caused by prison congestion, and the need efficient
record-keeping system to
the goal of proper classification
facilitate
of prisoners, led to the creation of the federal
was Sanford
the bureau
Bates,
who was
Bureau of Prisons in 1929. The
responsible for a
number
for a
more
and segregation first
director of
of important improve-
ments. Bates altered the method of selecting wardens, substituting a merit system for political patronage.
Wardens were
trained at a special bureau facility
within the bureau. In 1937, the Bureau of Prisons placed Federal Civil Service, throwing off the
began
a
another
system of facility.
staff rotation
last vestiges
and were promoted up the ranks all
prison employees under the
of political patronage. Also, the bureau
whereby any promotion was accompanied by
a transfer to
had moved up within the same
Prior to these changes, prison employees
prison and became entrenched in that prison, which had led to inflexibility and idiosyncrasies
within the separate
The
facilities.
federal system of classification of prisoners
was based on the Bureau of Prisons crimi-
nological study of prisoners. Low-risk offenders were sent to the serious offenders to Leavenworth
and
education to McNeil Island, and physically and mentally Springfield.
The bureau's conscientious
efforts
here
ill
made
new
would
Atlanta, those that
noncustodial camps,
benefit
from agricultural
inmates to the hospital prison
classification far
at
more systematic
in federal than in state facilities.
The
increase in hard-core federal prisoners, perhaps caused by the crime waves associ-
ated with Prohibition,
prompted the Bureau
1934, Alcatraz was awarded this distinction. "vicious
and irredeemable
type," those with
of Prisons to Its
open
purpose was
no hope
a prison of last resort. In
to isolate the criminals of the
of rehabilitation. Prisoners for Alcatraz
were selected from other federal prisons and were transferred back their release. Alcatraz
world.
inmates had virtually no privileges and
To prevent secret messages,
officials
little
to other prisons before
contact with the outside
never allowed prisoners to receive original copies
of their mail, only transcribed ones. In the early years, conversation
among inmates was pro-
188
Edgardo Rotman
/
hibited except
when indispensable. To compensate for these restrictions, Alcatraz had a fairly many classics, and its food was above the average. Although the rest of
extensive library with
was overcrowded, Alcatraz maintained
the federal system
its
original
purpose as
a jail for the
worst of the worst, a purpose that resulted in a surplus of beds. During the thirty years Alcatraz
was
in use,
it
housed
ers occurring in
a total of only
1937
closed in 1963 and
at
1,557 prisoners, with the highest average of daily prison-
302. Because of deterioration of the physical plant, Alcatraz was
was replaced by
the federal penitentiary at Marion, Illinois.
War II, the federal prison industries were greatly expanded to make goods including shoes, mattresses, bomb racks, and bomb fins. Also, World War
During World for the II
war effort,
witnessed the incarceration in federal prisons of highly educated conscientious objectors;
out of this came discussions on the propriety of segregating black and white inmates, but no action
was taken by
the bureau until after the school desegregation cases were decided
by the
Supreme Court.
Developments after World The American prison system was shaken by a series of riots
War
II
in the early 1950s.
When the new
concessions to inmates were thwarted by bureaucratic inefficiency, economic hardship, or
unmanageable overcrowding, tensions were created Riots took place at the Trenton Prison
Jackson, Michigan,
at the
Ohio
and
that
at the
State Penitentiary, at the
in various institutions in California,
Oregon,
found
in violence their only outlet.
Rahway Prison Farm Menard
New Mexico,
in
New Jersey,
at
and
State Prison in Illinois,
Massachusetts, Washington, and
Minnesota. The usual scenario was the destruction of costly state property, the taking of hostages, rampages, looting,
witnessed a large
number
and the vandalizing of prison grounds. The
early
1950s also
of less serious rebellions in the form of sit-down strikes or isolated
acts of escape or self-mutilation. Because of the particular rural structure of the penal farms
of the South, self-mutilation
The usual complaints
was
the
main channel
that triggered the riots
of revolt there.
were the deficiency of prison
of hygiene or medical care, poor food quality, lack of treatment,
demands
of the rebels generally coincided with
recognized by the courts. cils as a
A sensitive
what
in the next
and guard
facilities,
lack
brutality. All the
decade would become rights
point of contention was the formation of inmate coun-
way to channel and work out grievances. Frequently demanded by the inmates, these who considered them a threat to the
councils were strongly resisted by prison administrators, hierarchical principle.
Prison riots exposed the fact that the reforms of the Progressive era had largely remained at the rhetorical level.
House proved
The acute tensions created by
the fragility of
its
apparent order.
programs or even piecemeal realizations had created the other hand, Progressive concessions, cratic
power
and anarchy
that
had ruled prisons
social
monotony and boredom
of the Big
in Progressive
relentless expectations in prisoners.
which implied the surrender of
On
part of the auto-
in the earlier penitentiary models, created destabilization
in the prison social system.
The study of riots brought and
the
The mere promise embodied
a
new understanding of the
contradictions,
power structures,
arrangements that pervaded prison systems. The causes of riots were identified by
— The Failure of Reform
189
/
Police survey the
wreckage following a
1952
riot at the
State
Prison oj Southern
Michigan at Jackson.
The complaints 0} the Jackson
rioters
—
such
as overcrowding, inad-
equate medical care
and food, and guard brutality
—mirrored
those 0} the
many who
other inmates
par-
ticipated in a rash oj
prison riots in the early 1950s.
the
American Prison Association
in
1953
as lack of financial support, official indifference,
substandard personnel, enforced idleness, lack of professional leadership and professional programs, excessive size and overcrowding of institutions, political domination and motivation of
management, and unwise sentencing and parole
practices. But except for isolated
transform prison environments, the sociological diagnosis of prison
efforts to
ills
did not offer
widespread remedies. The generalized conclusion that prison unrest was the result of insufficient rehabilitative
programs
led,
however, to an intensification of the therapeutic thrust in
prisons after the early 1950s spate of prison
The The postwar treatment and
to the
New
riots.
Rehabilitative Thrust
era led to the creation of treatment-oriented correctional institutions
replacement of the Big House of the 1940s. After World
War
II,
the penological
arena was permeated by a general rehabilitative thrust caused by the international reconstructive
optimism and the
declining for
some types
relative prosperity of the 1950s.
of crime
—
the
murder
rate
had
The low crime
a 6.9 decrease
rates in the 1950s,
from 1946
to
1962
gave foundation to rehabilitative optimism. Enthusiasm for psychological treatment, influ-
enced by psychoanalytically oriented professionals emigrating from Europe, increased the input of behavioral scientists in the correctional system.
More psychologists and caseworkers
gave a more technical orientation to the therapeutic model of rehabilitation. The assumption
was
that offenders
were psychologically disturbed and needed individualized treatment
to
cope with their emotional problems, which were considered to be the cause of their criminal activities.
Further, the international rehabilitative emphasis
Nations Standard
Minimum
was formalized
in the
1955 United
Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners, which provided in Article
58 that a sentence of imprisonment can be justified only
when it
is
used
"to ensure, so far as
190
/
Edgardo Rotman
possible, that
upon
his return to society, the offender
law-abiding and self-supporting
The therapeutic orientation had some prison ric
same paucity of
offered
new wave
it
replaced purely discretional
administrative decisions. But despite the rheto-
of treatment euphoria shared with previous reform efforts
practical realizations. Because of the limited professional possibilities
by the penitentiary
setting, the treatment staff
qualified individuals. In addition, there sional,
not only willing but able to lead a
benefits insofar as
management with treatment-oriented
of rehabilitation, this
the
is
life."
was
between the custody and the treatment
was
permanent
a
staffs
composed
generally
still
conflict, ideological
of less
and profes-
regarding issues of discipline and secu-
rity.
Closely connected to the growth of the rehabilitative ideal, inmate classification systems
had developed throughout the
first
half of the twentieth century.
Bureau of Prisons had turned rehabilitation into a policy,
ment
of an institutional
network
that
would allow an
its
was
who
all
worked
Still,
classification
to assign the prisoner to
and periodically
the appropriate prison, to plan the future rehabilitative action, rehabilitative status of the inmate.
II,
sociologists, vocational
in creating the case history of the convict.
examined and evaluated the data
Special classification committees
the develop-
system and indi-
World War
by a team of professional psychologists, caseworkers,
counselors, and psychiatrists,
1929 the Federal
in
effective classification
vidualized decisions regarding discipline and treatment. After carried out
When
main concern was
to review the
custody considerations and managerial convenience
usually prevailed over treatment in the committees' decisions.
The ficials.
rehabilitative
optimism was shared by prison reformers, lawmakers, and prison
1954 the American Prison Association changed
In
tional Association institutions"
and
and counseled
to label the
its
members
punishment blocks
One
of
its
main
qualities
was
its
to the
of-
American Correc-
to redesignate their prisons as "correctional
in
them as "adjustment centers." The Soledad
Prison, also labeled a "California Treatment Facility," after the war.
name
its
was
the
first
of the men's prisons built
gun
pleasant physical atmosphere. Fences and
towers substituted for granite walls, and the internal structure
made communal
life
more
encouraging. Cell blocks with dayrooms and outside windows, inside walls with pastel colors,
spacious and well-equipped libraries,
and more relaxed
discipline,
and
gyms and educational
ing programs created a relatively friendly atmosphere After spective,
World War
II,
the therapeutic
more prone
rehabilitative strategies also shifted
which considered criminal behavior
cess. Correctional
facilities,
a broad selection of vocational training
acceptable food
and group counsel-
to rehabilitative treatment.
back
to the social learning per-
as a learning disorder in the socialization pro-
innovation was guided by newly conceived, psychiatric experiments on
community,
as well as the
growing awareness of the need
to counteract the
negative effects of institutions.
This need was
made
plain
by the seminal work of Irving Goffman, Asylums, which
1961 provided fundamental insight into the nature of "total institutions" in general and ons in particular. Total
institutions,
in
pris-
such as prisons, army training camps, naval vessels, board-
ing schools, or monasteries, were characterized by their encompassing character symbolized
by the
barrier to social intercourse with the outside. In total institutions,
human needs
are
handled by the bureaucratic organization, and decisions are made without the participation
The Failure of Reform
of inmates.
Goffman pointed
and cooperate.
cate
to the loss of the inmates'
He explained how inmates are
191
/
fundamental capacity to communi-
dispossessed and degraded from the time
they arrive at the institution and are stripped of the identity equipment they use for present-
The
ing their usual image of themselves to others.
social learning rehabilitative
attempted to transform these desocializing patterns of prison
A good example of such an experiment was when Commissioner
in the early 1960s,
the California
McGee,
the
method
to
the therapeutic
Richard
McGee was
experiments
settings.
community
at
Chino Prison
the innovative administrator of
Department of Correction. According to the evaluative research units
Chino experiment demonstrated the
effectiveness of the therapeutic
set
up by
community
change the antisocial behavior of offenders. The institution was decentralized into
small units, with counselors housed in each of them. Convicts were used as therapists.
prison became a
community
center for special training,
work
and family
release,
The
contacts.
Therapeutic communities focused on the transformation of the institutional environment, creating a
network of compensatory
social interactions, a
network
that
was intended
to re-
place the hierarchical structure of the institution with a horizontal association of mutually
responsible
human
beings
who would
resolve their
common
problems through a process of
The vehicles of this process were the frequent meetings and group
intensive social interaction.
discussions in which decisions were reached through the participation of both inmates and staff.
The demand
was intended
for active participation
tive effects of institutions as depersonalization,
The emphasis on
would generate
a
idea. In practice,
the therapeutic
movement attempts
model
such notorious nega-
loss of initiative.
of rehabilitation led to abuses that in the 1970s
of general opposition to
at rehabilitation
to counteract
dependency, and
and discrediting of the
rehabilitative
were only peripheral, but the prevailing indeter-
minate sentencing statutes led to disparities, arbitrariness, and disproportionately high penalties.
Another negative aspect of the therapeutic model of rehabilitation was the abuse of
1960
intrusive therapies. After in
American correctional
different forms of behavioral modification
institutions.
Many
were disguised versions of highly punitive
programs were used
of these programs, discontinued in the 1970s,
practices.
The Beginnings of the Prisoners' Rights Movement movement, inmates had
Until the beginnings of the prisoners' rights
and U.S. Supreme Court decisions precluded interference in prison matters
would disrupt
their access to courts.
institutional discipline.
practically
no
rights,
Judges reasoned that
Furthermore, they con-
sidered that such intervention was prevented by the doctrine of separation of powers and that
judges lacked the expertise to run institutions. Courts were declared not to have jurisdiction or
power over
the internal
management
referred to as a "hands-off doctrine,
unchecked power of
of prisons. In the 1960s this
which
their administrators,
virtually
who were
was
abandoned penal
entitled to
retrospectively
institutions to the
pursue whatever punitive or
despotic methods they chose to apply.
The
courts intervened in extreme cases. Violation of the cruel
and unusual punishment
Amendment resulted in a few isolated, though important, deci1940s and 1950s. One particularly significant decision and notorious case Johnson
proscription of the Eighth sions in the v.
Dye (1949), involved
a Georgia chain gang.
The
plaintiff
had escaped from the gang and
192
Edgardo Rotman
/
had been arrested
He
in Pennsylvania.
there applied for a writ of habeas corpus, alleging
brutal treatment from the Georgia prison officers
and danger
chain gang. The district judge denied him habeas corpus the Third Circuit reversed. For the
ment could
Amendment of the U.S.
barbarous punishments but
cally
and unusual punishment. The
In this respect
is
it
he returned
to the
flexible interpretation
Constitution led to the condemnation not only of physi-
also, as early as
19^0, of punishment grossly disproportion-
ate to the severity of the crime. In this decision the
and unusual punishment changes
life if
but the Court of Appeals of
time, a federal court declared that a prison environ-
first
entail the infliction of cruel
of the Eighth
to his
relief,
Court recognized that the concept of cruel
as "public opinion
becomes enlightened human justice."
important to underscore that the concession of benefits and privileges
during the Progressive Era had become accepted social practices that ultimately gave substance to the nascent prisoners' rights
movement. Those concessions were
largely the result
on the community. The recognition of the needs of
of the policy of patterning the prison
inmates for successful reintegration into society, a view widely shared by public opinion and
way
the press, paved the
The recognition of rights
and
for the recognition of their rights.
prisoners' rights
World War
liberties after
also
is
with other vulnerable social groups, such as mentally
ill.
This
movement was given
of social change, as the
landmark decision
in
force
Supreme Court's
Brown
v.
Board
an aspect of the general expansion of
impelled by
II,
new
civil
expectations of prisoners together
racial minorities,
women,
children,
and the
by the appointment of Earl Warren, an advocate
chief justice in 1953.
The 1954 U.S. Supreme Court
oj Education, prohibiting racial segregation, particularly
contributed to the creation of a legal atmosphere that would allow the development of rights for prisoners.
The recognition of prisoners'
of U.S.
Supreme Court decisions
John
Kennedy, elected
F.
These policies inspired
that
rights
was preceded and encouraged by
emphasized the
in 1960, initiated policies in support of minorities
a civil rights
a series
rights of the individual. President
and the poor.
movement, which decidedly influenced the
history of
American prisons. In the early 1960s, prisoners began to seek enforcement of their constitutional rights
through two main of habeas corpus
legal devices: the writ of
is
a
means
that
all
habeas corpus and the Civil Rights Act. The writ
people have to challenge in a court of justice their
illegal
confinement. The prevailing liberal trend of the 1960s led the courts to interpret the habeas
corpus procedure as a way to attack in federal courts tional violations. In
state convictions
flawed by constitu-
1963 three Supreme Court decisions reaffirmed the power of the
courts to review constitutionally challenged
state court decisions, triggering
federal
an unprecedented
expansion of the scope of the writ. These decisions minimized the habeas corpus require-
ments and
set liberal
standards both for the granting of
new
courts and for successive applications of the writ against the
The second and most ers
was the
is
law had been incorporated into the U.S.
a codification of the federal statutes,
rights litigation. Section
War
used to enforce constitutional rights of prison-
Civil Rights Act. This nineteenth-century
Code, which
Civil
significant legal tool
evidentiary hearings in federal
same judgment.
and became the
1893 of Chapter 42 of the U.S. Code,
to protect freed slaves
from
civil rights
basis of
modern
civil
originally enacted after the
abuses, began increasingly to be used
state prisoners for violations of their federal rights.
by
The Failure of Reform
Until 1961
it
courts,
where
ceived.
Through
was necessary
for a plaintiff to
sue on constitutional issues before the state
allegations of state breaches of constitutional rights
1961 police misconduct
a
case,
Monroe
were often not well
sue on constitutional issues
plaintiffs to
directly before the federal courts, thus avoiding the
sometimes prejudiced
religious
donment of the Supreme mid-1950s there was large migrations of
prisons
came
to
movement generated
the
change in the inmate populations as a consequence of the
southern blacks into northern and western
were a nationalistic and separatist group that the affirmation of their sense of worth.
1960s
Muhammad. The
in the area of
litigation.
first
the streets gave
The Black Muslims
tried to vindicate the situation of blacks
The organization grew during
through
the 1950s, under the
victories of the prisoners' rights
freedom of
tionally highly receptive. Black
Thus many northern
cities.
movement on
civil rights
support and inspiration to the pioneers of prisoners' rights
the early
state courts.
decisions that led to the aban-
first
Court's "hands-ofP doctrine concerning prison management. In the
a significant
hold a black majority. Also, the
teachings of Elijah
re-
Supreme Court
Pope, the U.S.
v.
unearthed the Civil Rights Act of 1871 and allowed
The Black Muslim
193
/
movement were
which the courts were
religion, a subject to
Muslim prisoners mainly demanded
in
tradi-
to obtain copies of the
Koran, receive their newspaper, eat pork-free meals, and hold religious services and other meetings. After exist in
much resistance from apprehensive prison authorities,
1965, as a result of Cooper
alleging that he
ing access to
had been confined
Muslim literature and
v.
Thomas Cooper had
Pate.
in segregation to clergy.
Muslims
punish his religious
state of corrections in
beliefs
complaint
and demand-
on Cooper's complaints, which
trial
led to
as a religious group.
The State of Prisons The
won their right to
The U.S. Supreme Court reversed the lower courts'
dismissal and ordered the district court to hold a the recognition of the Black
they
filed a civil rights
1965 was mirrored
on Law Enforcement and Administration
in
1965
in the survey for the President's
of Justice, a survey carried out
Commission
by the National
Council on Crime and Delinquency from February to September 1966. The project was undertaken with the help of three thousand correctional administrators, wardens, probation
and parole
officers, sheriffs, statistical chiefs,
and other
professionals.
can penal institutions was characterized with these words: barren and
futile, at
"Life in
The
situation of Ameri-
many institutions is at best
worst unspeakably brutal and degrading. To be sure, the offenders in
such institutions are incapacitated from committing further crimes while serving their sentences, but the conditions in
which they
successful reentry into society,
live are the
poorest possible preparation for their
and often merely reinforce
in
them
a pattern of manipulation
or destructiveness." In the foreword, Milton R. Rector pointed out,
being struck by the alization."
The
fact that
figures also stress excessive reliance
correctional method. During tional institutions in the
"One cannot read the report without
American correctional philosophy
on
is
a
philosophy of institution-
institutions as the nation's principal
1965 more than 125,000 persons were received
United
States.
Of this number almost 80,000 were
in adult correcfelons.
The
sur-
vey findings established that on any one day in the United
States, about one and a quarter
million persons were under the jurisdiction of state
local correctional agencies
and
and
194
Edgardo Rotman
/
Relieving overcrowd-
and combating the boredom of prison life were among the multiing
tude of challenges
taken on by reformers in the
1960s.
many thousands more were
institutions. In addition,
in a variety of local
lockups and
jails
serving from a few days to a few weeks
not included in the survey.
Of
the total reported,
28
percent were juveniles, and 72 percent were adults. One-third of all offenders reported were
under probation or parole supervision. Although judged
and other community
alternatives
had already
insufficient, the use of
probation
altered the overall trend of increasing prison
populations. Between 1961 and 1965, there was an exceptional annual decline.
The survey noted, "Judges and juries tional
in
evidently place a high degree of reliance
commitment." As the survey pointed
out, the high
1963 by the Saginaw Probation Demonstration
Project,
commitment
rates
on
institu-
were challenged
which offered evidence of the com-
paratively greater success achieved with offenders through increased use of effective probation.
in
It
also stressed the
manpower but
enormous savings
also in taxes.
of alternatives to mass custody
and
that a
lower commitment
The survey indicated
rate
produces not only
that prospects for establishing a variety
and mass caseloads could become
reality
through joint
state
federal planning.
The survey
movement
reflected
an
that led to the
anti-institutional
movement
in
American society
at the time, a
development of the reintegration model of correctional change.
This model tried to avoid imprisonment by keeping offenders in the
community and helping
them, through various programs, to reintegrate. The President's Crime Commission indicated that the task of corrections was to build or rebuild solid
community
life,
through "restoring family
ties,
ties
between the offender and
obtaining employment and education," and
"securing in the large sense a place for the offender in the routine functioning of society." aspirations of this anti-institutional
approach included changes in the community
The
to create
resources for convicts and an adequate environment for successful reintegration.
Conclusions At the beginning of the period of our survey, in 1865, Samuel Gridley Howe, a leading American philanthropist
endowed
.
.
.
and prison reformer, warned, cannot be got
"Institutions ... so strongly built, so richly
rid of so easily." Institutional structures
proved
their tenacity
The Failure of Reform
195
/
during the hundred years between 1865 and 1965. The basic belief that prisons were the
most
means
effective
for reacting against
crime led to excessive institutionalization and to
endemic overcrowding. Indeed, overcrowding became American prisons. One hundred years President's
after
a prevailing feature of the history of
Howe's warning, the Task Force Report of the
Commission on Law Enforcement and Administration
excessive reliance
on imprisonment
in the
United
As
States.
of Justice
a result of this
the U.S. rate of incarceration today (519 per 100,000 population)
and
after Russia,
at least five
Despite the appeals of
is
denounced
second in the world,
times greater than that of most other industrialized nations.
numerous prison reformers, most
of these overcrowded institu-
tions maintained their original nineteenth-century structure. In
1967 the
New
York
prison at Auburn, built in 1816, remained in operation, and the President's Crime sion reported that forty-three penitentiaries, seven reformatories, and one tion built before
the
unchecked trend,
1900 were still
in use in thirty-six states, "grim
state
Commis-
women's
institu-
reminders of an age of ignorance
and inhumanity."
The Progressive
aspiration to individualize
and democratize the prison resulted in the
abolishment of practices such as the lockstep and striped uniforms. This aspiration also motivated changes such as the introduction of bands, orchestras, sports, exercise, and movies.
But the overall Progressive goals of modeling the prison on the community and of trans-
forming the prison into a treatment institution basically
move beyond diagnosis, and the custodial aim.
The
quality of prison
life
failed. Psychiatrists
priority given to institutional order, discipline,
rehabilitative efforts to a
were unable
to
remained subordinated to the prevalent
and security reduced
true
few insufficient and scattered attempts.
Although the balance of change was meager, prisons could not remain impervious to
momentous
technological and economic progress. Despite the persistence of old external
structures, there have
been
significant transformations in their infrastructures. Prison
profoundly changed by technological advance in the
and
ventilation.
the
first toilets
toilets
were
were
still
An example
is
fields of
was
the introduction into prison cells at the turn of the century of
with running water, to replace the sordid and antihygienic buckets. These
installed for the first time in
Maryland, in 1899. However, in 1900 most prisons
using the bucket system, which was a major cause of the rampant spread of diseases
throughout the prison population. Raising prison living conditions was officials'
life
housing, sanitation, plumbing,
discretion
legislation.
and good judgment. But with time,
this
became an
first
a matter of prison
issue of general health
During the 1960s, standards of housing and sanitary conditions became the sub-
ject of constitutional litigation
The methods used significantly.
to
and statutory recognition.
maintain order and discipline in penal institutions also changed
Whipping and other forms
Wines and Dwight report
of corporal punishment, already
of 1867, were replaced
by
solitary
condemned
in the
confinement as the extreme
punishment. The gradual expansion of statutes abolishing corporal punishment was not
ways followed by penal
practices. Unofficial
into the twentieth century
and were eradicated
later
only through the scrutiny of
activist
courts and the imposition of due process safeguards in disciplinary proceedings. There
endemic tendency that
even
now
to inflict cruel physical
al-
forms of barbarous punishment continued well
punishment
in prison environments, a
constitutes a major source of prisoner litigation.
is
an
tendency
196
Edgardo Rotman
/
Another prison practice that has acquired particular significance since the century in American prisons
is
recreation.
High
levels of
sulting from the reduction of prison industries created an acute ties as first
an incentive to maintain order and
discipline".
late
nineteenth
overcrowding plus the idleness
need
The main
the slowly growing libraries, orchestras, organized sports,
re-
for recreational activi-
were
recreational activities
and what was
called the free-
dom of the yard. Sunday morning services were also regarded as a relief from the boredom of incarceration. Later,
notony of prison
movies and television became important elements
breaking the mo-
in
life.
There have also been numerous
efforts to
open the prison
to the
community,
to create a
series of alternatives to
imprisonment, to improve medical and psychological treatment, and
to rehabilitate inmates.
The
diversification of institutions
and the new
classification
constitute another remarkable development, to the extent that the history of
ons has been envisioned as a history of different systems In 1871
Woody
because
it
considered him "a slave of the
legal status
lawlessness, arbitrariness,
which had
rejected his appeal
compares
state," suffering "civil death." If one
Ruffin's
the courts into prisons in the early 1960s contrasts with the
and cruelty
The emergence of prisoners'
in prison
The Virginia court
with that of prisoner litigants in the 1960s, one can appreciate a significant change.
The introduction of law and
practice.
errors.
pris-
for classifying prisoners.
Ruffin, convicted of murder, appealed his death sentence,
been constitutionally flawed by procedural
methods
American
life
and
social practices
that
had been routine
legal status
in penitentiary
was the cumulative
management
result of all the
changes
brought about by reformers since 1865.
Acknowledgments I
I
am grateful to the staff of the my original draft.
completed
Nora de
la
Garza,
Head
Harvard University I
later
libraries
and of the Boston Public
found important materials
at the
of Retrieval Services at the University of
valuable interlibrary-loan assistance. Allison
Library,
where
University of Miami libraries.
Miami Law
Library, provided
Berman and Keith Gaudioso were
effective research
assistants.
Bibliographic Note
The leading
analysis of the period covered
Convenience: The Asylum and
work
is
Its
by
this chapter is
David
J.
Rothman's Conscience and
Alternatives in Progressive America (Boston: Little,
Brown, 1980). This
indispensable to understanding the constellation of factors that shaped American prisons
during most of the twentieth century. Blake McKelvey's American Prisons: A History of Good Intentions (Montclair, N.J.: Patterson Smith, 1977), the standard
book on
the subject,
is
a necessary source of
information. Other, less detailed accounts of the evolution of American prisons include the following: Harry
Elmer Barnes, The Story
rev. (Montclair, N.J.: Patterson
"State Prisons in America:
1
of Punishment:
A Record of Man's Inhumanity to Man, 2d ed.
Smith, 1972), written from a Progressive's perspective;
Howard Gill,
787-1937," in U.S. Department of Justice, The Attorney General's Survey
of Release Procedures, 5 vols. (Washington, D.C.:
Government Printing
panoramic view of the history of American prisons Prison Reform Movement: Forlorn
Office,
1939-40), a useful
until 1937; Larry Sullivan's well-informed The
Hope (Boston: Twayne Publishers, 1990); and Mabel
A. Elliott's
Coercion in Penal Treatment: Past and Present (Ithaca, N.Y.: Pacifist Research Bureau, 1947).
Edgardo Rotman's Beyond Punishment: (Westport, Conn.:
Greenwood
Press,
A New
View on
the Rehabilitation of Criminal Offenders
1990) includes a detailed analysis of the successive models of
The Failure of Reform
197
/
by
this chapter.
Francis A. Allen's The Decline ojthe Rehabilitative Ideal: Penal Policy and Social Purpose
(New Haven,
rehabilitation that underlay prison reform initiatives during the period covered
Conn.: Yale University Press, 1981) examines the social and ideological context in which the twentieth-century rehabilitative ideal flourished, whereas Francis T. Cullen and Karen E. Gilbert's Reaffirming Rehabilitation (Cincinnati, Ohio: Anderson, 1982) assesses twentieth-century rehabilitative
and sentencing
On
policies.
particular periods or aspects of the time covered
by
this chapter, see the following: J. E.
Baker, Prisoner Participation in Prison Power (Metuchen, N.J.: Scarecrow Press, 1985), a detailed historical
An
account of inmates' participation in prison government; Torsten Eriksson, The Reformers:
Historical Survey of Pioneer Experiments in the Treatment of Criminals
(New York:
Elsevier, 1976),
major penal institutions and protagonists; Glen A. Gildemeister, Prison Labor and Convict
a study of
Competition with Free Workers
in Industrializing America,
1840-1890 (New York: Garland Publishing,
1987), a view of the development of American prisons from 1840 to 1890, from the labor
and Paul W. Keve,
perspective;
Prisons
and
corrections.
James
A
American Conscience:
the
Corrections (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press,
History of U.S. Federal
1991), a history of U.S. federal
Jacobs's Stateville: The Penitentiary in Mass Society (Chicago: University of
B.
Chicago Press, 1977)
is
an informative view of the post-1925 period, through the study of a
and John
particular institution,
in the
Brown, 1980) provides
mid-twentieth century.
draws on, among others, the following publications: the chapter on
In addition, this essay
correctional history in
Irwin's Prisons in Turmoil (Boston: Little,
American prisons
insight into the evolution of
Todd
and George
R. Clear
F.
Cole, ed., American Corrections,
2d
ed. (Pacific
Thomas O. Murton's interpretation of the vicissitudes of prison reform in The Dilemma of Prison Reform (New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1976); J. Thorsten Sellin's analysis of the exploitation of convict work in America as part of a history of penal slavery, in Slavery and the Penal System (New York: Elsevier, 1976), and Michael Sherman and Gordon Grove,
Calif.:
Brooks/Cole, 1990);
Hawkins's historical interpretations in Imprisonment
Stephen Hindus, Prison and Plantation: Crime, Carolina, Prisons:
1767-1878 (Chapel
Houses of Darkness
in
America: Choosing the Future (Chicago:
The following sources should
University of Chicago Press, 1981).
Justice,
also be mentioned: Michael
and Authority
Massachusetts and South
in
University of North Carolina Press, 1980); Leonard Orland,
Hill:
(New
York: Free Press, 1975); President's Commission on
Law
Enforcement and Administration of Justice, Task Force Report on Corrections (Washington, D.C.:
Government Printing tive,"
Office, 1967);
David J. Rothman, "Sentencing Reform
Crime and Delinquency (October 1983); Sol Chaneles,
ed., Prisons
in Historical Perspec-
and
Documents (New York: Haworth Press, 1985); Enoch C. Wines and Theodore
Prisoners: Historical
W. Dwight,
Report on
and Reformatories of the United States and Canada (Albany: Van Benthuysen, 1867); Louis N. Robinson, "Institutions for Defective Delinquents," in journal of Criminal Law and Criminology 24 the Prisons
Seashore and Steven Haberfeld, Prisoner Education: Project Newgate and Other
(1933); Marjorie
J.
College Programs
(New York:
Knopf, 1923); Joseph
F.
reprint, Montclair, N.J.: Patterson Smith, 1969); Erich H. Steele
Security," in Correctional Institutions, ed. Robert ed.
(New York: Harper and Row,
Lawyer (Totowa,
N.J.:
(New York:
Praeger, 1976); Kate Richards O'Hare, In Prison
M.
and James
Carter, Daniel Glaser,
B. Jacobs,
and
W.
System
Rowman and
Littlefield,
1988); James B. Jacobs,
New
Perspectives on Prisons
1890-1990 (Chicago: University of Chicago
Yackle, Reform and Regret: The Story of Federal judicial Involvement
(New York: Oxford
3d
1985); Jim Thomas, Prisoner Litigation: The Paradox of the jailhouse
the Social Control of the Underclass,
Larry
"Minimum
Leslie T. Wilkins,
and Imprisonment (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1983); Jonathan Simon, Poor and
Alfred A.
Fishman, Crucibles of Crime: The Shocking Story of the American jail (1923;
University Press, 1989).
Discipline: Parole
Press, 1993);
in the
Alabama
and
Prison
CHAPTER SEVEN
The Prison on the Continent Europe, 1865-1965
Patricia O'Brien
y
"^ he penal institutions of a people should be, social state."
like all laws, the
expression of its
who
So spoke the French reformer Leon Faucher,
at
mid-nine-
teenth century was intent on redesigning the French prison system to reflect
2
the progress
and achievements of
his
own
society. Prisons
were expected
change and develop in accord with democratic and moral principles of equity,
improvement. As an
by
ated
from 1865 cultural,
institution, the
political cultural
to
1965
economic,
modern prison system has always been porous, perme-
assumptions and social values. The history of prisons in Europe
therefore, a story of continual
is,
to
and
fairness,
political,
and
social realities of
change that
modern
states.
parallels the
Moreover, as
changing
earlier
chap-
have demonstrated, the prison was also the product of pressure to reform existing
ters
methods of punishment and
to find a
more enlightened, humane, and
effective
answer
to
punishing crime.
Almost
as
soon as the prison
focus of reform efforts.
Many
period, advocating a variety of ever,
itself
became
central to criminal punishment,
different prison reform
methods
it
became
movements appeared throughout
to reach distinct goals. All these
took their inspiration from the same sources: advances in the
new
the this
movements, how-
fields of
knowledge,
including criminology and sociology; changes in beliefs about the causes and proper treat-
ment
of deviance;
and
shifts in social attitudes
toward crime and criminals.
Each European nation formed and maintained
its
own prison system.
In spite of distinct,
national institutions, however, the prison systems that developed throughout Europe in the
nineteenth century were remarkably similar, reflecting a
Shared ideas about
how
to create prisons that
commonly held
penal philosophy.
and
rehabilitative pro-
were secure,
sanitary,
duced similar prison populations, architecture, work systems, and inmate subcultures.
Toward ing criticism
the
end of the nineteenth century, imprisonment became the subject of increas-
and gradually
punishment. In r
its
place, r
lost the absolute position
many' European r
it
had gained
states invented
as the
dominant form of
new, noncustodial punishments, r
such as the suspended sentence and supervised parole. In some countries, these
new
Rectory prison
in
oj the
Montpeiher,
France, circa 1920.
200
/
Patricia O'Brien
nonincarcerative punishments produced only a minor change in penal practice; in others,
they substantially replaced imprisonment.
Penal philosophies began to diverge significantly in the twentieth century. Development of nonincarcerative punishments continued energetically in gressively
expanded
their prison systems.
in the interwar period II
among all European
its
Italy
during World
War
nations to date, of the deprivation of
form of punishment.
The search led to
countries while others ag-
and the concentration camps of Germany and
represent the most extreme use,
liberty as a
some
The forced labor camps of the former Soviet Union
for a better
method
transformation and
its
of
punishment not only gave
rise to the
The search
partial obsolescence.
as
it
prison but also
continues today
is
necessarily rooted in the national experiences of this important period in the history of the
modern European
prison.
The Prison and
Life Within,
1865-1914
Inmates and Guards
From
their origins in the early nineteenth century, prisons
had been primarily intended
to
who were poor, unskilled, unemployed, and judged to be in need of social and moral instruction and discipline. Public fears about idle young men crowding the cities house populations
in search of work fueled middle-class fears of political unrest.
punishment became
a
The idea of rehabilitation through
panacea for a variety of perceived social
ills.
By the middle of the
nineteenth century, penitentiaries were performing their assigned task of disciplining populations of mostly
young and
single
men, who,
in age, marital status, class,
experience, were remarkably similar to the rank and profile of
French prison populations in the
of those of the continent as a whole:
tween the ages of twenty-one and tuted,
last
file
and occupational
European conscript armies. The
quarter of the nineteenth century was typical
two out of every
thirty;
of
men between
five
French male prisoners were be-
thirty-one
and
forty years old consti-
on average, about 20 percent of the male prison population, with declining percentages
in the older age groups.
Female prisoners,
who made up 20
percent of the total prison population in the mid-
nineteenth century, dropped to 12 to 13 percent by the end of the century. The inmates, like the men, were
made up
women
of the young. Again the French experience exemplifies
women in French penitentiaries were between the ages of twenty-one and forty; and women in their twenties outnumbered women in their thirties by about three to two. Most women in prison, like the men, were single (65 percent), but most female prisoners had children, whereas two out of every three men were listed as single and the trend:
two out of every three
without children. After mid-nineteenth century, prison populations
emerged
portionately urban. Repeat offenders were especially likely to ers possessed
who
did
list
few or no job
skills;
women were
as significantly
come from urban
consistently less skilled than
and dispro-
areas. Prison-
men, and those
occupations identified themselves as seamstresses, domestics, and day laborers.
In spite of considerable difficulties with the recorded occupational identifications of prisoners,
we are able
to observe that the percentage of vagrant
and unskilled workers
in the prisons
The Prison on the Continent
/
201
An 1850
engraving of
inmates of a French prison.
declined in the second half of the nineteenth century, revealing a criminally
—experienced population. Most male
more occupationally
—and
prisoners were convicted of theft and other
property crimes. Domestic theft by servants, prostitution, and vagrancy figured significantly in the female prison profile.
Guards were not very
different in social origins
came from poor backgrounds and had
little
or
no
and
class
from the prisoners. They too
specialized training. Because of the delib-
erate recruitment policies of prison administrations,
most guards came from military back-
grounds. As the role of the prison guard came to be more highly valued as a moralizing force in a progressive penitentiary system, the greater administrative scrutiny
and
background and training of the
attention. In France in
ing the failure of the prison to rehabilitate prisoners
And in 1879
1872
recruit received
a parliamentary inquest study-
recommended "special training"
for guards.
the International Penitentiary Congress voted in favor of creating special
normal
schools to instruct prison guards.
This endorsement of the principle of formal education for guards was controversial in France, as elsewhere, because, critics insisted, guards were best trained as apprentices, learning their skills
movement
to
on the job and
of the parliamentary inquest in in 1879,
in the prison. This tension helps explain the failure of the
develop a significant training school program for guards. In France, regardless
1872 and the vote by the International Penitentiary Congress
such an institution was not created until 1893 and never took firm
1908, reopened in 1927, was abolished in 1934, and was reestablished after part of
more general prison reforms.
In
fact,
root.
It
closed in
World War
II
as
instruction for prison personnel in programs
such as these often consisted of basic courses in reading and writing, with being paid either to the rehabilitation of prisoners or to their
humane
little
control.
attention
202
/
Patricia O'Brien
Perhaps the single most important characteristic of prison populations their shrinking size after
Such
array of punitive sanctions.
a contraction
except in those countries that came
late to the
lations.
But whatever
or
in
new
in either reported crime or prison
efficacy of the prison as a
and about what standards should characterize specific issues as the
life
inside
its
Italy,
popu-
mechanism of control
walls. This debate often revolved
proper physical structure of the prison and the appropri-
ateness of labor within the prison but also addressed such larger
whether the prison created
Western European nations,
occurred within the prison population, there continued to be
fall
and contentious debate about the
around such
1865 was
prison solution. Thus in these decades,
and Spain experienced no such diminution rise
common
was
Russia,
a heated
after
decades of growth, a reduction reflecting the development of a
and more inchoate
issues as
a subculture of deviance.
Prison Architecture
drew on
a small repertoire of
international penal philosophy
and on shared ideas
The architecture of European prisons throughout forms that pointed to a of
how to
els
common and
the period
Two broad mod-
achieve goals of security, sanitary conditions, and rehabilitation.
emerged: the Pentonville radial design (wings radiating around a central rotunda), which
achieved complete separation of prisoners; and the "telephone pole" model (multiple blocks
at right
and Sing and
Sing,
angles to a long central corridor), as in the American
which provided
single cells for night separation
facilities
of
cell
Auburn
and communal workrooms
refectories for the day.
The Pentonville model
inflicted a harsher life
on
its
prisoners;
it
was
also
more expensive
to construct and to maintain. Nevertheless Pentonville-type, radial prisons continued to be
built in Holland, Belgium, Spain, Switzerland, Scandinavia, Austria,
in the latter half of the nineteenth century,
even
been called into question. The cruelty and harshness of
under frequent attack
Hungary, and Portugal confinement had
after the efficacy of solitary
total isolation of prisoners
as statistics revealed higher rates of death, suicide,
came
and madness among
isolated populations.
Even
in countries endorsing the principle of solitary confinement, financial pressures
common dormitories and common workrooms, thereby
caused prisons to be constructed with reflecting a ties.
kind of institutional schizophrenia between articulated goals and economic
Although France, Russia, and
fulfill
the
need
for
more
as
convents and
prisons. In Spain, as late as 1880, old, poorly
ventilated buildings were the order of the day for offenders of
together in
reali-
they also tended, often out of
on buildings converted from other purposes, such
fiscal necessity, to rely
military barracks, to
Italy built single-cell prisons,
all
types,
who were mixed
communal arrangements. Extreme overcrowding and inadequate food allotments
were not uncommon. In 1872,
on the heels
of the French military defeat
by
Prussia, the
French National As-
sembly commissioned an inquest to examine the state of French prisons in a system where isolation, in principle, fear of rates.
just
was endorsed. Two
great social fears informed the deliberations: the
homosexual promiscuity among prison populations, and the
The conclusions
and
rehabilitative
fear of rising recidivism
of that inquest reaffirmed that single cells were absolutely essential for
punishment.
It
was hoped
that as a result of separating prisoners
from
The Prison on the Continent
common
each other and eliminating isolation
203
/
dormitory arrangements, the moralizing influence of
would reform behavior denounced
as
promiscuous and degenerate. Yet few prisons
complied with the laws that were passed in the wake of the committee reports. By the turn of
and
the century,
in spite of
remained about the same as of the penitentiary inmates.
completed
new fifty
prison construction, the
a standardized penitentiary
regime composed of single-cell prisons, and
and
efficacy of confining
question by high and steady recidivism the
first
of single cells in France
which accommodated only
Only Belgium among Western European nations claimed
by spreading the cost of twenty million francs over By 1900, the
number
years earlier: five thousand,
was so
half of the nineteenth century
it
half
have
did so
forty years.
isolating prisoners for long periods
rates.
to
Yet the
momentum
was called
into
of solitary confinement in
firmly established in state institutions that
new
prison edifices continued to be designed according to principles once considered enlight-
ened, even though the prisons were being built
at a
time
when
the principles of
punishment
themselves were judged to be bankrupt and in need of replacement.
Work
in
Prison
By the end of the nineteenth century, many Western European penitentiaries engaged manufacturing. They produced for an external market or responded to the institution's internal
demand
for uniforms, shoes,
bedding, baskets, and the
like.
Some were
in
own
profit-ori-
ented in their operations and distributed nominal wages to prisoners. Others employed prisoners in the maintenance of the prison: cooking, baking, cleaning, doing laundry, working in the infirmary, shepherding, farming, gardening, landscaping,
and
sian anarchist Peter Kropotkin captured well this aspect of prison
French penitentiary Clairvaux:
"When one approaches
which extends along the slopes of the believes he stacks,
what
is
looking
at a little
hills for
the
one from the very
immense outer wall
city.
Smoking
factories, four large
of organ
music as a
1880
p.m.,
returned to
work from 6 p.m. In
punctuated by
to 8:45 p.m.
life
followed a half hour
and walks in the prison garden. After
music, at 9
factories, that's
of the nineteenth-century
in a Belgian prison, inmates rose at 5 a.m. to the
call to prayer; breakfast
6 a.m. and lasting until 5:30
tures, lunch,
smoke-
(Pierre Kropotkine, Les Prisons [Paris, 1890], p. 7).
Labor was the central and organizing factor of the daily
On a typical day in
of Clairvaux,
about the length of four kilometers, one rather
manufacturing
first"
The Rus-
in his description of the
steam engines, one or two turbines, and the punctuated rhythm of the
strikes
penitentiary.
at
raising animals.
life
and
visits
later,
from prison
sound
with work beginning officials,
weekly
lec-
a half-hour dinner break, the prisoners
retired, after fifteen
minutes of prayer and organ
Austrian prisons, inmates typically worked ten and one-half to eleven
hours a day, following similar breaks for instruction, exercise, and meals.
Even before the creation of the penitentiary, prisoners had performed work tasks of their punishment.
Some had
same token, workhouses
relied
as part
served in forced labor, as galley slaves exemplified. By the
on labor
as a tool of reform
and improvement;
in response to
work in new workhouses under the strict control of overseers and a harsh disciplinary regime. Though work in such institutions often consisted only of spinning and weaving, the idea that the rising costs of poor relief in the eighteenth century, the indigent poor were put to
these
inmates should be occupied in productive labor spread from the workhouse to the prison.
204
/
Patricia O'Brien
Just as nineteenth-century politicians, theorists,
demptive value of work in creating
a disciplined
work
and
social reformers stressed the re-
force in free society, so too did prison
reformers count on the moral benefits of productive labor to transform the most hardened criminals into useful citizens. Although prisons were not simply mirror images of production in the marketplace, the prison
society
was dynamically linked
to the cultural
and economy. By the end of the nineteenth century, the
work had, both
in the
community
at large
and
in the prison,
shift
changes of the broader
from craftwork to piece-
produced an insistence on new
expectations about discipline and productivity.
Even though the
rehabilitative value of prison
work was recognized throughout Europe,
debate continued from country to country into the twentieth century over the appropriate
form of work
—should
be performed in isolation or in groups, as occupation for
it
its
own
sake or as productive activity determined in relation to markets? Early-nineteenth-century English experiments with implements like the treadwheel or treadmill had been aimed
at
keeping prisoners occupied; in certain instances, these wheels and mills could be harnessed to the tasks of raising water or grinding grain, but
intended
for
productive labor.
was not
It
until
on the whole, they were
certainly not
mid-century that English penal reformers and
administrators began to consider the rehabilitative values of productive labor
among prison
populations.
The
possibilities for real profits
from
efficiently
organized prison work systems led to a
new kind of moral reasoning in the last quarter of the nineteenth century: some reformers now argued that profitable and productive prison labor was immoral because it succeeded by denying employment
to
unconvicted and therefore more worthy workers in
free society.
Beginning at mid-century in France, community worker associations periodically objected to the unfair competition presented by the vastly reduced wages of the prison
periods of revolutionary activity
—and notably
tion of prison production. In Prussia, tested over
low
in
1848
—
businessmen and manufacturers
labor costs in prisons; they resented
work
demanded
craftworkers
force. In
the cessa-
—not workers—
what they considered the
pro-
state's unfair
advantage of a captive work force whose minimal cost could undercut prices and destroy their businesses.
worker;
These bourgeois preferred
critics of a
work system oriented
to
a prisoner
on
a treadmill to an inmate textile
markets argued that prisons that aimed to be
self-
supporting by the sweat of their inmates' brows did so to the detriment of the true penal goals of education
and
rehabilitation.
Nevertheless,
many
countries remained committed to the goal of the prison as a finan-
cially self-sustaining institution.
Some
did so not by competing with local businessmen for
markets but by working as partners with manufacturers and producers through a labor contract system. Free
employers, in other words, paid the prison administration a
labor of prison inmates.
Among German states,
Brunswick claimed
that its
fee for the
system of inmate
labor contracted out to local businessmen nearly covered the cost of operating the prison,
whereas Baden, under a work system administered by the
state,
was
said to have supplied
two-thirds of the institution costs and taught useful trades to inmates. French prison administrators
frayed
sought to establish self-sustaining institutions whose operating expenses were de-
by prison labor contracted out
to
community entrepreneurs. Subcontracting was
also
common: the principal entrepreneur could act as an agent by entering into agreements with
The Prison on the Continent
other local producers
who sought cheap, short-term, inmate workers, already under contract
to him. Italian prison authorities sought, less successfully than the French,
make
lated, to
Prison
work organized by entrepreneurs and not
local factors
to central planning; the
rather than the state responded necessarily to
complexion and the organization of work
sys-
the very heart of the nineteenth-century penal philosophy, were, therefore, often in
at
hands of private individuals. In France, penitentiaries adopted one of two models
the
maximized work or,
whom they emu-
prisons economically self-sufficient by offering specific services in the prison
entrepreneurs or by allowing for the subcontracting of whole prison populations.
to local
tems,
205
/
for profit: either the prison administration directly supervised
more commonly,
the provisioning
the prison director contracted with a private entrepreneur
and maintenance of the prison
tor of a particular prison
tative
cess.
which he had
Choosing among competing bids by
the organization of work.
working and
in return for
and the
that the prison
local prefect
aimed
local
who assumed
to ensure that the prisoner
was always
was self-supporting. Neither the kind of work nor the
a result, occupational practices varied
over
total control
businessmen, the direc-
and educational value of particular occupations figured heavily
As
that
production
rehabili-
in the selection pro-
widely from prison to prison. Gaillon, for
example, was the only French prison that engaged in accordion-making, and umbrellas were
manufactured exclusively
The created
role of outside
many
at
Melun prison by about
three
dozen men.
businessmen, trying to turn the prison into a profitable enterprise,
tensions. There
were problems
And
for prison personnel, paid
by the
state
now
but
there were problems for prisoners, with
some
entrepreneurs economizing on overhead costs, which for the most part meant food,
light,
serving the interests of entrepreneurs.
and heating due
for prisoners.
Abuses were
to entrepreneurial neglect
came
public debate and calls for reform.
rife.
In France, a declining standard of
to light at the
An
buy
in prison
end of the nineteenth century and fueled
—and abuse—was
the
foodstuffs, beverages, soap, clothing,
and
additional source of profits
prison store, or cantine, where prisoners could
life
stamps with the wages they earned through the prison work system. The standard
fare in
prison was a notoriously bland diet often consisting of bread, soup, gruel, and occasionally
meat and vegetables. Although seldom starved, prisoners could escape the monotony of their diet only
through purchases from what was essentially
ability of the state to
a
company
store.
With
the increased
monitor and inspect, these arrangements came under reforming scrutiny
by the end of the century.
Around the mid-nineteenth century, certain countries, including Bavaria, initiated
Italy,
and Spain,
experiments that allowed prisoners to choose the trades in which they wished to be
apprenticed. Reformers argued that
by allowing
choice, prison administrators
would reduce
recidivism rates. In spite of the best intentions to stress the utility of work in prison as preparation for return to free society, however, vocational training in marketable skills,
whether by
choice or by assignment, was either neglected or ineffectively implemented for adults in most
European prisons. In the rhetoric surrounding new punishments tieth century,
that
emerged
in the
twen-
penal reformers were curiously silent about the rehabilitative benefits of work
in prison, a principle at the heart of the nineteenth-century
vidualization of the
punishment
to
fit
program of punishment.
the offender as well as the crime
noncustodial punishments took the place of organized
meant
work systems within
that
Indi-
new,
the prison.
206
Patricia O'Brien
/
Prison Subcultures
Not
aspects of prison
all
life
institution to institution,
it
were organized by those in charge. To an extent that varied from
was the prisoners who shaped the
prisoners, especially those in long-term facilities, adapted to
own
forming their
daily regime. life
The majority of
within the institution by
informal communities, networks of power, and cultural identifications.
Rather than being stripped of their personalities, prisoners seem to have adjusted their identities
and experiences
to the penal
environment.
Common
features of
life
within prison in-
cluded coded vocabularies, "argot," tattooing, and social networks based on homosexual relations.
Although inmate subcultures transgressed the formal rules of prison
pear to have taken root to varying degrees in
The growing presence
of recidivism in
many European
life,
they ap-
prisons.
European prison populations
1865 helps
after
explain the continuity in content and form of inmate culture. Even in countries like France,
where the most frequent offenders were
isolated or sent abroad after 1885, recidivists served
knowledge from one generation of inmates
as the primary conduit for transmitting other.
Those
men and women who
to an-
returned to prison dominated the prison hierarchy be-
cause of their experience in the system.
By means of tences
made
a steady process, repeat offenders
were returned
teenth century in France, two of every five imprisoned
women
to prisons to serve sen-
longer and longer by records of previous convictions. By the end of the nine-
men and one of every four imprisoned
were repeat offenders, and they were not necessarily the most vicious or dangerous
criminals. These returning inmates, critical role in
who circulated from regional to central prisons,
played a
shaping the ongoing subculture of the institutions.
Inmate interactions and social organization in the prison were dynamically related both to the ordered
world of work and discipline in the prison and
beyond prison
walls. Prison subcultures
to the prisoners' experiences
were not simply interesting anomalies
that defied
the best intentions of the nineteenth-century penal reformers: they were the arena in
which
prisoners appropriated, distorted, and recast the values of disciplinary society. As such, pris-
oners did as
much to define the
governed penitentiary
and disciplining
life.
In
realities of
its
imprisonment
own way,
as did the rules
the prison subculture
was
and regulations
as
much
that
a regulating
force in the prison as the bells that signaled the hours of rest, prayer, meals,
and work. Special language, or argot, with
its
own
vocabulary and distinctive patterns and word
placement, brought a cohesiveness into inmate prisoners
who
life.
The secrecy
of
communication among
shared a separate language protected prisoners' privacy, even in the presence
of intense surveillance.
Coded communication allowed
prisoners to define their relative sta-
who were members of corporations and guilds had their own argot used to the same ends. Through words, whose meaning was known only to the initiated tus
and
rights, just as
workers
few, the group reinforced
Inmates in long-term
its
shared identity.
facilities all
over Europe appeared to have invented specialized
vocabularies and idioms indigenous to prison differed
though
from the little
street slang of criminals
of this
life.
In the nineteenth century, prison slang
and from the language of the laboring poor. Al-
shadow world has been preserved, French ethnographers and
linguists
The Prison on the Continent
worked prodigiously
end of the nineteenth century
at the
and prisoner
tions of criminal
argot.
From
their
compile dictionaries and collec-
to
work, there
207
/
is
every indication that while the
corporate argot of workers was disappearing, the argot of the criminal class and of prisoners
was expanding and
flourishing.
Prisoners also chose, often with considerable pain
images by tattoo
and without
sufficient hygiene, either
with crudely designed images or to be tattooed with more sophisticated
to tattoo themselves
artists
within the prison.
prisons just as branding, a state-imposed
It
seems ironic
mark
that tattooing
on
of infamy
grew
was being terminated throughout Europe. Writing
social ostracism,
in popularity in
convicts' bodies
and
a
means
Lacassagne, professor of forensic medicine at the University of Lyon, found in tattoos a of studying the social milieu of the criminal: table talking scar." Lacassagne
systematically scars"
"From
was one of the
first
of
in 1881, Alexandre
the point of view of identity,
it is
means a veri-
medical specialists to catalogue tattoos
among prison populations. The categories of the
twenty-four hundred "talking
he examined included fantasy and historical images, erotic and sexual images, meta-
phoric symbols, military figures, inscriptions, professional or occupational symbols, and patriotic
and
religious
Tattooing, as
emblems.
much
as distinctive
identity in the institution.
speech patterns, helped define the prisoner's sense of
The marking
of one's body, an
ated with primitive societies and tribal cultures,
Beginning in the
immemorial phenomenon
was widely practiced
in
modem
nineteenth century, continental European criminologists and criminal
late
anthropologists compiled detailed statistical accounts of tattooing in prisons. Just as the
army and women
of passage
and
as a
in the brothel
means
were known to mark
their bodies
institution.
inventory of images of power, defiance, sex, affection, and motherhood
but no area of the body was
commonly
immune from
and romantic
when
tattooed their arms, chests,
love,
power, and bravado.
cir-
and backs,
the puncturing needle as hands, faces, necks,
were marked with indelible symbols of
rarely inscribed their bodies, but
gious,
in
a rite
of self-identification with the values of the group, so too did in-
culated in prison systems. Prisoners most
genitals
men
permanently as
mates recognize tattoos as emblems of status and distinction within the
A common
associ-
prisons.
Women
and
more
they did, they most frequently chose maternal,
reli-
depictions.
Prison regimes, then as now, attempted to obliterate the individuality of inmates, relying
on uniforms, codes,
rules,
and regulations
to transform individuals into
homogeneous
conforming prisoners. However, through words, images, and gestures, the prisoners them-
managed
selves often
inmate's
to create their
body could record
for liberty"
and "Prison
is
own
system of values and cultural identifications. The
the graffiti of protest
outcast. "Death to the bourgeoisie" indicated social order.
One
and longing. Scripted
tattoos like "Martyr
waiting for me" expressed the negative view of the victim and
more than
a vague sense of protest against the
early-twentieth-century French inmate serving a term for theft with three
previous convictions had his entire torso tattooed, explaining: "The tattoos on
hidden [under done, there
is
my shirt]
and having them
is
a great source of pleasure to me.
nothing dishonest about them, and
I
like to
show them
off.
my body are
They
are well
My only regret
is
not being tattooed from top to bottom" (quoted in Charles Perrier, Les Criminels: Etude
208
/
Patricia O'Brien
The tattooed torso of a twenty-eight-year-old inmate 0} the prison Nimes, France. A
•"»
at
..
product of a prison subculture in which tattoos
were emblems
oj status, the convict told the prison doctor,
Charles Perrier, only regret
is
"My
not being
tattooed from top to " From lies Cnminels (1901-5)
bottom.
by Charles Perrier.
'-=-:
^^^m^of-^ concernant 859 condamnes [Lyon, 1901-5]).
The
particular choice of this twenty-eight-year-
old inmate was a potpourri of revolutionary and Napoleonic images, flowers, a serpent, a
badge of honor, dagger drawn as
a bee, a bird, if
an assortment of portraits of
entering his heart, and "Souvenir de
la
women and men,
Martinique,"
all
the hilt of a
crowding his upper
body and arms. The use
of argot
and tattooing has been
common among
prisoners in different penal
systems, whether in late-nineteenth-century Italian or French prisons or in the Soviet gulag
system and the forced labor camps of the twentieth century. In the Soviet case, criminals spoke their
own dialect in
for
example,
the camps, regardless of their place of origin outside the
world of incarceration. Representational and symbolic forms were used by generations of inmates to express a shared cultural identity within the context of the prison and to defy the
anonymity of the
faceless,
homogenized, and uniformed mass
that the disciplinary system of
the prison strove to create.
Sexual and affective relations were another means of adapting and adjusting to the ano-
nymity of prison
life.
The prison created an arena
for expressions of love, jealousy, anger,
and
affection and for the emergence of networks of power run by prisoners within the institution.
There are
many
indications that homosexuality
was widely practiced
in nineteenth-century
The Prison on the Continent
mens
where
prisons, even in those
isolation
by night and surveillance of communal areas by
day were the organizing principles of punishment. There
is,
however,
phenomenon. Promiscuity among inmates attracted
the extent of the
209
/
little
solid evidence
on
the attention of special-
who blamed the prison for creating an environment of deviant sexuality. Reports written by doctors who worked in prisons acknowledged sexual activity among prisoners and deists,
nounced
it
as
immoral and unnatural. Others argued,
to the contrary, that the prisoners
doomed and that homosexuality was proof of their fundamental
themselves were biologically
degeneracy and corruption. Administrators' reports, parliamentary inquests, and studies offered conflicting opinions
prison doctor, Charles Perrier,
"scientific"
on the causes and cures of the problem. One French
who worked
at the
prison of
Nimes
in the last decade of the
nineteenth century and the early years of the twentieth century, explained the particular situation of his institution in great detail
by providing
and opening techniques used by prisoners in
homosexual
During the day, the
liaisons.
stairs, in
in the dormitory, in a
homosexual
of feverish activity,
activity
activity
illicit
passage from one place to another, under the
and on days of bad weather),
floor plans
to defy single-cell
and descriptions of locking
arrangements in order to engage continued "in the workshop, in
the refectory (during reading periods
word, everywhere." In
accounts
Perrier's
was possible because the guards were "comrades"
(Perrier, Les Criminels 2:196).
In the records of women's prisons, there are also indications of a strong inmate culture in
which
affective relationships
letters
and notes by
their repetition of
women
predominated. At the turn of the century several collections of
inmates were published in France. These writings are similar in
key themes and images surrounding husband-and-wife and mother-and-
child relationships
among
prisoners. Inmate letters expressed affection
and jealousy, and provided a commentary on survival outside world. to
Commentators on these
in the prison
and
and
fidelity,
a critique of
life
collections stressed the perversity that, they
anger in the
felt,
had
be associated with expressions of sexual love and affection between women, but they over-
looked the
fact that the
most often repeated pleas from one prisoner
to
another were for
simple companionship and friendship. In the end, the evidence
we have from prisoners themselves about
relationships in prison remains sketchy.
phenomenon unique ries,
to
It is
likely,
sexual and emotional
however, that homosexuality was not a
French and American prisons
in the nineteenth
systems for which documentary evidence of homosexuality
and twentieth centu-
exists.
Moving Punishment into Society, 1880-1914 The late nineteenth century marked a profound change
in the policy of punishment.
Through
an odd nexus of public opinion and two widely divergent theories of criminality, imprison-
ment gradually
lost its place as the preferred
ports, accounts
sensationalized
penal sanction. During this period, press re-
by sociologists and criminologists, and inmate journals and
life
diaries
behind prison walls. The public became increasingly aware of the prison's
failure to rehabilitate
wrongdoers and
its
success in fostering a culture of recidivism.
At the same time, a variety of new disciplines influenced penal development. Experts in the social sciences incorporated a
complex of
factors into
new
theories of deviance
and
210
Patricia O'Brien
/
punishment.
Two
distinct schools of
thought emerged. The
Italian School, led
by the crimi-
nologist Cesare Lombroso, posited a biologically determined theory of deviance.
and
his disciples argued,
and
regressive cally
and
intellectually inferior to
and
to
Lombroso
characteristics, that criminals
biologically inferior, just as, he contended,
The opposition jurists,
from observation of physical
women
as a sex
men.
Lombroso and
his disciples
forensic specialists throughout
was led by
a
number
who argued that view, who included
Europe
ences "created" the criminal. Supporters of this
of criminologists,
family
and
social influ-
Franz von Liszt of Ger-
many, Adolphe Prinz of Belgium, and G. W. Van Hamel of the Netherlands, joined the International
Union
were
were physiologi-
forces in
of Penal Law, founded in 1889, to voice their critique of a penal
philosophy that absolved society of responsibility. They contended that society as well as the criminal had to be held accountable for an individual's deviance. Most vocal in their critique
and
of the Italian School were French criminologists
Lacassagne and Gabriel Tarde,
who
forensic specialists led
by Alexandre
argued that crime could be reduced by improving the
material environment. In a related but distinct vein, in 1898, the French penologist
Raymond
Saleilles
pub-
lished a highly influential work, Llndividualisation de la peine: Etude de la criminalite sociale,
which argued cording to
that criminals could exercise free will
Saleilles, scientific
study could help
fit
and assume moral
the
punishment
responsibility.
to the special
Ac-
needs of
individual criminals.
The
biological determinists absolved the prison of responsibility for prisoners because,
as innate deviants, these criminals
were incurable. The social-environmental theorists
fa-
vored individualized punishments outside the homogenizing influence of the prison, along with preventive social reforms. For very different reasons, then, both schools discredited
imprisonment
as a
method
In this way, public
of treatment.
and expert opinion agreed
original ideal of treatment
fulfill its
aimed
that
imprisonment did not, and could not,
at reintegrating the offender into the
In accord with this devaluation of the prison as a rehabilitative
site, a large
community.
number
of Euro-
pean states created an array of new, noncustodial punishments, including parole, suspended sentence,
and probation. Although imprisonment remained
alternatives,
it
New The
rise of
Fewer
Prison inmates became a
was
the
making
first resort.
Noncustodial Punishments
noncustodial sanctions changed the size and complexion of prison populations.
first-time offenders
One
central in the field of punitive
was, in those countries, no longer the punishment of
were sentenced
to prison,
and the
more concentrated population
total
of the innovations most significant in reducing the
suspended sentence. Belgium led the way this alternative part of its penal policy in
number of prisoners shrank.
of recidivists
for other
number
and serious
criminals.
of prisoners in Europe
Western European countries
in
1888, followed by France in 1891. In this
punishment, courts determined the length of a prison sentence and then suspended
it,
allow-
ing the first-time offender to enjoy freedom as long as the conditions of the suspension were
honored. In a variant of the suspended sentence, probation, the wrongdoer's sentence was not prescribed after his conviction, but he was informed that
if
he did not conform to the
,
The Prison on the Continent
/
2
1 1
reporting to an officer of the court
and him— displaying good behavior while —he would be brought back the court and sentenced
his original crime, as well as for
any crime involved in the break of the conditions of his
conditions of probation imposed on
usually,
free
for
to
probation. In France, the penal population
most part owing late
to the
new
was reduced by
half
between 1887 and 1956,
for the
punitive alternatives of suspended sentence introduced in the
nineteenth century and of probation in the twentieth century. Early-nineteenth-century
reformers had believed that punishments must
fit
crimes and that the best
way
of punishing
penitentiary.
By accepting the suspended sentence
as a legitimate punishment, traditional reformers yielded
ground to the challengers who stressed
was the deprivation of liberty through the
need
the tive
for individualized
punishments and insisted on the corrupting rather than correc-
nature of the prison.
Suspended sentencing, following the Belgian and French
Luxembourg (1892), Portugal (1893), Norway (1894),
Italy
lead,
moved
across Europe to
(1904), Bulgaria (1904), Den-
mark (1905), Sweden (1906), Spain (1908), Hungary (1908), Greece (1911), the Netherlands (1915), and Finland (1918). Two German states, Saxony and Prussia, modified their penal legislation to include the suspended sentence as early as 1895. After World
suspended sentencing was adopted throughout Eastern Europe: the Russian ated Republic incorporated the measure into
its first
War
I,
Socialist Feder-
criminal code in 1919, followed over the
next thirteen years by Czechoslovakia, Romania, and Poland. In the course of the twentieth century,
Middle
suspended sentencing
and the
also spread to Asia, Latin America, Africa,
East.
Another noncustodial punishment, supervised parole, was basis with
first
used on an experimental
French juveniles in the 1830s. Parole involved the release of the prisoner on the
grounds of good behavior before the sentence expired; the release was conditional and supervised. Parole
1854
was enacted into law
for juveniles for the first time in
penal colonies,
to political prisoners transported to
community under supervised conditional release as
it
eration.
first
in
allowed to work in the
country to use parole, or
was also known, with adult criminal populations, beginning in 1861
followed by Saxony in 1862 and
an advanced system of
was the
conditions. Portugal
1850 and was extended
who were
Germany
classification in
in 1871. In
1873 Denmark passed
a
law creating
which prisoners progressed toward conditional
lib-
For the ten years preceding enactment of the law, a Danish prison had experimented
with conditional release and claimed a dramatic decline in the rate of recidivism. The International Penitentiary Congress held in
Stockholm in 1878 acknowledged
punishment, conditional release was "not contrary the judgment,
and presenting advantages
The parole system established
in
for society
and private
and
form of
harming
for the convicted."
France in 1885 was based on the concept of conditional
release joined to a strong private patronage network. ies
that, as a
to principles of penal law, not
The
state
made
grants to private societ-
institutions for the care of prisoners released after serving half their sentences.
Although only those convicted of misdemeanors were
eligible for this early
form of parole,
about twelve thousand prisoners were released to the care of private patrons between 1886
and 1895. Parole was approved throughout Europe 1910.
at the International
Prison Congress of
212
Patricia O'Brien
/
Patronage was an essential aspect of surveillance for released prisoners in certain Western European nations. Entrusting convicts to the oversight of private individuals, patronage societies,
and state-funded agencies was not
control wrongdoers; large.
Noncustodial punishments indicated the
and control beyond the prison and
cipline
sian system, local
confidence in
state's
in
horrified
extend dis-
meting out harsh punishment. Instead of exile, fines,
on physical punishments based on
Russia's reliance
community settings,
revenge, in
ability to
its
community. In the less-developed Rus-
into the
communities figured heavily
best to
ideas into the society at
being sent to prison, the majority of those convicted were sentenced to
commonly, whipping.
how
a return to traditional ideas about
was instead an expansion of modern penal
it
Western European reformers. In
and most
retribution
contrast,
and
commu-
nity-based punishments in the more industrialized states of continental Europe emphasized the beneficence of local involvement, although in fact constituting a highly standardized
centralized punitive
and
mechanism.
French Penal Colonies At the same time that punishments were ameliorated for first-time offenders and alternatives to the prison
were
punishments
identified,
for repeat offenders
and those found
guilty of
serious crimes became harsher in France. Deportation, for example, was the legal term re-
served for the punishment of political crimes in the
first
half of the nineteenth century.
The
sentence of deportation was replaced by the legal designation of transportation to a penal
colony with the reform of the French penal code in 1885. After that date, serious offenders
and hardened criminals were sentenced America and the South Reliance
on overseas penal colonies was
which sought the reintegration of offenders sion from
it.
However, relegation
—was reserved
colony
internment in French holdings in South
to overseas
Pacific.
for
—
odds with punishment philosophy generally,
at
into the
community
rather than their total exclu-
a lifetime sentence of preventive detention in a penal
hardened criminals,
whom the system had given up on reforming.
Rene Berenger, one of France's foremost penal reformers and
critics of the
1885 law, de-
scribed relegation to a penal colony as "the bloodless guillotine" because of the high mortality rate associated
punishment
with serving time there. The French,
at the
time
when
were undoubtedly influenced
who
decided to adopt
by the
in their decision
creation of a criminal class of recidivists.
Some
fear of
observers
felt
ment, which resulted in the deaths of thousands of men and
New
international penal congress in
of convicts as a form of
comment: "What
whom
of
hardened criminality and the
that the severity of the punish-
women
in the penal colonies of
1880 questioned the legitimacy
are the results?
yellow fever did not
kill, is
The sad legend of Guiana, from which nearly
have escaped.
.
the balance sheet.
Perils
.
.
.
.
.
in
1897 and was
finally
Transportation
expunged from the books
multiple offenders was also abolished.
for speall
those
without end, continual escapes,
only an expedient." Transportation of forced-labor convicts to
pended
of the transportation
punishment and singled out the French overseas experience
millions in expenditures, that is
new form
Caledonia and French Guiana, was tantamount to extermination.
An cial
this
was being dismantled,
the British convict system in Australia
is
New
in 1938. In
not a punishment.
It
Caledonia was sus-
1942 the relegation of
The Prison on the Continent
/
213
Although the benefits of colonization and economic development motivated some of the support for sending convicts to a colony, the fear of relentlessly rising recidivism rates
home
figured heavily in the French legislation of the 1880s. Half of
all
convicted criminals
were former offenders. The high number of recidivists may have been due to the state's increased ability to detect
egory
made
fication,
possible by
more accurate
Too at
in part,
however,
them. Recidivism was a culturally constructed cat-
statistical
knowledge and
a
new
technology of identi-
including anthropometric procedures and fingerprinting.
ill
French prison hospital are carried by cart the port city of
Rochelle, will
attempts to reform I.
its
at
penal and judicial systems between
Tsarist officials faced the
unique challenge of
a
known as samosud, which was regufew defendants who appeared before state courts,
strongly entrenched, extralegal system of popular justice lated
by the peasant community. Of the
only a small percentage of them went to prison. The vast majority of those convicted were exiled, fined, or
With
whipped.
the goal of remaking Russia in Europe's image, the tsarist
transportation to
penal colony
amounted
While Western European nations were enacting noncustodial punishments, Russia moved its
where they
tined jor French
this
and the outbreak of World War
to
La
board a ship des-
victs,
the 1860s
walk, a group
Guiana. For most con-
Russian Penal Reforms
a considerably slower pace in
to
oj inmates from a
government abolished
corporal punishment in the 1860s. Educated Russians believed that physical punishments
to
a death
214
/
Patricia O'Brien
offended personal dignity. The peasant reactions to these reforms reveal a disparity in sensiChained Russian conbilities:
many
victs in Siberia, circa
1885.
heavily
peasants apparently feared that fines and imprisonment would weigh
on them than corporal punishment.
ditures required to isolate prisoners effectively, Russian reformers
how
to
more
In addition, because of the massive state expen-
grew discouraged about
implement imprisonment. Even those interested in reforming the prisons
faced, in a
country as vast and diverse as Russia, an excessively expensive and complex task, which pressed them to rely on the punitive initiative of the local
community more than
in other
European countries. Exile continued as a
punishment
reformers repeatedly sought
its
in Russia
throughout the nineteenth century, although
abolition. Deportation with
hard labor remained the most
severe punishment into the twentieth century when, under Joseph Stalin,
it
assumed the
scope and severity of exceptional brutality.
Internationalization oj Reform
As we have
seen,
many of the
alternative
punishments introduced throughout Europe
in the
second half of the nineteenth century germinated in international congresses where govern-
ment
representatives, reformers,
and prison
specialists regularly
convened
to discuss the
prevention of crime and the reform of punishment. These meetings and the periodical ture that flourished
around them were important forums
guage, and concepts
among an
litera-
for the dissemination of ideas, lan-
increasingly international penological
community.
International societies dedicated to philanthropy, criminology, criminal anthropology,
penal law, and policy-related issues were created specifically to study reforms of particular facets of the penal process. In
hoped
that
exchanging information, experiences, and ideas, reformers
an international community could influence progressive changes in the correc-
tional systems of member nations.
The
international meetings drove changes as
hoped
reflected them. Italian criminal anthropologists, for example,
European support
at
an international congress held in
their influence over the
new
Rome
in
that
much as they
winning general
1885 would strengthen
Italian penal code then in preparation. International meetings
The Prison on the Continent
not only reviewed the state of the
field
but also provided a showcase for
new
/
215
social science
approaches, particularly for criminologists, psychiatrists, and those favoring biological explanations of criminality.
The influence of international meetings
is
nowhere more evident than
in the
widespread
recognition of the suspended sentence for first-time offenders as a legitimate alternative pun-
ishment
at the
turn of the century. In
ment was discussed in one
international
fact, virtually
every major transformation in punish-
forum or another before country-by-country adoption.
The prison work system and the training of guards by apprenticeship were
also widely dis-
cussed by reformers across national frontiers. In a typical procedure for reviewing a controversial issue, the Fifth International Penitentiary
question:
do prisoners have the
right to a salary?
merits of bonuses, fixed allotments, that prisoners
Congress held in Paris in 1895 posed the
The assembled representatives discussed
and room-and-board payments
to
the
inmates and concluded
could be rewarded for work performed but did not have any legal claim to a
salary. Similarly, the International Penitentiary
the issue of prisoners' accident insurance,
were sentenced to a loss of
Congress held in Budapest in 1905 discussed
which was defended on
the grounds that prisoners
not a loss of health. The content of the debate and the
liberty,
solutions endorsed differed from country to country, but these international forums defined the terms of the debate
and helped
to forge a
new
consciousness and
new sensibilities about
punishment.
Twentieth-Century Trends The period between 1914 and 1945 was ment, poised as
it
in
Punishment, 1914-1945 epoch
a liminal
was between nineteenth-century
in the history of
modern punish-
practices of incarceration
and twentieth-
century experiments in noncustodial punishment. Most penal innovations introduced before
World War
I
were maintained and extended
where reforms had been introduced
late
after
1918 from Western Europe
and inconclusively. Across Europe,
changes occurred, expanding the range of penal options. experiments
like the
incarceration.
Swedish furlough program and
On
of
a heavier reliance
on
fines in place of
On the other end of the spectrum was the increased use of prisons and camps,
were also testing alternatives In the Soviet Union, of the Bolsheviks,
who,
for criminal liability
little
to Russia,
number
one end of the spectrum were
which now housed newly defined deviant populations, sometimes
ommended
a
in the
same countries
that
to incarceration.
commitment to penal reform was part of the postrevolutionary agenda in 1918, abolished courts
from ten years
that the child not only
to seventeen.
and prisons
for children
and
raised the age
Commissions studying juvenile crime
rec-
be punished but also be educated and protected, although
coordination in child care and rehabilitation actually took place because of competing
jurisdictions
and agencies.
In the 1920s, the Soviet institutional
commune
and
for
Union experimented with penal forms,
cultural structures.
A Ukrainian teacher, Anton S.
young offenders convicted
the pressure of the peer
group
as a
for
as well as with other
Makarenko, established a
crimes of violence. Makarenko's aim was to use
means of moral
rehabilitation through education
216
/
Patricia O'Brien
and vocational
training.
Along with the emphasis on education, which resembled
Western European experiments
in the nineteenth century, there
was
certain
moral concern
also a
with productive Soviet citizenship. In spite of the best intentions of reformers, however,
changed
little
in penal practice.
Like Russia, other European countries attempted to reform their penal systems by rely-
ing on prewar advances in penology, criminology, and related disciplines. Western Europe-
ans differed, however, in the degree to which psychoanalysis influenced the individual treatment model. The psychoanalytic case history approach also threw into treatment of children. Out of
tive
formed League of Nations created linquency to include health, children.
its
a
committee whose concerns ranged beyond juvenile de-
political,
and moral
The League hoped to serve as
ments and private bodies
to
relief the correc-
concern with "international child welfare," the newly
"a
issues affecting adult populations as well as
world documentation center"
to
encourage govern-
exchange information and to coordinate welfare issues related
to
punishment.
Other countries expanded
their
implementation of noncustodial punishments. In the
1930s Sweden introduced the furlough system as a key component of institutional a regular basis, prisoners, selected according to type of
care.
On
crime and length of punishment, were
allowed periods of freedom following periods of imprisonment. Furloughs, normally fortyeight hours in duration,
were established
to
world and with family members and thereby, to free society.
On
maintain the prisoner's it
was hoped,
the whole, Swedish penal reformers
In the 1930s there
was
a
growing use of
fines
ties
with the outside
to facilitate the prisoner's return
deemed
the
program
cant deviation from earlier punitive models, in which deprivation of liberty
non
was
signifi-
the sine
qua
of effective punishment. Fines were sometimes criticized, however, as commercializing
the justice systems of the countries that used them. In countries with large
poverished citizens, including Poland, penalize the most
By
war
contrast,
years. In
common
new
and
Italy,
Bulgaria, fines
were
numbers
less likely to
of im-
be used to
offenses.
Germany and
Italy
dramatically enlarged their prison systems in the inter-
Germany, criminal law served
state to rid itself of its
as
an important tool
for the National Socialist
enemies. Crime rates skyrocketed as a consequence of the creation of
categories of criminal behavior covering everything from sexual practices to political
dissent.
The higher crime
and giving
it
more
rate
was used
in turn as a justification for enlarging the police force
authority.
In their classic study Punishment and Social Structure,
acknowledged
that the accession to
ated, the increasing severity of
the
a success.
throughout Europe. Fines were a
Weimar
the severe
period.
power
Georg Rusche and Otto Kirchheimer
of Adolf Hitler advanced, rather than itself
initi-
punishment, whose origins are more accurately identified
Concerned with
justifying
its
own
constitutional legitimacy
and
in
facing
economic challenges of hyperinflation and reparations payments, the Weimar
Republic relied on greater use of the death penalty, penal servitude, and long-term imprison-
ment. These rigid penal practices had their origins in the imperial period. Yet National Socialist
penal policies took severe punishments to
new extremes, singled out those deemed socially number of political offenses. Imprison-
unacceptable for special severity, and enlarged the
The Prison on the Continent
ment, originally intended as torture
a
more humane and
rehabilitative
and disfiguring punishments, was perverted into
/
217
punishment than physical
a tool of systematic repression
and
extermination. The achievements of nineteenth- and twentieth-century industry and tech-
nology were perverted to what one German
official called
"murder by assembly
The concentration camps of twentieth-century Germany and
Union
forced labor under
Macht
Frei"
(Work Makes You
leave
the purges that
no doubt
for
human
life.
network of penal
in the 1930s, coincided with the
accompanied
it.
Stalinist
In the Arctic to
camps
mine even
life
in forced labor citi-
penal policies. The gold mines of the eastern Soviet
of Kolyma,
where millions
total disregard for the
value of
are said to have died, prisoners
in winter.
After Stalin's death, several important changes in
forced labor
institutions in
and the creation of a productive
example, were death camps characterized by a
were expected
have
planned growth of the Soviet
Horrifying accounts of
that principles of rehabilitation
zenry were incompatible with
Union,
that could
Free).
of Soviet corrective labor camps, a vast
and Soviet Asia begun
economy and camps
and extermination,
Soviet
a nineteenth-century penal reformer explaining the liberating value of labor:
The creation Siberia
work camps of the
which millions suffered and died were masked by a slogan
camps was apparently reduced.
punishment took
place.
the watch of Nazi guards. As tools of
systematic repression
line."
also facilitated the ruthless exploitation of convict labor. Ironically, the systems of
been devised by "Arbeit
the
Jewish laborers under
The number of
In limited cases, authorities began to rely
on
Nazi concentration
camps perverted
the
concept oj imprison-
ment
as a
humane
al-
ternative to physical
punishment.
218
Patricia O'Brien
/
community. Within
social collectives for supervision of released offenders returned to the
prison, to the
work teams,
quotas,
and group
responsibility in the prison workplace corresponded
behavior and values of the broader society.
work system
effectiveness of the Soviet
in
An
commented on
observer in 1965
measuring up
the
to standards of outside production.
Thus, the development of European penal systems took two widely divergent paths in the
first
half of the twentieth century.
some countries countries
saw
in
The
desire to rehabilitate
and
imprisonment an opportunity
Post-World War The horrors of World War
II,
for
unprecedented abuse and exploitation.
Penal Reforms, 1945-1965
II
the imprisonment
and extermination of millions
and the displacement and expulsion of millions more
tion camps,
world with a picture of
reintegrate prisoners led
on imprisonment and mQre on noncustodial punishments. Other
to rely less
collective
punishment
that
was
after the
brutal, unjust,
in concentra-
war provided
the
and inhumane. In
reaction to the events of 1940-45, postwar penal reformers devoted unprecedented attention to the legal rights of prisoners.
lessons from the
war
of punishment run
Those
who
took up the cause in 1945 had two significant
world had just witnessed the worst perversion
fresh in their minds: the
amok,
as eyewitness accounts
and photographs chronicled the horrifying
genocide of concentration camps; and an extranational juridical body
recognized the existence of the legitimacy
and the need
evil
and morality of the
right to punish, the
whole array of penal sanctions. With the challenge of fair
enforced
punish
to
new
a
fervor
it.
Whereas
Nuremberg had
the latter affirmed
former demanded reevaluation of the
and commitment, Europeans took up
and humane punishment and the need
to
reform the institutions that
it.
France was
among the
first
to
change
its
national penal system. In
May
mission for the Reform of French Penitentiaries explicitly endorsed the
and betterment of prisoners through general and professional logical,
at
and
social services
1945, the
humane
Com-
treatment
instruction. Medical, psycho-
were available in every penitentiary, and prison personnel were
required to receive specialized, technical training. In the international arena, the United Nations
(UN) was
in the
vanguard of attempts
at
enlightened reform of criminal justice systems throughout the world. Just as the League of
Nations had done in the interwar years, the for fair
and humane treatment of
UN worked to establish international standards
prisoners, to undertake research of penal issues,
1948 the
compile accurate statistical information at the international level. In
and the treatment of
section dedicated to the prevention of crime
which observers believed opened
the standards for fair
and
for creating
and
just treatment
more "open" penal and
Convention on the Protection of
a
new
to
Treatment of
era in penal corrections: the "Rules" set
and made recommendations
for training
personnel
correctional institutions. In addition, the
European
Human
Rights and Basic Freedoms, endorsed in
November 4, 1950, was influential throughout Europe to everyone, including prisoners. Prisoners' rights
rope,
for the
and
created a
The Geneva
offenders.
Congress of the United Nations, held in 1955, passed "Minimum Rules Prisoners,"
UN
in
its
Rome on
attempt to guarantee basic rights
were also defined by the Council of Eu-
which established the European Committee on Crime Problems
in 1957.
The Prison on the Continent
219
/
The Social Defense Movement The treatment concept, a the 1950s
familiar idea in
new
garb,
and 1960s. One of its manifestations, the
dominated international discussions
postwar years by the eminent French jurist Marc Ancel, had
in the
in
movement, spearheaded
Social Defense
its
roots in the late-nine-
teenth-century reform movements, which had taken their inspiration from discoveries in biology, medicine, society
tence
and the social sciences. Postwar
would be protected
on
Social Defense reformers
emphasized
that
best through the treatment of the offender, not through the insis-
his or her moral responsibility
under the law.
Much of the movement s
fervor
came
from the prewar penal reforms of the 1930s throughout Europe and from the renewed post-
war commitment
to
decency and humanity in punishment.
Although the Social Defense movement versity
and
its
the individual offender as the best
by
to define
because of
way
it
doctrinal di-
its
advocated treatment of
of protecting society. Treatment
drew on the array of
postwar welfare system, from psychiatric counseling to job training to
social services in the
assistance
is difficult
various splinter groups and factions, in general terms
social workers. Social
Defense had a truly international dimension with
its
own
group founded under Ancel's direction in 1947. The International Society of Social Defense
hoped
that
through social and economic change and the application of
scientific
treatment
measures to the criminal, the role of the prison would be greatly reduced. In spite of attempts to internationalize solutions,
however, particular national concerns and cultural assumptions
predominated in the process of reforming correctional systems. The indeterminate sentence, an open-ended sentencing practice intended to calibrate the length of sentence to the prisoner's
performance in the institution and his or her
agreement in international reform Defense. For
some
fitness for release, is a
good example of lack of
about the value of particular punishments
for Social
followers, the indeterminate sentence practiced in the United States since
1900 was viewed as enhancing as
circles
rehabilitative possibilities,
whereas European countries such
France saw indeterminacy as a cruel and unusual punishment.
Many
critics
warned
that the Social Defense
approach
to deviance
would
result in
an attenuation of the authority of the courts and an emptying out of prisons because
it
both
would
break the link between crime and imprisonment and displace fixed penalties. Opponents of the
movement
of judges
feared that sociologists, criminologists,
and place
and
psychiatrists
would usurp
the role
their sciences over the rule of law. Yet in spite of often bitter disagree-
ments among both followers and detractors of the movement, Social Defense stood as a marker of the general postwar
emphasis on individual treatment and
social protection.
The Open Prison and Autonomy within the Walls Centralized administrative structures continued to be responsible for tional
much
work conducted throughout Europe after World War II and continued
routinized regimes in
all
prisons.
The French Fourth Republic,
for
of the correc-
to
impose
example, renewed
dorsement of the deprivation of liberty as a principal form of punishment reforming convicted criminals and returning them to free society, even as
for the
rigid,
its
en-
purposes of
critics of the
prison
system agitated for more individualized treatment. But now, in addition to the traditional, closed prisons, which continued to operate ter
1945, a
new breed
af-
of penal institutions took their place in the range of punishments.
220
Patricia O'Brien
/
In this 1948 photograph oj the town jail in
Claras, Switzer-
land, the caretaker
holds a conversation
with an inmate while his
dinner
is
prepared.
Postwar reforms led
to
a general relaxation oj punishment in pris-
ons throughout
much
oj northern Europe.
Communal -based sentencing,
that
is,
punishment taken out
into the
community and beyond
prison walls, was the logical extension of a treatment-based model of punishment. Several
European countries developed "prisons without tions for those offenders threat
if
who
they did. Simultaneously, there was a
behind the walls of closed, secure larger
measure of autonomy than
which the
institu-
presented no serious looser regimes
prisoner would be allowed
a
in the traditional prison. that allowing prisoners a certain degree of
decision within the institution and allowing
the outside world constituted the best
means
more frequent
freedom of
interaction with
of returning offenders to their families and
communities as productive citizens. These prisons of correctional treatment.
who
movement toward establishing
institutions, in
Most European nations recognized
movement and
and open, unfenced
walls": farms
could be trusted not to escape and
relied
on behavioral and therapeutic models
The "treatment ideology" superseded
the security, prevention,
and
deterrence rhetoric of punishment, although implementation varied widely from country to country. These developments dovetailed with a recognition in the 1960s that the idea of
confinement was cal sociology.
itself
deviant, a perception confirmed
by the normalization theories of radi-
The Prison on the Continent
Leaves, vacations,
and the general relaxation of punishment
/
221
Denmark and Sweden
in
resulted in Europe's most lenient prisons. Scandinavia and the Netherlands offered extensive
support to the imprisoned and the recently released by implementing a whole array of day
and weekend
work
leaves,
The Netherlands was
release programs,
home
furloughs, and job-hunting furloughs.
vanguard of treatment- and community-based punishments.
in the
There, the Prison Act, passed in 1953, decreed two important organizing principles for post-
war Dutch
prisons:
first,
that prisoners be involved in
greater emphasis be placed
on the
den too endorsed the move beyond prison should be as
little
group interactions; and second, that
prisoner's preparation for the return to free society. walls.
The
official
Swedish policy was
facilities.
The small size and homo-
geneity of the Swedish national community, reformers acknowledged,
On
away from
a firm
commitment by
made such
a
system
open prisons and more
the whole, then, those countries that experimented with
autonomous prison populations had made that led
that prisons
used and as painless as possible. Sweden was especially committed to penal
policy-making by the lay public and to community-based
viable.
a
Swe-
the early 1960s to a road
forms of incarceration and toward the decline of the prison.
traditional
Treatment as Punishment: The Decline of the Prison Postwar reforms stressed the need for the
state to tailor
victed criminal, to his or her personality, attitude, tions
to the individual con-
to change. Custodial sanc-
and deprivation of liberty declined dramatically as punishments of first
probation, suspended sentence, and fines fenders.
Above
all,
state agencies, social
uniformed and In 1965,
resort,
became more common sentences
and
parole,
for first-time of-
workers, and private patronage systems sought indi-
vidual treatment solutions rather than relying
to
punishment
and willingness
on incarceration
to transform prisoners into a
faceless population.
Sweden enacted
a
new criminal code emphasizing noninstitutional alternatives
punishment. The code endorsed the goal of prevention and eliminated prevailing ideas of
retribution. Conditional sentences
and probation became routine
common punishment
Fines were the most
for over three
imposed on 95 percent of offenders. Sweden was more advanced sanctions but was nevertheless typical of years following
World War
many
Italy.
its
rejection of custodial
II.
In 1965, only Spain, Portugal,
European models of probation: toring. Active treatment
in
continental European nations in the twenty
The popularity of probation grew dramatically and
for first-time offenders.
hundred prohibitions and were
aimed
in Scandinavia, the Netherlands, France,
and Eastern Europe
resisted the
active, intense surveillance,
at reintegration into the
two dominant Western
and the more lenient moni-
community
or stressed intervention
and coercion over the offender's behavior by using probation as an
alternative to custody.
Probation caused the dramatic decline in the already small numbers of women in prison. The
number January
of 1,
women
serving long-term sentences in France, for example, was 5,231 on
1946; by January
The Netherlands
1,
offers the
1980, the number, after a steady decline, stood
most striking example of the decline
populations in the two decades following World
100,000 of the population
fell
at
1,121.
in the size of sentenced
War II. The number sentenced to prison per
from 66 in 1950 to 25 in 1965 and continued
to decline to the
lowest rate in Europe. The Dutch state invested heavily in the correctional system in terms of
222
Patricia O'Brien
/
personnel, institutional construction, and intensity of treatment efforts. The shrinking prison
population reflected shorter prison sentences, with an average prison term of one and onehalf months.
By the same token, Sweden's use of short sentences
also explains the contraction in
prison populations in the two postwar decades. By 1970 only one-tenth of
all
its
prisoners re-
ceived sentences of one year or longer. Over two-thirds received sentences of less than four
months. Prisons were modified and prisoners. part of the
diversified, so that
same progressive reform movement. In
periods of freedom was extended to
summer
became
all
open prison policy as
to the
the 1970s, prisoners' exposure to limited
vacations with
families in specially surveilled vacation dwellings. families
open prisons held one-third of
The emphasis on treatment as punishment was linked
The
members
of their immediate
possibility of actually living with their
available to those prisoners serving long sentences. Visitor hotels near cer-
tain designated prisons permitted conjugal
In the Netherlands, religious
probationary care and helped to
and family
visits
on weekends.
and philanthropic groups continued
make
it
common to judicial
to
be responsible for
procedures. Private,
communal
involvement in corrections existed as well in Norway and Finland, where the governments subsidized private societies for probationary
and
activities,
in
Sweden, where probation was
conducted by supervised volunteers. Social workers in the Netherlands and Sweden assumed
growing responsibility
combined program
for professional
of volunteer aides
private groups in the shift to
probationary
and trained
activities;
both countries relied on
social workers.
The
communally based corrections should not be underestimated:
reminiscent of the involvement of bourgeois philanthropists a century teers
in a
embraced the idea of a
of
citizenry involved in the
earlier,
all
system by relying on professionally trained probation
convicts
modern volun-
punishment and correction of criminals
world where prisons no longer worked. By contrast, West Germany
tional
a
participation of these
built
its
new correc-
officers to supervise
who would otherwise serve sentences of nine months
or
less,
almost half
thus also achiev-
ing a low rate of incarceration.
Prisons and Society In spite of
common
trends,
European penal systems to
one must
in the last
in the
from
their keepers.
diversity that characterized
quarter of the twentieth century.
measure the effectiveness of punishment
ers receive
end remark on the
is
to calculate the care
Here there appeared
to
be no
Among
the
and attention
common
pattern.
many ways that prison-
The
ratio of
prison personnel to inmates varied widely throughout Europe in the two decades following
World War ratio,
II.
The Netherlands, heavily committed
to a treatment
model, had the lowest
with 3,100 correctional personnel responsible for 4,500 prisoners in 1959. Sweden,
with the same prison population, had half as prisoners. sible for
many
prison employees to supervise and treat
West Germany lagged considerably behind with 3,300 prison personnel respon-
19,000 prisoners. However, West Germany built
its
new corrections system by rely-
ing on professionally trained probation officers to supervise almost half of all convicts serving
sentences of nine months or Regardless of
and guards
how
less.
effectiveness
is
measured and regardless of the number of prisoners
in a given institution, the rhetoric that
surrounded penal reform stressed
less
The Prison on the Continent
/
223
Guards check on inmates of a
the
maximum-
security prison in
France, circa 1960.
punishment rather than more. Scandinavian countries call for
in the
postwar period went so
far as to
the total abolition of the prison. These countries experienced a decline in prison
populations over the long term. As a consequence of the Northern Punishment Criminal Act of 1963,
Denmark, Finland,
tional system,
Iceland,
Norway, and Sweden agreed
which had already been considerably reduced
the exigencies of confinement included measures such as
to
in size.
open up
their correc-
The new
relaxation of
weekend and vacation passes and
increased availability of leaves for prisoners. Socialist countries, in contrast to the rest of
the single tries
most important sanction
Europe, maintained the prison sentence as
in the correctional repertoire. Prisons in socialist
coun-
continued to be oriented toward "resocialization" of the offender through longer sen-
tences, job training, education,
and
disciplinary techniques.
Hungary was closest to the Western
European model and was the exception among Eastern bloc nations because of its willingness to use conditional release as a
means
of facilitating the prisoner's social reentry into free
society.
Dramatically different from the prison trends of most of continental Europe and closer to the
American experience was the steady growth of the prison systems
The number of prisoners clined rapidly in the
The
in Britain
open prison countries of the Netherlands and Scandinavia.
different states and, as the reformer
end
reflected the political systems of the
Leon Faucher said over a century earlier, "the
A common commitment to
rights inspired
in England.
doubled between 1950 and 1980 while the number de-
diversity in state prison systems in the
of citizens.
much
by the legacy of World
social state"
reform prevailed. By 1965 the concern for prisoners'
War II had produced penal innovations that took hold
224
in
Patricia O'Brien
/
much of Western Europe.
freedoms to maintain
In
Denmark and Sweden,
prisoners were granted extensive
also relied
new
with families and communities, for the purpose of easing the even-
from prison. Even those countries that continued
tual release
onment
ties
to
endorse traditional impris-
more and more on community-based intermediate punishments such
suspended sentence, parole, and probation. The shared values and moral consensus
emerged
war allowed
after the
punishment process
the
to
move
into the society at large.
Monitoring and surveillance, which formerly required prison walls, could be achieved in society
on
as
that
free
a scale never before possible.
In general, however, despite reforms of the penal codes of
Western European nations
through the introduction of short sentences or noncustodial sentences aimed
at
keeping
people out of prison, penal populations in Western Europe, viewed over the long term, began to
expand again
after
1955. Penal specialists viewed the increase in
life
sentences and sen-
tences longer than five years as troubling and not easily explained. Although noncustodial
punishments became increasingly prevalent throughout Europe tions continued to
grow even
in countries, like France,
ments. Punishment has always been expensive. Penal practices,
overcrowding or the policy of wait-listing those sentenced available, required public toleration
some
as
community
1950, prison popula-
to noncustodial arrange-
like collective
pardons due
to prison until space
to
becomes
not approval, neither of which was easily achieved in
parts of Europe. Critics also questioned
was
ally
if
after
committed
how
progressive noncustodial sentencing re-
corrections and nonsegregative techniques
made
state control
more
pervasive.
Rehabilitation its
and control have been the twin concerns of the modern penal system from
beginnings. In the twentieth century, emphasis on treatment complemented but did not
vanquish the
earlier reformers'
preoccupation with discipline and control. Yet the ideal prison
so ardently sought by reformers in the early nineteenth century, the prison in which prisoners
were made into better
citizens,
seemed
as far
from
reality in
1965
as
it
had
in 1865.
Bibliographic Note Since the 1960s the social science literature on continental European prisons has expanded dramatically, with an emphasis
on sociology, criminology, and penology. The appearance
Foucault's Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan Sheridan
Books, 1977), marked a sea change in the historical history of the prison
was evident
in the
punishment. These studies include
1980s
my own book,
literature.
(New
of Michel
York: Pantheon
The impact of Foucault's work on
in studies of the social
and
the
cultural history of
The Promise of Punishment: Prisons
in
Nineteenth-
Century France (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1982), as well as the following: Michelle Perrot, ed., L'lmpossihle prison: Recherches sur
Jacques
Guy
Petit,
La
le
systeme penitentiaire au J9eseide (Paris: Seuil, 1980);
Prison, le bagne et Vhistoire (Geneva: Librairie des Meridiens,
Peines obscures (Paris: Fayard, 1990);
and Robert Roth,
Pratiques penitentiaires
1984) and Ces
et theorie sociale;
I'Exemple de la prison de Geneve, 1825-1862 (Geneva: Droz, 1981).
The Structure
classic Marxist
(New
study by Georg Rusche and Otto Kirchheimer, Punishment and Social
York: Russell and Russell, 1939), looks
at the
prison in relation to commercial
capitalism across Europe, including Italy, Poland, Belgium, Sweden, and Germany. Dario Melossi
and Massimo
Pavarini, The Prison
and
the Factory: Origins oj the Penitentiary System, trans. Glynis
— The Prison on the Continent
Cousin (Totowa, strict
N.J.:
/
225
Barnes and Noble Books, 1981), follows Rusche and Kirchheimer in their
Marxist analysis by applying it to the Italian experience. Michael Ignatieff, "State, Civil Society,
and Total
Institutions:
A
Critique of Recent Social Histories of Punishment," Crime and Justice:
Annual Review oj Research 3 (1981): 153-92, provocatively critiques the
modern prison including Revolution,
of the
his
own work, A Just Measure
new
An
historiography of the
oj Pain: The Penitentiary in the Industrial
1750-1850 (New York: Pantheon Books, 1978),
that of
David Rothman on the history
American prison, and the work of Michel Foucault.
Gordon Wright, Between the Guillotine and Liberty: Two Centuries of the Crime Problem in France (New York: Oxford University Press, 1983), Robert Badinter, La Prison republicaine (Paris: Fayard, 1992), and John A. Davis, Conflict and Control: Law and Order in Nineteenth-Century Italy (Basingstoke, England: Macmillan Education, 1988), root the prison very of national communities. a
much
in the specific political realities
Although some recent works, including Foucault's, have implications
for
comparative analysis of the prison across national borders, virtually no historical studies have
undertaken
this task.
Penal reformers, however, constituted and continue to constitute an
community
international professional
that generates comparative data: national commissions,
conventions, international congresses, reports by the League of Nations, the United Nations, and the
European Community are important sources for information on continental European prisons in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Studies by
Norman Johnson on prison architecture, by Harold K. Becker and Einar O. Hjellemo
on the Netherlands, by Robert
Gellately
nineteenth-century classic by
on Germany, by
Raymond
Saleilles
Ulla Bondeson on Sweden, and the lateon individualization of punishment
L'lndividualisation de la peine: Etude de la criminalite sociale,
published in English as The Individualiza-
tion
ojPunishment, trans. Rachel Szoldjastrow (Montclair, N.J. Patterson Smith, 1968)
the
works
:
Defense
that have
been useful
in
developing this chapter. Marc Ancel's
movement he founded, on suspended
sentencing, and
provide an important perspective on post-World
Garland
—Punishment and
Welfare:
and Punishment and Modern 1990)
— examine
penal practices.
War
II
—
are
many books on
on European penal
conditions.
Two
legal
studies
among
the Social
systems
by David
A History oj Penal Strategies (Aldershot, England: Gower, 1985) A Study in Social Theory (Chicago: University of Chicago Press,
Society:
the relationship between culture, especially that of the
modern welfare
state,
and
CHAPTER EIGHT
The Contemporary Prison 1965-Present
Norval Morris
y the mid-1990s, one and three-quarter million persons were held in prison or jail in
more than one
the United States;
prison. But there
is
million,
an astonishing diversity
are held. Prisons range in security
from double-barred
rooms
walled, electronically monitored perimeters to
unfenced
fields.
They range
prived isolation to
in pain
work camps
one hundred thousand were in
to the institutions in
in
which they within high
steel cages
unlocked buildings in
from windowless rooms of close-confined, sensory-de-
of no physical adversity whatsoever. There are "open prisons"
indistinguishable from farms and "prisoners"
who spend
their days
working unescorted and
unsupervised in the community; there are "weekend prisons" and "day prisons"; there are "coeducational prisons"; and there are prisons of grindingly dull routine interrupted by occasional flashes of violence
where the only
and
brutality.
out-of-cell exercise
there are prisons of excessively are
and there
There are prisons with tennis courts and prisons
an hour of pacing an outdoor cage three times a week;
crowded congregation and prisons of
community-based prerelease
hostels;
is
are "prisoners"
utter isolation. There
centers, called "prisons," indistinguishable
doing time in their
own homes, which
from workers' purpose are
for this
legally classified as prisons. It
would be an error to assume
that
most of these late-twentieth-century mutations of the
prison tend toward leniency and comfort. The most
common
prisons proximate to the big cities of America; they have
punctuated by bursts of ditional,
fear
and
violence.
Nor
is
prisons are the overcrowded
become
places of deadening routine
there a clear trend in either direction: tra-
massive prisons and modern, smaller prisons both proliferate.
Yet within this diversity, the typical prison in the United States has a distinguishable pattern of daily
life.
grimly gray routine life is
For the great bulk of prisoners,
—always
the same, unless there
is
a "lockdown."
same: twenty-four hours per day in the wise there
is
the
same
routine, the
that
deadening sameness.
would miss the inner
reality.
So
I
cell,
And during
It is
—but
a
lockdown
broken only by
same grinding
Always the same, always the same
know
this consists of a relentlessly
the same, never a change unless for the worse.
a
it is
unchanging,
Day
in,
day out,
even more of the
once-weekly shower. Other-
A
nineteen-year-old
inmate of Stateville Correctional Center,
a prison nearjoliet, Illinois.
this
then, unless
you have been
not easy to portray
have used the
life
This photo-
graph and the others
repetition. a prisoner,
in prison;
you don't
bland description
literary device of a diary of
one day and one
in
chapter were taken
at Stateville 's
maxi-
mum-security section by Lloyd DeGrane during the early
1
990s.
228
Norval Morris
/
night in the
of a typical prisoner in a typical prison adjacent to a typical industrial city.
life
This "diary of prisoner #12345" was constructed as follows. At kept a detailed diary for one day.
House, Cell 304,
prison
then shared the result with
life. I
warden of Stateville and several senior correctional most of their suggestions pattern and,
The
for revision.
believe, the truth are Sam's.
I
have retained
where Sam
Stateville Prison,
Chicago, though prisoners
held,
is
come
Sam wrote is
all
from what
I
and elsewhere. I adopted
errors remains mine; but the
commentary around
a
it
Gutierrez and with the
his diary,
and
I
diary.
the maximum-security prison in effect serving
there from
all
over
was written
security prison; at the time the "diary"
Sam
officials in Illinois
responsibility for
my composite
this structure in
two prisoners
request,
with his permission, rewrote
Stateville Prison, Illinois, and,
knew from observing
my
chose the one prepared by Simon "Sam" Gutierrez, of F
I
it
Illinois. It is a
paradigm maximum-
housed some twenty-one hundred
pris-
oners in a complex of buildings covering sixty-four acres, surrounded by a high and
gun-manned
wall.
Given the substantial differences in types of imprisonment in
contemporary Western world, States.
And
since
prisons for
jails,
different countries of the
chapter will concentrate on imprisonment in the United
this
women, and
institutions for juvenile offenders are dealt
with elsewhere in this book, they are excluded here. Hence the typical prisoner
is
an adult
male, and the pronouns him and he are used throughout.
One Day You asked me or bad
—
to
keep a diary for one day. You told
just to tellyou exactly
done anything like as
the Life of #12345
in
this before. It is
not to to
tell
you
that things
me through one day.
not easy to describe a day oj monotony
were good have never
I
and boredom other than
monotonous and boring. Before
I
on the diary,
start
gang
violence, brutal guards, will
let
me
you have to be constantly careful of impending danger
is
like
the dull
me
to
anger,
is
—though
to
move around people
A sense
rather than
and reasonable sense you can move safely enough. For me, is
not the
life, its
major problem; the major problem
idleness
inconsequential other than
the governing reality of is
my
and boredom,
that grinds
is
monotony.
me down. Nothing
when you will be free and how to make time pass
life
in prison.
diary for yesterday:
5:30
was awakened by
the
wake-up
banging on the bars of the
me
and movies
But boredom, time-slowing boredom, interrupted by occasional bursts of fear and
So, here
wakes
and fearsome adventures, you
the press, television,
and "shanks " (prison-made knives)
always with you; you must be careful
sameness of prison is
what
avoid situations or behavior that might lead to violence.
in prison, violence
matters; everything until then.
expect the usual prison tale of constant
really nothing like
life is
against or through them, but with care
It is
this: if you
not a daily round of threats, fights, plots,
It is
and many
say
rapes, daily escape efforts, turmoil,
be deeply disappointed. Prison
suggest.
I
me I was
what I did and what happened
cell
every morning.
careful not to think about
I
call for the
a.m.:
kitchen
detail.
I
am not on that detail, but the who is on the kitchen detail,
near me, to awaken a prisoner
knew
I
could doze for the next half hour, half awake but
where I was.
1
stirring in the bunk beneath mine, new day with a loud and odorous fart.
heard Tyrone
but today he did not, as he often does, celebrate the
— The Contemporary Prison
6:00 The keys were roundhouse It
has four
all
rattled across the bars of
(the cell house,
tiers of cells
the same;
most of them are
As F House came
and so
it
you
around
would go on
to
told
its
our
me,
is
and F House came
a panopticon, designed
to
life.
—
the noise began
F House
Stateville's
is
the
by Jeremy Bentham).
perimeter, each tier having sixty-two
cells.
The
cells are
been some double
radios, TVs, shouting
night, with an occasional
till
229
a.m.:
cells,
single cells, but recently there has
life,
/
from
scream of rage or
fear
Tyrone and
1
did our best to keep out of each other's
our cell while we used our
on our
steel
bunks.
We
toilet
cell to cell
through the
change our outer clothes sometimes twice a week, sometimes
or a friend in the laundry, you can
do
better than this.
a blue shirt or a white T-shirt; in winter
those heavy, lined, bluejackets.
Reebok and so on down the
my
bunk. Tyrone and
shows,
real
I
we wear
they cost a
lot,
listened to
the sense that
we
are
still
I
you have money, or influence, dress in
summer
is
blue jeans
blue jeans, a blue shirt, and one of
agree about what
form opinions;
it
part of the world.
but in this place they are worth
it.
my radio, which is tied to the steel support we
people talking about real issues.
discussed, pro and con;
If
Our
Our sartorial flourish is our sneakers, with Nike outranking
line;
As we washed and dressed, we of
the space of nine feet by
and washed and dressed and pulled up the blankets
once a week, and our socks and underwear every other day.
and
way in
like to listen to in the
My mind
mornings
—
talk
dives into whatever issues are
represents sanity for me. It is
It
often hard to hear, such
helps to give is
block in the United States,
is
modeled after
the panopticon de-
celling.
night.
six in
F House,
the last circular cell-
me
the noise from
signed by Jeremy
Bentham
in the late
eighteenth century.
230
/
Norval Morris
competing radios and TVs
on
stations turned
neighboring
in
And
full blast.
guards from prisoners trying to get their cell doors opened tell
me
used
that they get
to
Tyrone doesn't seem
it;
6:30 F House began
back of the
Most
in the central tower.
guys get up
for breakfast
remembers
on and
cell,
to
on and
off,
come
and there were no
file
holding
trays
by, or
is
1
was glad
I
had put on
huge round mess
prisoners, are gone forever.
all
in line.
The food
served onto our plates by the kitchen
here, three times a day, to over
twelve-day repeating menu.
suppose
I
usually not many when most everybody
I
It
to the
mess
my jacket;
it
was cold
hall
—
Food
for
served cafeteria-style.
bowls
for
it
to
get
for this purpose.
be dull and I
do.
to
together and expect this to be
welcome
a white
else is
aggravating.
it is
comes
guy joining
food
The meals
he
is
mess
hall
also older
the
sit at
same
Breakfast in the
—and
it is.
are not light
their tables.
for
all
I
me.
serve meals
is
I
million meals a
But guys mostly
on carbohydrates. usually
manage
to
did this today.
sit;
metal tables with six metal
there are "regulars"
of course, the blacks
The prison
—
may be
sensible,
I
to the seating area,
known. And,
in the yard.
table,
and
mess hall
the tunnel
and
and more
to
be careful where you
Hispanic, but this causes no great problem in the
They
more than two
to
lifeless
handed
your food you walk back
You have
we
Knives and forks and spoons are
detail.
much, but
know
I
two of them with whatever
you
We pick
us to pick up, as
twenty or thirty minutes, before the food
calculate that this
tend to put on weight in prison;
After
in the tunnel.
two thousand prisoners each meal, 365 times a year, on a
should expect
seats fixed to them.
There was
in the tunnel,
the dangerous days of one single
is
The cartons of milk cannot be spoiled by our prisoner cooks, and collect
hall.
was semi-dark
making weapons, though they are sometimes smuggled
and narrowed and sharpened
service line opens, not that this matters
I
my
at this time;
either waiting in
is
We are often kept waiting, sometimes
year.
old.
mess hall that our galleries use was opened. Our section
section of the
and wait
to the cells
must be getting
I
the flickering light being
walk through the tunnel
to
of plastic, not particularly useful for
back
tower
which he does from the controls
ones always seem to be there.
a segment, pie-shaped, of the
up our
to the
for breakfast.
lights.
The door to the
off,
cell,
F House remain locked
cells in
at the front; the fat
hall,
mind;
to
except on "Donut and Sweet Rolls" days,
We lined up in rough lines,
mess
and
the noise never ceases. Others
a.m.:
request to the tower guard to open the door to this
is
—
tunnel for chow. "3 turned off the radio and flipped the
galleries: in the
light switch at the
pushing
and country music
be unlocked, with the loudspeaker from the tower guards bellowing,
to
"Three and four
the rock
cells, particularly
there are the shouts from cell to cell
who
sit
and Hispanics don't
more than 90 percent black and
the whites tend to congregate with one another
a bit of an exception here;
and neither of us belongs
Tyrone
to a gang.
We
is
black, but
occasionally
but mostly not. other meals take about fifteen minutes to eat, but often
about forty-five minutes
and up the three
of cereal for snacking.
after
flights of stairs to
house was
we
are held
our arrival. Today I walked back through
my cell, carrying a carton of milk and a box not fully awake; the noise level was not
The
cell
cell
door. Tyrone was sitting on the toilet seat, which
still
too bad.
7:30 I
stood in front of
my
a.m.:
covered with a shaped piece of three-ply and a cloth.
smoking. The
cell
He was
we have
reading a magazine and
smelled of us and of cigarette smoke. The tower guard saw
me and
The Contemporary Prison
my cell door;
231
/
pound on the bars to attract his attention. I put the we have fashioned from a small towel, tied to the cell bars, to hold some of our things. They are in danger of theft by anyone passing by the cell, and this happens, but not often enough to worry about, and I never put anything there I am not willing to lose. Of course, if I know who took something, particularly if others know that I know, I have to do something about it, and the ensuing unlocked
didn't have to
I
carton of milk in a hammock-like contraption
fight
may
well put either or both of us in the hole; but
I
am known
be a determined
to
person, and
my things are
All the cells
throughout the prison, ours included, were locked for "Morning Count."
rarely interfered with.
8:05
down on my bunk and
a.m.: I
Our cell is #304. The guard came by and looked into our cell, making a mark on a pad he was carrying, and walked on. You could 305," telling those inside to look up hear him shout in front of each cell, "302, 303, and be recognized as alive and not dummies. He didn't call out in front of our cell; he saw and knew us; he didn't have to speak to us, and we didn't have to reply. Our cell is some material different from some of the others in that we have not put up a "curtain" across the bars to achieve some privacy. We prefer to leave the cell open; it's too much trouble putting the curtain up and taking it down. These curtains are not allowed, but laid
turned the radio on.
.
.
.
—
—
they are tolerated
— there
much
is
like this in Stateville. Disciplinary "tickets" are
occasionally written but not routinely.
The count, usually four times
morning count and the the prison, since
all
last
a
day but sometimes more,
count around
is
a slow process.
prisoners are then locked in their cells and the count
The other counts present more reported from every
difficulty.
Nothing goes on
house and from everywhere
cell
The
early
1:30 p.m. do not interfere with the routine of
1
is
easier to take.
in the prison until the count
that prisoners are
supposed
is
to be,
nothing until the numbers reported reconcile exactly with the numbers that are supposed to be there.
can go on for a long time.
It
It is
8:30
the central ritual of prison
life.
a.m.:
There was the sound of a factory whistle, which meant, "The count has checked."
A bell
rang loudly in F House, followed by the loudspeaker blaring, "School, barbershop, library ... get
ready for work." The cell-opening and door-banging began in earnest, and prisoners
poured out of showers
—
it
on
cells. It is
cattle;
light
the bars.
another
switch until our
The day
ritual, a ritual of
to collect or to
hand
"Yard, yard, get ready for F the tailor shop, I
where he
tells
detail,
and probably
a
telephones, which are often
chaos.
I
The work
going to the
I
dislike
joined the crowd pouring from the
details
were rounded up
over, before he can leave for his
House yard
me he I
.
.
.
like straying
has found a peaceful job.
was glad
it
was
a fine, cool
to see that
Some
He
fall
left
left for
with the "Industry"
day, and get a workout,
only twenty or so prisoners joined the
few of those were not interested in exercise but rather in the
more
available in the yard than in
diamond, with other areas of grass and of packed a fence.
work assignment.
yard in the tunnel, yard." Tyrone
The yard is of playing-field size and of rounded,
and
details, others
door was opened; he knows
cell
began.
officially
decided to go to the yard, since
bench-pressing some weights. yard
work
each prisoner always has something to do, some message urgently to deliver,
something
detail.
the school or
the usual rush to "nowhere."
Tyrone flipped the the banging
some joining
their cells,
was
sparse outdoor
F House.
triangular shape, with a earth,
gym equipment
is
surrounded by in
a
rough baseball
running track
one corner. There are two
232
/
Norval Morris
telephones, protected a
from the weather by
little
steel
surrounds; a small line formed.
Guys ran around the track or walked around in twos or small groups. Five or six of us worked out on the equipment. The telephones here and in F House are monitored, and every few minutes a voice you and whomever you
interrupts telling
correctional facility."
And
the time
you
are speaking to that this
on whatever the prison authorities have arranged with only collect
any one
are allowed for
the telephone
can be made, so that no one outside has to
calls
makes
telephone, and this
is
a call
from
call is limited,
a "state
depending
company. Of course,
talk to a prisoner
you
the telephone expensive for the person
on
the
are calling,
particularly long-distance calls.
10:30
A new guard,
a
woman had
a.m.:
not seen before, came to unlock the chain-link fence, and
I
the yard detail headed back to F House. I
my cell, feeling better for the workout.
returned to
anything can happen while a I
hadn't had any larcenous visitors while
I
I
raised
my hand
guard's attention.
I
gave
my cell a quick inventory;
was gone. There hadn't been
everything was in place, the carton of milk was
warmish by now, but
I
empty. TV, radio, calculator, typewriter, fan
cell is
still
to indicate that
if
He saw me and opened
I
was going
.
.
.
shakedown,
"hammock." The milk was
in the
reached through the bars for the milk and drank
as
a
it.
pound on the bars to get the hung up my jacket on a screw
to
the cell door.
I
my hands in the small steel basin behind and above the toilet seat, put a sheet of paper in the typewriter, and wondered to whom should write. decided instead to have a shower; felt hot and smelly from my workout. took off my shoes and socks, rolled up my pants legs, slipped into my shower sandals, and grabbed my washcloth and towel and a green bar of state-issue soap. Many prisoners buy in the wall,
washed
I
I
I
I
"commissary soap," some TV-advertised soap, on but I'm going nowhere special for some time, and this
time
all
the cells were
walked down the three
open
I
prefer to
weekly
soap
will
visit to the
do
F House, so without having
flights of stairs
Most prisoners shower "with
shower room.
in
their
state
to signal the
and along the paint-peeled ramp
security," that
shower "without
is,
when
security."
commissary;
fine until I'm free.
I
to the showers.
there are guards about to
The showers
At
guard
watch the
are dangerous places;
gangs tend to shower together as a protective measure; only a very few prisoners shower alone and without security, as
tend therefore to be these buttons stops,
I
do.
I
am known
as a loner
all
and dangerous
The shower room seems designed
alone.
you push, and then the water comes out
and you push
everyone pushes
much
left
again. This
the buttons
is
all
supposed
to
to cross
for crazies.
and
There are
for a couple of minutes, then
it
be for "water conservation," but of course
the time so that the water
is
hotter
and continuous. So
for saving water.
When you come to prison it is wise to leave all shyness behind. for myself in the showers.
Here
in Stateville there aren't
But
I
am not anxious
gang rapes or even rapes that
I
hear about, though they are reputed to take place occasionally, and they are certainly
more frequent
in the jails. Here, the gay
and guards, though there
is
a
community is
good deal
about "dropping the soap in the shower"
largely left alone
by both prisoners
of vulgarity directed their way. is
The old thing
ancient history. Girlie magazines and a
tacit
acceptance of masturbation, including mutual masturbation, as well as of other relatively consensual homosexual relationships, minimize sex-related violence. there are quite a few
women
guards
at Stateville
seems
And
the fact that
to help. Prisoners taking
showers
The Contemporary Prison
need security from gang little
attacks, not
anxious in the showers;
who might common,
1
from sexual
have some particular reason to dislike me. Even
still
for
there
often tension
is
some semi-clean socks,
for the call to lunch,
and anxiety and,
though
1
The gang element I
I
violence
if
suppose,
buddies,
who
worth
and
hate the mess hall at lunchtime.
The noise
do not take
The guy
built up.
It is
is
not
that
all
nobody took any
I
was waiting
letter.
I
chaos
at
lunch; the
the trouble to enforce order.
sound of "Chow going out
in front of
stepped up and joined him in front of me. in the confusion
always a
a.m.:
definitely in control. Nevertheless, to the
hall.
am
I
fear.
joined the mass of prisoners heading for the tunnel.
outside the mess
it,
is
suppose
1
got dressed, and started typing a
prisoners refuse to act "orderly," and the guards
the door,"
Still,
avoid being alone in the showers with any one or more
11:30 looked
I
attacks.
233
/
We
me
were kept waiting
yelled at one of his
made no complaint;
it
wasn't
notice of such matters.
Nobody learns from the mistakes of yesterday. The door to our segment of the dining room was finally opened, the guards stepped back, and everyone tried at once to squeeze through the twenty-inch opening, rushing awaited them. Once
I
food servers shouting
my
got at
one another, spraying the food,
be unlocked so that
I
I
down
sat
I
at a table
found myself unusually dejected, waiting
could get back to the relative peace of
1:00 I
soggy vegetables and limp pasta that
and joined
regular lunchtime group, with conversation devoted to complaints about the food
and discussions of TV programs. to
for the
my food, after ten or fifteen minutes in the surging line, with the
for the
doors
my cell.
p.m.:
joined the "school" detail and with six others from F House went off to a course on
computers run in the school
area.
Unlike
all
but a few prisoners in
genuine high school graduate. There are a few more is
that a majority of
who
my fellow prisoners in Stateville are
Stateville,
I
am
a
claim to be such, but the truth
functionally
illiterate,
and only
a
handful have any sort of a record of high school academic achievement. In earlier years in Stateville
earn
I
worked
at school;
in the furniture factory
and
in the tailor shop, earning
but the computer course interested me, and
I
more than I can
applied for
it
and got
it.
I
now been in it for three months and am beginning to be able to write programs. The course is taught by an Indian who speaks strangely but knows what he is doing. It fills my have
afternoons, three days a week, two hours each day.
The better-educated have
the pick of the jobs in Stateville.
the library, particularly the law library, swiftly than other prison jobs,
is
Though
it
is
poorly paid,
probably the best job, passing prison time more
having influence in the prison, and being
left
alone by the
me in some ways even better. In the distant years when I am free may be able to use what I am learning about computer programming, but doubt it; the point is that it helps to keep me alive here. You may be interested in the pay scale in this prison: the low rate for all jobs, industry guards; but the computer class seems to I
I
and maintenance, from the useful
to the
make -work, is $.95 per day. The top pay is $2.15
per day. These rates are based on the prisoner's working twenty-one work days per month.
However one's money arrives, currency
is
either
from prison pay or approved payment from outside,
contraband, and commissary credit
is all
one can have without risking
disciplinary punishment, including loss of "good time." There
(other than a prisoner under prison disciplinary sanction)
provided his account
is
in credit.
is
no limit to what a prisoner
may spend at
the commissary,
— 234
/
Norval Morris
3:30
Two
was showering, TV.
his
my set, but
It is
him
to give
a set
if
bargain about what
when he
doesn't,
work
program.
came
we
if
are to share this cell,
my
to
I
we have
fortunate; he mostly falls in with
much TV as do here. My set is a I
I
Tyrone
cell.
turned on the
some
to strike
my preferences, and
thirteen-inch
to the
World,"
RCA color TV. me an ideal
for
want, a public television news commentary program; a contribution
up beside
down on
lay
So,
1/VVTTW Chicago, "Your Window
1
them
rigged
and
in
it.
we watch. I am
what
to give
we have
table
went back
1
While he was away
yield.
I
just
It's
finished.
cannot control what we watch,-since his friends outside could afford
I
he wanted
turned on Channel
had money
shop
in the tailor
never watched so
I've I
p.m.:
guards escorted the school detail back to F House.
—they ask
the toilet;
it is
best
bunk without
his
for
it
frequently.
The TV
wish
I
on
is
a
I
little
watched by lying on one's bunk. Tyrone
speaking.
It's
the best way; avoid useless
chatter.
and dozed.
I
got sleepy
I
was awakened by the mailman rapping on the bars
package of mail to Tyrone. Nothing for me; dries
up
to a trickle,
even
if
you write
after a year or
watched the
are
on
their
local
way
news.
here.
I
It
lay
on
a small
incoming mail
p.m.:
my bunk,
much
devote
I
activities of
of
my
who
people
daydreaming of
half listening to the news, half
waking thought, and
my
all
time, to being out of prison.
5:25
The loudspeaker blared
again, "Three
p.m.:
and four
often worse in the evening than at lunch, but
now
and giving
in prison,
was depressing, much of it about the
freedom. Like most other prisoners,
dream
two
regularly.
5:00 I
of our cell
the thundering noise of F House, with
galleries, get
it is
ready for chow." The food
better to go than to stay in
TVs and
what
seems
is
is
by
to
me,
more bread and
less
radios blaring and,
it
every prisoner shouting to another prisoner and nobody listening.
The evening meal was pasta; but the
a less-adequate replica of lunch, with
pushing and shoving was also
7:00
less,
and the gangs were
less active.
p.m.:
went smoothly. Most everyone was by now back — barbershop, houses, and were fewer places—schoolroom, gym, and so on— be counted.
The evening count
it
in the cell
also
yard, industry,
there
kitchen,
to
was F House's turn
It
basketballs around.
I
for
evening gym. Many, including Tyrone, went
stayed in the cell and followed a batch of my favorite
to
throw
TV programs
my exercise for that day. in my computer training manual, TV again, and by nine o'clock Tyrone was back in the cell, and got out of my clothes, except my undershorts, and got into my bunk. The central lights in F House stay on through the they passed the time well for me, and
And
I
had had
so the evening went: TV, reading a
little
I
night.
I
the day
wondered if perhaps we should put up some sort of curtains, and with ended
Well, that
was
for
my
that thought
me.
diary for yesterday. Let
me comment
a
bit
on
it.
Yesterday was unusually uneventful. Often in prison something happens
flow of the day. For example, sometimes when
1
am wakened
in the
to disturb the dull
morning Tyrone
is
to be
The Contemporary Prison
/
235
Angry prisoners
litter
the floor outside their cells in
a futile effort
to
protest a lockdown, a collective
punishment
during which inmates are confined cells
to their
sometimes for
weeks at a time.
heard pulling himself
off,
here, but
others,
—
noisily
and with such a stench
eat the
same food. Tyrone and
know about
other
these
annoy one another.
It is
security, but the
the
we
to
this;
at night.
something wrong with
it
is
when
someday
other
way
and we
to
neighboring
to leave
you
alone,
you have
to
belong
to
There are, of course, the regular variations
a fight,
will both
which makes it
has been
a gang or be under their protection.
in
our days. Regularly we go
where our apprentice-barber fellow prisoners practice to the
to
be controlled by
cells,
for peace. Unless you are very strong or influential, or for one or another reason decided
we
to let the
one another as we do, we
one another. Cell places are supposed in
shits so
his digestion; after all,
that will happen,
keep their members together
they are
And Tyrone
we say nor in any
in which, living so close to
better than the
We have not yet had an argument that leads
live so close that
in the hole, hating
gangs manage
is
take care neither by what
and other ways
mind
slightly. 1 don't
not homosexual outside, fall into
same sometimes, mostly
think there
better that way.
even a shouting match, but probably end up
1
I
shakes
who are
Of course, 1 do
disturbs me.
it
my hunk
and
homosexual habits that some
their skills
on
us.
to the
There
is
barbershop,
the weekly visit
commissary. There are Sundays, with their more relaxed regimen, more open yard and
gym
time,
and
to the
litigation,
more
sitting
or walking about in groups talking. There are times to go to the library
law library for those of us which they
tell
me
courts.
And
tickets
and segregation and
is
still
appealing our convictions or pursuing prisoners' rights
a good way
to "do time" but rarely
then there are the hard-to-avoid confrontations with
"lockdown, " when
cells
loss
of "good time." Even worse are
are locked for
shower a week out of the
cell;
all
and
the collective
—
leading to
punishments of the
twenty -four hours, sometimes for months, with only one
time moves even slower then.
Neither Tyrone nor I use prison hooch or drugs prisoners do,
produces any success in the
some of the guards
to get
through the days and nights, but
the disorder of prison, the frequency of punishments
and oflockdowns,
is
many
increased
236
Norval Morris
/
because of
Drugs,
it.
drugs, are readily available at about twice their street price, payable
all
inside or outside the prison.
make
way
their
with
in
under the stamps or
Some drugs come over the wall; some are brought in by guards; some administration's efforts; small quantities are hidden
visitors, despite the
built into pockets in envelopes;
available in every large prison
and jail, and they
one way or another,
am
1
certainly are available here
if
told,
drugs are
you can pay for
them.
Gang
activity
is
one prison
but
to another,
not
much
this
authorities; they influence
the
same as
they can do about
safely in the prison
a great deal of
life
and who
in prison.
is
known
to the
move gang leaders
Tjiey try to
it.
only briefly interrupts gang activity
The gangs influence who moves
much
Gang membership
another addiction of our prison.
is
authorities, but there
—new
prison
about, from
leaders promptly emerge.
gets into trouble with the prison
The influence of gangs
in Stateville
is
on the streets, though mercifully they are not equipped with guns here, only
it is
with shanks. I
am not sure whether the average prisoner is safer physically in prison
where most of us come from. In
more
slightly
likely to
we
Stateville,
are
less likely to
be knifed or injured seriously in a fight. Fights are not
are always followed up by the prison authorities, and an effort
There are regular and intermittent shakedowns of all the other contraband.
is
than on the
streets,
be shot and killed but possibly
uncommon
but they
made to punish those responsible.
cells
and other areas for shanks and
a violent place, but most prisoners do their time without being victimized
It is
physically unless they are looking to prove something to themselves or unless they get into trouble
with betting, or hooch, or drugs, or with the gangs. Those prison culture
—
—have
own
time"
and
the constant sense of danger
I
on
hope
this
diary
visitors days,
is
and
that
a bitter happiness. The
is
many years ago when
easier to describe
purposes are unclear, education
and keeping peace and
Let
appears
tenets of the
staff,
"do your
—you are neverfor a moment happy, except sometimes
is
largely
letter
1
am sorry;
life
briefly
misses the relentless, slow-moving
mixed with occasional flashes of fear and it is
rage;
not easy. Probably prison
it
was
prison guards saw themselves as punishers, inflicting
pain on prisoners, and prisoners joined together
it
main
of use to you; itfails to capture the constant unhappiness of prison
misses the consuming stupidity of living this way.
how
to the
the best chance of avoiding violence.
routine, the dull repetitiveness, the tension
is
who adhere
never "rat" on another prisoner, always keep your distance from
to resist
them.
Now,
in prisons like Stateville,
a token, idleness takes the place of work and industry,
safety between prisoner
and prisoner is
the prevailing aim.
Anyhow,
that
to this prisoner.
me know when you
will next visit
me;
I
hope soon.
Sincerely,
Prisoner
#12345
The State of the Prisons From 1970 to 1980 1995
the population of the prisons of the United States doubled; from 1981 to
more than doubled
it
tems, both federal and ing the
first
marked
again, so that a crisis of
crowding overwhelmed the prison
Though
substantial increases in crime rates dur-
there
had been
of those decades, the second decade, from the early 1980s to the early 1990s,
overall
form Crime
state.
by no increase
Statistics
in the rates of crimes reported
and recorded
sys-
was
in the FBI's Uni-
or by any increase in imprisonable crime as measured by the victim
surveys of the National Crime Survey. By
all
our measures,
for the period
1980
to 1985,
The Contemporary Prison
serious crime steadily declined
reaching
its
earlier
high
and then, from 1985
rates. Thereafter,
to 1990, steadily increased,
through 1996,
declining. Nevertheless, political attitudes
and sentencing
and judicial resources were supplemented; and
ecution,
it
/
237
though never
remained either stable or
slightly
policies toughened; police, pros-
in the result a flood of prisoners
was
produced.
There were similar increases
for a time in the prisons of
deluge in the United States.
like the
England and Wales, but nothing
A comparison of the imprisonment rates in several coun-
the beginning of 1992 gives a compelling view of this inundation.
tries at
incarceration rates per 100,000 of population, adding prison for international
as
Holland
36
Sweden
61
109
South Africa
332
U.S.A
455
Because an insufficient number of cells built for
new
prisons was built to house this flood of inmates,
one held two and sometimes three prisoners.
prisons were similarly stretched
—health
All the resources of the
services, recreational services, classification of pris-
oners into manageable and trainable groups, vocational and educational services important, discipline became
an increasing
never before, drugs to be more available, and brutality between prisoners to be threat.
The South has
varies widely
Northeast. And, as
among
the different regions of the United
the highest rate of imprisonment, incarcerating
than any other area; then, in declining
ceration
—and most
much more difficult to impose, with the result that gangs began
The extent of imprisonment States.
are
necessary
98
Canada
to flourish as
is
comparisons:
England and Wales
by 1994
The following
and jail together
rates,
we saw for national crime rates,
do not mirror differences
more people per capita
follow the West, the North Central, and the these regional differences in rates of incar-
in rates of serious crime.
The Federal and State Prison Systems There were no federal prisons, as such, until 1890. Of course, there were colonial prisons and jails,
there were military prisons,
Department of the statutes
from the
Interior. But,
first
and there was even a
District of
though there were criminal offenses against congressional
days of the Union, there were no federal prisons until the Three Prisons
Act of 1890, which authorized the building of federal prisons lanta, Georgia;
fenses
and McNeil
Island,
were farmed out by contract
In the years
Columbia prison run by the
at
Leavenworth, Kansas; At-
Washington. Until 1890, those convicted of federal
of-
to state institutions.
between 1890 and 1930, the number of
federal prisoners greatly increased,
and under separate congressional authorization, the number of federal prisons grew
to seven,
each operated under policies and procedures established locally by each warden. In 1930 the Bureau of Prisons Act brought these scattered institutions
bureaucracy, the Federal Bureau of Prisons. The bureau has
under the control of
now grown
a single
into a nationwide
238
Norval Morris
/
system of prisons, jails, and community correctional centers that will
house more than
likely
100,000 offenders by the mid-1990s.
The
between federal offenses and
distinction
has never been clear, other
state offenses
than the obvious and formal point that the former
reflect a
breach of federal law, the
borders of a single state or that involve large-scale conspiracies, which are
and bring to justice.
to investigate
moved
shrunk,
tion of
For
largely
by
women
many
for
federal criminal
federal prisons.
motor vehicles had
tion of stolen
its
many
for
law was deeply concerned with the transporta-
immoral purposes, but there
fill
grown and
and changing popular concerns. Thus
is
no one now
in federal prison for pimping.
years too, the illegal distillation and distribution of alcohol
but moonshiners no longer
difficult for states
But, over the years, the ambit of federal law has
political fashion
under the Mann Act,
years,
latter of
Generally speaking, federal statutes aim to deal with crimes that stretch beyond the
state law.
Then
turn, but this
was
a
major concern,
the prosecution of interstate transporta-
not a concern now. Today drug offenses
is
are the largest single source of federal prisoners, so that currently over
60 percent stand
convicted of drug offenses, and over one-fourth of all federal prisoners are not citizens of this
country (they are drug carriers from south of the U.S. -Mexico border); and
this figure
does
not include those held for breach of immigration or nationalization laws.
The range of federal offenses grows, and
their share of violent robbers
camps
to the
prison
at
It is
the
and murderers. Federal prisons range
most secure and
Marion, in southern
and
rigidly controlled prison in the
less
United States
attract a better class of
that they are therefore easier to control.
founded
but they also hold
on the kind
is
held
of inmates than
There
among
on
is
some
—
the federal
inmates than
truth in this, but the
those informed on correctional
the quality of the staff that has over the
years been recruited, the staff training programs that have been developed, ity
from open
in security
Illinois.
high esteem in which the Bureau of Prisons is
prisoners burgeons. Fed-
state institutions,
sometimes facetiously said that federal prisons
state prisons
matters
number of federal
hold more "white-collar" criminals than
eral prisons
and the continu-
of leadership that has been maintained at the bureau.
The
history of state prisons has followed a very different path, as described in chapters
and
six of this
four
book. In the pattern that
finally
system, whereas local communities, counties, and felons go to prison,
emerged, every
cities
state
runs
run the jails. By and
and convicted misdemeanants and those awaiting
trial
its
own
large,
go
to jail.
There are interesting financial consequences of this division of responsibility. gree, the sentencing
judge controls
who
pays for
sentenced as a felon to prison, the state pays; if
a felon or
local
misdemeanant
community
To complete pacts ers
—
by which for
will pay.
is
if
he
punishment: is
if
prison
convicted
To
example,
sentenced as a misdemeanant to jail, or
Such consequences sometimes cloud punishment
combine
women
is
placed on a community-based sentence such as probation, the policy.
the outline of this administrative patchwork, there are a few interstate
states
a de-
the convicted offender
com-
to administer institutions for particular categories of prison-
prisoners and mentally
ill
prisoners. Finally, there are contractual
arrangements between the states and the federal Bureau of Prisons by which individual
state
prisoners are held in federal institutions and vice versa. For example, the federal prison at
The Contemporary Prison
239
/
A guard
manacles maximum-security
prisoners in preparation for escorting to the exercise
Marion, to
Illinois,
be held in
holds a few state prisoners
state institutions. Likewise,
who are
it is
—
particularly vulnerable in a state institution
too unremittingly aggressive and violent
not unusual for a state prisoner a convicted
who would be
policeman, for example
—
to
be
held in the federal system.
Classification of Prisons
Every
state
and the
and Prisoners
federal system provide for the classification of prisoners at admission to
prison and for their allocation to institutions and within institutions according to that classification. All states less likelihood of
who
have prisons for those
prison-behavior spectrum,
are not escape risks
and who can be held with
open and less-supervised conditions. For the other end of the
violence in all
prison systems run maximum-security
constant supervision. In between there
prisons for younger offenders and prisons with particular emphasis tional training or
The
on
facilities
with close and
usually a range of medium-security prisons, such as
is
on vocational or educa-
industrial activities.
architecture of these diverse institutions varies greatly, from traditional concrete
and brick behemoths,
filled
dining halls, to campus-like
with
tiers
facilities
and ranks of steel-barred cages with
vast congregate
with scattered houses, each holding thirty or forty in-
much
mates in home-like conditions. Architecture tends to dominate
of the texture of
life
in
to
an
prison.
Prisoner #12345's
life,
hour by hour, would be
open or even a medium-security prison. the separate
life
he created
for
All
himself in his
would be
different
indeed were he
different,
cell in Stateville:
moved
from the noisy awakening
to
much more
of
he would spend
them
yard.
.
240
Norval Morris
/
his time out of his cell; useful
work would more
likely
be available; congregate and safer
associations with other prisoners
would
therefore less demanding. In
he would have a greater sense of personal worth. There
would be tails
the
of life,
all,
prevail;
and the guards would be
same recognition of separateness from the world, but the
would be much
less oppressive.
open and medium-security prisons, sense of banishment from
life.
and
state
daily round, the de-
A man of ordinary life experience, who had never
would
before seen the inside of a jail or prison,
anxious and
less
find
no physical pain
federal
Indeed, this type of prison
life is
many of the
in living in
—other than the pain
resulting from the
not unlike that on a rigidly
disciplined military base. But the overcrowded, maximum-security prisons are quite another matter.
White-collar criminals are disproportionately to be found in open
from the inner cities, those with histories of "street crime,"
the
fill
facilities,
whereas those
maximum-security prisons.
White-collar prisoners generally are neither escape risks nor violent and dangerous; since
assessment for these risks are generally found in
is
the basis for classification of prisoners, white-collar criminals
minimum-security
institutions,
not requiring massive walls and steel cages, are also run. These "open prisons" provide tions.
There
much
which, being
much
"easier time" than the
maximum-security
an unevenness in suffering in such a classificatory system, but
is
an inequity that the prison authorities can or should avoid. There funds and personnel resources to sential pain of
of autonomy;
less staff-intensive
imprisonment
it
would
serve
make
lies in
no
is
no point
institu-
it is
not
in wasting
conditions worse for white-collar criminals. The es-
and
the prisoner's banishment from society
social
and
cheaper both to build and to
purpose to increase suffering
his loss
for criminals in
open
institutions.
Minority Prisoners In the United States as a whole, the differential rate of imprisonment of African-Americans to
Caucasians, proportional to population,
is
in excess of 7.5 to
prisonment of those with Hispanic surnames Efforts to
account for these gross differences
cause of brevity,
if
1.
in proportion to raise
The
differential rate of
Caucasians
is
im-
about 5 to
1
important and disturbing issues. (In the
not precision, the terms white, black, and Hispanic will be used, without
hint of pejorative intent.)
To justice
illuminate this problem, consider a few statistics of the racial impact of the criminal
system in the nation's capital
Washington, D.C.
city,
On
a typical
day in 1991, of all
black males between the ages of eighteen and thirty-five living in Washington, 42 percent
were within the control of the criminal justice system. To be more in prison, 21 percent
being sought for
precise, 15 percent
were
were on probation or parole, and 6 percent were either awaiting trial or
trial.
These are deeply disturbing could be approximated in
figures,
many
others.
but they appear to be exceeded in one other city and
To what
difference
between incarceration
uncertain.
By way of contrast, black males
rates in the
times that of black males in South Africa.
extent they account for the extraordinary
United States and other Western countries
in the
United States are incarcerated
is
at a rate four
The Contemporary Prison
Let us consider racial prejudice
some
on the
possible explanations for this gross racial skewing.
and
part of the police, the prosecutors, the judges,
It
/
may
241
reflect
juries, so that,
crime for crime, black and Hispanic offenders are more likely to be arrested by the police and
more
are
likely to
Support
be dealt with severely by the courts.
for that
view
is
found in the data on
arrests for
drug
100,000; by contrast, the arrest rate of blacks, which was also
at
From 1970 on-
offenses.
ward, the arrest rate of whites for drug offenses has held relatively steady
300
at
about 300 per
1968-69, shot up
in
with the "war on drugs" to just below 1,500 per 100,000 in 1990, declining to about 1,050 in 1992.
No
differential
one informed on drug usage would suggest that
usage
—
it
is
surely the product of intense targeting,
this
huge
differential reflects
by police and prosecutors, of
drug use in certain areas and not in others.
The
overall reality of racial
skewing in punishment practice may suggest
of the criminal justice system, at every level, deal that
clemency
is
This possibility
that the officials
more harshly with blacks and Hispanics, so
disproportionately extended to whites and denied to blacks and Hispanics. is
suggested by the
fact that in
1990, even though less than 30 percent of
those arrested were black, blacks accounted for 47 percent of those imprisoned, and that
although whites were nearly 70 percent of those arrested, only 48 percent of prisoners were white.
The blacks
more
racial
imbalance in the prison population
who commit
severely than blacks
whose victims
of the color of their victims.
up
of prisoners
sentences,
had
may be
It is
are black
likely that
some
fact that
and more severely than whites, regardless
of the minority prison population
who would not have been sent to prison, their victims
been of some other
Another possible cause of proportionately
explained in part by the
crimes against white victims, particularly serious crimes, are punished
commit what might be
is
made
who would have received shorter
race.
skewing
this racial
or
is
that
whereas blacks and Hispanics
dis-
called "imprisonable crimes," white offenders express
their criminality, disproportionately higher
than do blacks and Hispanics, in frauds, em-
bezzlements, and white-collar offenses, which do not so inflame public opinion and do not so readily attract imprisonment as a punishment.
Genetic factors are sometimes suggested as causally related to these differences in in-
volvement in imprisonable crime; but light of
and
what
for the
class, their
is
known about
this position is
extremely
difficult to
maintain in the
evolution and the noninheritance of acquired characteristics
more immediate reason that as blacks and Hispanics steadily move
into the middle
crime rates and the delinquency rates of their children are indistinguishable from
those of their white neighbors.
There
is
this qualification, of course:
if
blacks and, to a lesser extent, Hispanics have been
subjected to adverse social conditions stretching over generations tributing
and rewarding
life
—
if
opportunities for a con-
have been denied them by the lack of adequate health care and
the lack of reasonable educational
and employment opportunities,
if
their children
and youths
over generations have been subjected to the culture of the inner-city streets, and acceptable role models are denied
and accepted
social adaptation,
them
—then
criminality
becomes
a
if
socially
much more normal
passed on from generation to generation.
242
Norval Morris
/
As
is
true of
any observation about
superficial in the extreme; validity,
all
human
behavior, single-factor explanations are here
of the above suggestions, apart from the genetic,
may have
varying from case to case, but they are extraordinarily difficult to quantify in the
mass. Nevertheless, an effort toward that end was the National
Academy of Sciences. The
made
in
some research done
for a panel of
about 80 percent of the black-
results suggested that
to-white disproportion in rates of imprisonment could be explained by blacks' disproportionate involvement in serious crime
and
well be attributable to racial prejudice
that
20 percent remained unaccounted
on the
part of those initiating
for
and may
and administering the
criminal justice process. This does not, of course, dispose of the allegation that, regarding their crime rates, blacks are the captives of racial prejudice;
it
merely
shifts the focus to
20
percent attributable to racial prejudice within the criminal justice system and 80 percent attributable to
what
racial prejudice
and imposed
social adversities
have contributed to soci-
ety at large.
Whatever the causes, many of the prisons and jails of the United larger,
maximum-security
institutions,
States, particularly the
appear to be institutions designed
to segregate
from
young black and Hispanic male underclass.
society a
Sentencing and Release Procedures
A
substantial reason for the doubling
States in the period eral
and
state.
from 1970
to
and redoubling of incarceration
1994 was
a
profound change
rates in the
United
in sentencing practices, fed-
Sentencing practices have two impacts on prison populations.
First,
they de-
who out of the mass of convicted offenders will be sentenced to prison; that is, they determine who goes to prison. And second, they determine for how long criminals will stay in prison. Over the period we are considering, more convicted offenders were selected for termine
prison,
and they were sentenced
Regarding the second
to longer
terms of imprisonment.
effect of sentencing decisions, the
have been great changes: in the 1960s, legislatures ticular offense and, very rarely, also set the
set the
duration of imprisonment, there
maximum
minimum. Within
prison term for a par-
that range legislatively set, the
sentencing judge would order an indeterminate sentence of imprisonment, being the maxi-
mum number of years that the prisoner could be imprisoned. prisoner
would
serve
would
later
Then, the actual term that the
be determined by a parole board, the parole board's deci-
sion being based on the gravity of the crime, the prisoner's behavior in prison, and the parole board's prediction of his likely success during the parole release term.
term, the period of conditional release under supervision,
The parole
would normally be
release
the unserved
period of imprisonment, the difference between the time he actually spent in prison and the
maximum
that the
to prison for a
judge had ordered. During that period the ex-prisoner could be returned
breach of a condition of his parole
or, of course, for
commission of a crime. As
rough estimate, prisoners generally served something between one-third and two-thirds of
the sentence the judge
had imposed.
This type of indeterminate sentencing had as tative
its
main justification a belief in the
purpose of imprisonment; the period of incarceration would be used
oner for a
life
free of crime,
rehabili-
to train the pris-
with educative and vocational training and psychological techniques
The Contemporary Prison
/
243
Handcuffed and
in
chains, newly arrived
prisoners await processing as they prepare to join the
ever bur-
geoning U.S. prison population.
being directed to this end. During the
on
this "rehabilitative ideal," led
by
works," that rehabilitative purposes
late
1960s and early 1970s a
full-scale attack
was made
a series of technical articles maintaining that "nothing
may be
fine in principle
but that they failed in practice.
This depressing view was exaggerated and reflected the genuine difficulties of running methodologically
sound studies to
prison experience, but
it
test the later
During the early 1970s, crime that
had been made
conduct of discharged offenders in relation
to their
had considerable popular appeal.
—pursuant
rates increased, along
to the
with disenchantment with
efforts
1967 report of the President's Crime Commission
—
to
bring principle and efficiency to the criminal justice system. Sentencing reform became a focus of political
and academic
interest,
each tending in the same direction, though for pro-
foundly different reasons.
The
political pressure for
sentencing reform was a reaction to increased and increasing
serious-crime rates in the 1960s and 1970s and inhibited
by
greater severity of punishment.
stemmed from
the belief that crime could be
The popular press depicted judges and parole
boards as sentimentally lenient, the evidence being a parade of imprecisely described, exceptional cases.
The remedies recommended were
legislatively fixed
and mandatory minimum
sentences and an abandonment of parole release.
The academic pressure first
for sentencing
reform had a quite different provenance.
It
flowed
from an appreciation of the extent of unjustified disparity in sentencing, by which
offenses
by
like offenders in the
same
like
jurisdiction received profoundly different sentences,
244
Norval Morris
/
and second from an understanding the parole board's
presumed ability
on the
that to support parole release discretion to predict
offender's behavior in prison was an exercise in self-deception, since prison behavior to
basis of
behavior in the community from observing the is
known
be a very poor predictor of behavior in the community. Denunciation of the assumed leniency in sentencing moved the legislatures and
enced the judges;
a quest for fairness
reformers. Both agreed
would be little
common
predictability in sentencing
"truth in sentencing,"
the sentence served, less
else in
favoring
on
and
some time
moved
by which the sentence the judge proclaimed
off for
"good behavior"
in prison,
in their purposes. Nevertheless, this unlikely alliance
more condign punishment and those
influ-
the academic
favoring fairer
but there was
between those
and more predictable sentenc-
ing practices had a great effect on increasing the severity of sentences, federal and state, through-
out the United States. As a result, the extent of imprisonment for crime and of time served for
each type of crime substantially increased. Legislatures, federal
month"
for
and
state,
moved to mandatory sentences for whatever "crime of the
which they thought the judges had been too
lenient in sentencing. These
manda-
minimum sentences obliterated judicial discretion (transferring it, in effect, to the prosecutors who determine what offense the criminal is to be charged with) and achieved substantial tory
increases both in the
numbers
sent to prison
and
in the duration of their confinement.
There were also various experiments in guiding judicial sentencing discretion
to achieve
rough equality in sentencing, the best known being the establishment of sentencing commissions in the federal system to
and
in Minnesota, to draft
complex
sets of
sentencing guidelines
channel the judges' sentencing discretion. The strong tendency of the federal system of
sentencing guidelines has been toward greatly increased severity of sentencing; in the states that
have followed
that result in
path of sentencing reform, particularly Minnesota and Washington,
this
is less clear.
In those two states, the prison population increase
was held below that
comparable jurisdictions lacking such guidelines.
Fundamental changes rates in the early
were,
at the
been widespread, and though crime
in sentencing policies have
1990s were broadly the same as they were, or were
slightly
lower than they
beginning of the 1980s, the great increase in rates of incarceration continued, in
substantial part because of those sentencing "reforms."
Unhappily, these changes in sentencing practice, which have tended to eliminate or
duce the discretion of the parole releasing of discharged prisoners. Ideally,
all
prisoners, certainly
re-
have also reduced parole supervision
authorities,
all
who have served long terms, should
be released gradually into the community; they should be supervised and, where appropriate, assisted this.
during the
difficult
period of readaptation to freedom.
Some
prison systems do
For example, the Federal Bureau of Prisons has entered into contractual arrangements
with 260
Community
held for the
based
last
facilities
many
from which prisoners go out each day
bureau administers for-profit,
Corrections Centers, where
longer-term federal prisoners are
two or three months of their period of imprisonment; these
this
to
work
are
community-
or to try to find work.
The
system by contractual and supervised arrangements with nonprofit,
and public agencies.
But the bureau's release program tems, the prisoner
is
set free at the
is,
regrettably, not the
norm. In many
state prison sys-
prison gate in clothes ill-suited to the likely pattern of his
The Contemporary Prison
life
and with funds
insufficient to
but sufficient to buy a handgun. in
support himself during the
A
difficult
/
245
period of readaptation
few private organizations, such as the
SAFER Foundation
Chicago, sometimes financially assisted by federal and state funds, do provide some train-
ing and assistance to ex-prisoners in finding employment, but the resources are
swamped by
the need.
The Impact of Accreditation and the Courts The American Correctional Association (ACA) in correctional
and
a voluntary organization of those
working
programs, adult and juvenile, institutional and community-based. With over
members
twenty-four thousand lation
is
in 1992,
has considerable influence on correctional
it
legis-
Following the example of hospital accreditation programs, in 1974 the
practice.
ACA established a correctional institution accreditation program, which has defined acceptable standards for prison conditions tors in
and programs and has
assisted correctional administra-
meeting them. Accreditation has assisted prison administrators in attracting funds to
improve prison conditions; but
a larger, similar effect has
been achieved by the courts, mostly
the federal district courts.
Until the early 1970s, federal and state courts adopted a "hands off policy toward prison conditions, deferring to the
assumed expertise of the prison administrators and being pre-
pared to intervene in only the most egregious circumstances; in federal
and
state,
effect, the constitutions,
did not protect the prisoner. But since that time there has been a spate of
judicial activity relating to prison conditions, with the federal district courts and, to a lesser
extent, the state courts
and
federal appellate courts being actively involved. Class-action suits
by prisoners have led the courts
to the definition
health care, to the establishment of
minimum
and enforcement of minimum standards of
procedural due-process requirements for the
imposition of disciplinary punishments, to the equal protection of the laws for different categories of inmates,
and
to the
upholding of the Eighth Amendment guarantee against cruel
and unusual punishments. Overcrowding
in several prisons
and
jails
has led the courts to impose a "ceiling" on
populations, which has compelled the release of some prisoners before the expiration of their sentences. Inevitably,
and public In jail
criticism
some
on
of those so released
commit new crimes and bring vigorous
the correctional authorities
two decades of such judicial activism,
running under court control, and eight
correctional system, either adult or juvenile,
all
and on the
but a few states have had a major prison or
states at
one time or another had
of a Special Master, responsible to the court,
court in ensuring that
its
is
is
at
by the appoint-
acts as the authorized agent of the
order concerning prison or jail conditions, or the
ber of offenders to be held in an institution
Court intervention
who
institution
any one time,
is
maximum num-
obeyed.
a matter of considerable contention,
with some arguing that the
courts have neither the knowledge nor the ability to control prison conditions. tive
view
is
their entire
common mecha-
under court order. The most
nism by which the courts exercise control over the correctional
ment
The
alterna-
that this type of litigation helps, rather than hinders, correctional administrators.
Prison administrators control neither prison populations nor prison purse strings.
no means
press
courts.
to build
new
cells or hire additional staff to
accommodate
They have
the constant, growing
246
Two inmates
/
Norval Morris
in
Statevilk's "industries"
area cut fabric that will
be sewn into uni-
forms for prisoners throughout the
Illinois
prison system.
stream of prisoners or to control the resultant overcrowding; they have no way to keep
new
inmates out or to allow nonthreatening inmates to leave. Federal court orders mandating the reduction of prison populations or the improvement of conditions enable administrators to
make
their institutions safer
and
fairer places for
both prisoners and
staff.
Vocational, Educational, and Other Prison Programs
As we have seen
in other chapters of this
book, prisoners were traditionally sentenced to
"hard labor," which was often very hard and useless labor indeed. The quite different: to find sufficient
employer and labor in prisons
and
work
to
interests has gravely
jails.
This
is
impeded
the availability of productive
family,
if
work
of a type that
would pay a small stipend
he has one, and to cushion the early days of his
ment. As a
result,
it
employment
employment
for the prisoner to
is
for the
help his
release.
Opposition from manufacturers' associations and organized labor has of prison industries, which,
is
one issue on which the correctional administrator and the
prisoner are in complete accord; they both desire useful, productive prisoner, preferably
modern problem
keep the prisoner occupied. Opposition by both
stifled the
growth
argued, constitute unfair competition to labor and manage-
prison industries have been confined largely to a "state use" system by
which prisons can produce goods and
services only for governmental consumption. Restric-
tions of this nature have also hindered the
which work best when they can be linked
development of vocational training programs,
to productive
employment.
The Contemporary Prison
/
247
Nevertheless, several prison systems, notably those of the Federal Bureau of Prisons with its
quasi-independent
UN1COR (Federal and
(Prison Rehabilitative Industries
Prison Industries) program and the Florida
them modestly
prisoners the experience of productive employment, pay train
them
well for such
work on
been
idea has
ployed and paid
at the
same
PRIDE
a minority of
for the
work, and
release.
There has been some experimentation in Europe with the United
discussed in the
do give
Diversified Enterprises) program,
scale as
States. In
wages" prison, and
"full
this
such a prison, the prisoner would be em-
he would were he gainfully employed
at large;
he would
then pay the prison for his board and keep, the remaining funds being used to compensate those he has injured, to assist in the maintenance of his family
be supported by the taxpayer on some type of social welfare release.
This idea reads better in theory than
it
works
—who would —and be saved
likely otherwise
to
against his
in practice. Since the cost of maintain-
ing a prisoner in 1993 hovered around twenty thousand dollars per year, and since
oner in a
much
"full
no
pris-
wages" pnson could be expected to earn that amount, a highly artificial deduction,
than that, would have to be assessed. The plan becomes an exercise in bookkeep-
less
ing rather than economic reality.
From the is
a
perspective of the prison administrator, an ample program of prison industries
management
tool of central importance,
making
for a peaceful
and orderly prison.
If it
can also help to train the prisoner for freedom and provide him with some funds to tide him over the early days of his release, so
much the
better;
but the resistance to such programs by
outside interests remains a serious impediment to their development. Basic education programs,
ons, since a substantial
Likewise, there
is
on the other hand,
number
are to be
found in
of prisoners are undereducated, with
generally lightly patronized in the larger,
to
many being
of pris-
illiterate.
prisons.
The same
is
are widely available but
maximum-security prisons; the culture of those
They are more apt
institutions does not favor them.
and open
number
usually an opportunity for most prisoners to pursue correspondence courses.
Such self-developmental opportunities, educational and vocational,
rity
a large
to flourish in the smaller,
true of psychological
medium-secu-
and counseling programs, which
be found in rudimentary or reasonably developed form in
many
are
prisons.
Alcohol and drugs figure prominently in the etiology of imprisonable crime; more than prisoners were under the influence of drugs, alcohol, or both at the time of their
half of
all
arrest.
Because of
spread. Alcoholics contrast,
this, efforts at
Anonymous
alcohol and drug treatment programs in prison are wide-
has had considerable success in federal and state prisons; by
drug treatment programs seem more
effective
when
they are community-based,
compulsorily treating those sentenced to intermediate punishments or those released from prison
on condition
of involvement in such programs.
One philosophical aspect the prison
was thought
of these programs merits mention. In
to be the rehabilitation of the prisoner.
By
1965 a major purpose of a variety of reeducative
programs, the prison was to turn the malefactor into a conforming and productive
member
of society. In the ensuing decades, these high aspirations have been rejected in public
mentary, and nals.
The
fact
it
com-
has become fashionable to say that "nothing works" in prison to reform crimi-
of the matter
is
that
it is
extremely
difficult to
measure the reformative
effects of
— 248
/
Norval Morris
prison programs; clearly
some
prisoners are assisted to a conforming
but equally clearly
life,
others are, by the total prison experience, confirmed in their criminality. As a result, the general posture of even the
more enlightened prison administrators
to
is
do
their best to
who want
provide self-developmental opportunities and programs for those prisoners
to
pursue them.
Discipline and Punishment It is
not always appreciated by the general public that immediate power within the prison
belongs to the prisoners. Ultimate power, of course,
lies
with the prison authorities, but guns
and weapons cannot be taken into the security areas of unless one the
running a concentration camp
is
—
a prison
where prisoners move
outnumber
since the prisoners always greatly
staff.
The
reality
of course, that
is,
most prisons
are characterized
most of the time, since most prisoners want order and
safety
by a high degree of order
and thus accept
its
maintenance.
on the matter, firm and enforceable
Nevertheless, whatever the prisoners' feelings
disciplin-
ary processes are essential to effective prison governance.
Hence, prisons have their prisons, their "holes," their punishment a further
armamentarium of disciplinary punishments, ranging from
cells.
They
also have
the withdrawal of privi-
leges to the prolongation of the term to be served, as well as transfer to a higher-security,
—or
more
rigidly controlled institution
ward
for conformity.
to a lower-security,
more relaxed
institution as a re-
Three contemporary problems of discipline and punishment merit mention: prison gangs,
and
protective custody,
riots. Starting in
lems of discipline and safety
the 1960s, prison gangs
began
to cause acute prob-
in several jurisdictions, particularly in California, Illinois,
and
Arizona. Linked to street gangs, welded to loyalties by religious or racial sentiments, they seriously challenged the preservation of order
and
discipline within the larger, increasingly
overcrowded and understaffed big-city prisons. They remain bances and
Partly as a product of the
overcrowding, isolate
it
growing influence of prison gangs and partly as
has become more difficult to protect the
weak
own
number
a result of
prisoner from the strong, the
from the gang, the minority prisoner from the majority (whatever
a result, an increasing their
a potent force, linked to distur-
riots.
of prisoners in the last two decades have
their ethnicity).
had
to
be held,
request and agreed to by the prison authorities, in "protective custody"
own safety from the general population of the prison. uncommon to find 10 percent of the population of a large
—
As at
segre-
gated for their It is
not
prison in protective
custody. This puts further pressure on the prison administrator. Unless punitive, near-solitary
confinement
there
is
must be two
imposed on the protective custody inmate (which too often happens),
distinct prison
programs within the prison, one
for those in the general
population and one for those in protective custody: two different programs for food service,
employment, thing that
is
complicated.
visits,
work, recreation,
library,
and
religious observations, in short, for every-
required of a prison. The task of preserving order and discipline
is
thus further
The Contemporary Prison
Sometimes
discipline
1992 there have been being
York
killed
—
all
the prisoners
to
fourteen major prison riots in the United States, the two worst
1971 and
State facility, in
at
New
Mexico
1980. In the Attica uprising, eleven prison employees and thirty-two
which the
249
and order break down completely. Over the period from 1971
at least
New
at Attica, a
/
and four of the prison employees being
The
authorities reclaimed the prison.
State Penitentiary in
unarmed prisoners were
killed
by the gunfire with
thirty-three prisoners killed in the riot in the
New Mexico penitentiary were killed by other inmates in a scene of unbridled brutality. Many murdered were prisoners who were being held in protective custody and who, rightly
of those
or wrongly, were seen
The other major
homa
by other prisoners
state prison riots
as informers.
during those decades resulted in more deaths: Okla-
State Penitentiary in McAlester in 1973, three prisoners killed;
two inmates
in 1979,
killed
and seventeen injured
Soledad in California
what amounted
in
to a race riot; three
Michigan prisons in 1981, injuring 130 prisoners and guards and causing nine
riots in
million dollars in property damage; in 1983, a riot in
Oklahoma,
in
which one inmate was
killed
Conner Correctional Center in Hominy,
and twenty-three prisoners and guards were
injured; in 1985, rioting at four Tennessee prisons; in 1985, an eighteen-hour uprising at
Oklahoma
State Penitentiary, in
which hostages were taken and three guards stabbed; and
in 1986, three inmates killed in a
two-day takeover of West Virginia State Penitentiary in
Moundsville.
The
federal prison system has also experienced riots, but their origin
that of the riots in state prisons. In 1980, President
Cuban
come
refugees to
to this
country in a
Jimmy
back wards of Cuban mental
Many
hospitals.
eral correctional institutions at Atlanta, Georgia,
convicted of crimes in the United States. The it
became known
that,
different
from
from the Cuban port of Mariel, a deci-
boat-lift
sion that General Fidel Castro used as an opportunity to the
is
Carter decided to allow 125,000
empty Cuban long-term prisons and
of these refugees eventually filled the fed-
and Talladega, Alabama,
after
having been
August 199 1 occurred when
riot at Talladega, in
,
pursuant to the 1984 agreement between the United States and the
Castro government, a group of such detainees was soon to be forcibly repatriated.
much speculation on, but no satisfactory analysis of,
There has been riots,
other than the riots of the Marielitos.
between the a
common
rioters
pattern
and the prison
It is
authorities, the
food,
idleness
Health Care
minimum
that riots
and
as
seem
programs,
a sufficient
to the larger, over-
Physical
the involvement of federal courts
constitutional conditions of custody
we have seen
be confined
to
achieved
racial tensions.
in Prison:
care in prisons. Typically, the prison hospital
And,
is
by the prisoners follows
these
worthy of note, however,
The accreditation movement and
prison.
of complaints
care, the lack of rehabilitative
all
crowded prisons characterized by
requiring
list
the causes of prison
and communication
—bad inadequate medical —but even complaints taken together do not seem
unfair punishments
explanation.
When riots start
is
had
one of the
in other chapters of this
medical personnel in prisons has had an ameliorating
a
from the 1970s onward
in
widespread impact on health
first sites
shown
to a visitor to a
book, the presence of professional
effect
on prison conditions
generally.
250
Norval Morris
/
Nevertheless,
it is
often difficult to attract competent medical staff to
tend to be lower, and inmates tend to be
difficult
and
problems of serious concern have recently emerged: HIV treatment-resistant tuberculosis;
and an increase
work in prisons;
litigious patients.
in the
and AIDS;
positivity
number
salaries
Three prison medical
of geriatric
a strain of
and terminally
ill
patients.
In the early days of recognition of the threat of AIDS, prisons to
be
fertile fields for
expediting the spread of this plague
—and
and jails were seen so
it
both institutions contain a substantial number of active homosexuals to
be protective of their
isolating
own
physical safety
young men from women
although
it is
now less
frequent, the threat of
Add
appalling to contemplate.
and of the availability of drugs
in
And
of course,
homosexual behavior. Further,
homosexual rape by an HIV-positive inmate
number
is
of drug users in prison
most prisons and jails, and these breeding grounds
became
all,
than others
less likely
that of their sexual partners.
to this the realities of a large
are further fertilized. Prison staffs tive
and
increases the incidence of
as likely
has proved. After
greatly alarmed; the spittle or bite of
for
AIDS
an HIV-posi-
prisoner was, without secure medical foundation, seen as a lethal threat.
There was
much
testing in prisons,
those prisoners the spread of
and
discussion about whether there should be compulsory regular this is
who had
now generally in place.
tested positive should be separated
AIDS and whether condoms should be
very few prisons,
condoms were made
consensus that
is
it
unwise
some prisons and jails),
available,
for
two reasons.
HIV
extensive
when
there
a false sense of safety,
is
which
is all
to
impede
(though
It is
this is
also the
done
problem of the window of
in
delay,
accurately to establish the presence of that condi-
HIV positivity in the prison is less when the majority of prisoners have
that the spread of
an appreciation of the
In July 1992, the three
but this remains a rare practice.
First, there is the
test
and second, experience has shown
tion;
from other prisoners
available to the prison population. In a
to try to segregate HIV-positive prisoners
often six months, required for the
HIV
There was also discussion about whether
risk than
that segregation
would
achieve.
—
most centrally concerned national medical associations
the Ameri-
can College of Physicians, the National Commission on Correctional Health Care, and the
American Correctional Health Care Association problem
the gravity of the
community state
and
at large.
that
AIDS presented
They reported
—
that the incidence of
reported their collective view of
AIDS was
and jails and
They estimated
AIDS
cases in prisons at the
end of 1990.
many more inmates than these numbers reflect were seropositive, that is, HIV virus. In states conducting blind epidemiological studies, rates of HIV
that
were carrying the
seropositivity ranged
from as low as 0.6 percent (Oregon and Wisconsin)
(New York, with
They calculated
18.8 percent of women prisoners in
New
to as
York being
the lifetime cost of caring for a single person with
AIDS
to
high as 17
seropositive).
be eighty-five
thousand dollars (thirty-two thousand dollars annually) and the yearly cost of caring
asymptomatic HIV-infected person If
to
be over
five
thousand
the patient were not in prison, he or his family
prisoners have incomes sufficient to
ment
is
to the
fourteen times higher in
federal correctional systems (202 cases per 100,000) than in the population at large
(14.65 cases per 100,000), with 6,985 confirmed
percent
officially
to health care in prisons
do
so.
for
an
dollars.
would have
Although the cost
to
meet
that cost; few
to prisons of providing treat-
generally less than the cost of private health care, the expense
is still great.
Should
The Contemporary Prison
/
25
1
This seventy-three-
year-old inmate
is
Statevilk's oldest prisoner.
With
the
num-
ber oj elderly prisoners
growing, prisons
now
jace the challenge oj providing adequate care for the aged and infirm.
such a cost
fall
on the prison budget?
Federally,
and
in
most
adding up to a very considerable burden on the budget. of a national health insurance program, the of
It is
punishment
states, the
answer has been
yes,
paradoxical that, in the absence
for
crime becomes a prolongation
life.
Tuberculosis link with AIDS.
is
also presenting a
new and difficult problem,
The incidence of tuberculosis
in people with
times that in the general population. Given the extent of ters for
is
nearly five
in prisons
hundred
and jails, the Cen-
Disease Control of the Department of Health estimated that the incidence of tubercu-
among
losis
AIDS
particularly in the light of its
AIDS
incarcerated people in 1985
was more than three times the
rate in the general
population, and with the burgeoning of AIDS in prisons and jails since then, that rate
much
is
now
higher.
A few studies have attempted to calculate the frequency of tuberculosis among the incarNew Jersey it was eleven times higher than in the general population; in the same year in California it was six times higher. In New York priscerated in particular states: in 1987 in
ons, cases of tuberculosis increased from 15.4 to 105.5 per 100,000 in the period from to
1976
1986, with 56 percent of cases occurring in HIV-positive inmates. These are straws in the
wind
of an
impending and grave plague.
In the early 1990s, a virulent
and
difficult-to-treat strain of tuberculosis
with extraordinary speed through the inmate populations of the
and
less swiftly in
other crowded big-city institutions.
With
began
to
New York jails and
spread prisons
tuberculosis, unlike with AIDS,
252
Norval Morris
/
the risk to the institutional staff
York prison system reported
both
is
and appreciated. In November 1991, the
real
that this treatment-resistant condition
had
New
months
in eleven
caused the deaths of thirteen prisoners and one guard.
As we have seen
in earlier chapters, prisons and-jails
have a long history of being breed-
ing grounds for infection. The problem seems to be recurring with renewed intensity, spurred
by AIDS and tuberculosis,
new
a
"gaol fever," as
we approach
the
end of the twentieth
century. In addition, an entirely novel
physicians tionate
—
the problem of aged
number
now
of people
several federal
of
young male
offenders,
and they
and
state prison
and Alzheimer patients
paradox
a dispropor-
numbers
do; but with the increasing
still
systems are facing the
in
are but the
running
most
problem of
incarcerating, in
visible
and challenging groups
that prisons
a geriatric prison-hospital. Geriatric care raises the
does AIDS patient
for the prison administrator as
treatment will be
difficult
number of aged and terminally ill prisoners. AIDS
ues to be punished by imprisonment for his crime, his
and morality
prison administrators and prison
being sent to prison and with the duration of sentences lengthening greatly,
reasonably decent conditions, a substantial
accommodate
now confronts
problem
and infirm prisoners. Prisons have always held
far better
point, as they
than
if
punishment
the
sometimes do,
is
care:
life
will
if
must
same moral
the patient-prisoner contin-
be prolonged and his medical
remitted and he
discharged.
is
Money
in opposite directions.
Health Care in Prison: Psychological In the
world of colonial America, the mentally
were treated
in the
same way
as the
houses, hovels, and the streets today.
was not until
It
the
first
—
ill
who
lacked financial or familial support
poor and the homeless, finding
a condition in
their
which too many of them
way
are
to jails,
still
work-
be found
to
half of the nineteenth century that asylums for the mentally
spread throughout the United States to house and treat those
ill
who could not live safely in the
community.
With tally
ill
the spread of the asylum,
presented distinct problems
dangerous or were thought nal
and held
to
it
came
to
be recognized that certain classes of the men-
—those who,
as well as being mentally
ill,
were physically
be physically dangerous and those who, as well as being crimi-
as prisoners for their crimes,
were
also mentally
ill.
Hence hybrid
institutions,
within the mental health and correctional systems of the state, were established to house and
two categories of the mentally
treat these
our present concern Psychosis
is
But
pear.
It is
it is
more common among those
when both subgroups
two hybrids, the
institution closer to
in the
community
compared with control groups
are
at large.
in mental hospitals than in the
disparities largely,
of the
Likewise,
community
same
sex, age,
though not completely, disap-
therefore an unsafe conclusion that prisoners are disproportionately mentally
an entirely
mentally
these
the psychiatric prison.
and socioeconomic circumstances, those
but
Of
more common among prisoners than
criminal records are at large.
is
ill.
ill
make some
safe
conclusion that
and many who
among
prisoners there will be found
are retarded. Hence, every prison system, federal
provision for a substantial
number
of such prisoners.
And
many who
and
state,
since the
ill,
are
has to
movement
The Contemporary Prison
mentally
facilities to
ill
253
on the prisons and jails
to deinstitutionalize psychiatric hospitals in the 1970s, the pressure for
/
inmates has greatly increased; with the lack of community-based treatment
many such
help those removed from the psychiatric hospitals,
unfortunates have
found their way to prisons and jails.
and
Typically, in each state
in the federal system, there is a section of a prison, or a
separate prison or prisons, set aside for psychiatric serve their prison sentences ill
and
and severely retarded
are released at the
and dangerous, they may, when
end of
their prison terms are served,
or voluntary patients to a state mental hospital, the tests of their tions being the
same
These hybrid they provide. prisons
mentally
be admitted as compulsory
commitment
to
such
institu-
mental hospitals, vary greatly in the quality of care
are excellent; for example, the psychiatric care available at the federal
Butner and Rochester
at
Here they
still
as for the unconvicted.
institutions, the prison
Some
prisoners.
their prison term. If
is
of the highest quality. Others provide
little
more than
secure custody and drug therapy. The reputations and careers of ambitious psychiatrists are
not advanced in such institutions, and few are to be found at
work
in the prison mental
hospitals. State
or
who
others
mental health systems also have to provide
if
violent patients
who
present,
and
to
the patients are at large; hence high-security mental hospitals, or sections of mental
hospitals, are to be justice systems of
found
some
for
are thought to present, a particular danger both to those in the institution
found in every
each
state
unfit to stand trial or
state.
These
facilities also
generally serve the criminal
by holding people who have been charged with crimes and
who
have been found not guilty by reason of insanity. Like the
psychiatric-prison hybrid, the mental hospital-security institution hybrid also tends to pro-
vide a less-curative environment than It is
are seen as citizens;
do other
not surprising that prisoners
who
state
mental hospitals.
are mentally
ill,
and mentally
ill
citizens
who
dangerous or criminal, should receive less-adequate care than do less-stigmatized
but
it is
a regrettable fact that,
er circles of suffering
and
by and
large, these
hybrid institutions provide deep-
less-solicitous care than either the typical
mental hospital or the
typical prison.
The Other Prisoners The "other prisoners"
are, of course, the prison staff.
During
their
working
shifts,
day and
night, they too are within the security perimeter of the prison, subjected to a routine reflect-
ing that of the prisoners. Over the quarter century since the report of the President's Crime
Commission
in 1967, there
have been substantial changes in the composition of the prison
guard force as well as in their working conditions and vocational At the top of the hierarchy of prison administration
is
roles.
the director or superintendent of
prisons or the commissioner of corrections. In most states this functionary
is
appointed by
the governor. These senior administrators of prison systems demonstrate widely differing styles of prison
a
management: some
are closely involved with their staff and inmates, adopting
hands-on approach; others spend the majority of
the legislature
and public-interest groups.
their time outside the prison, relating to
254
Norval Morris
/
At the next
with what
and
ation,
level are the
They supervise
tutions.
known
is
wardens, responsible
as "program"
similar personal
for the supervision of their particular insti-
and administrative
the custodial
— education,
and the
staffs
staff
more concerned
industries, the hospital, counseling, recre-
development programs.
The majority of the prison
staff
work
as security officers. Individual states have different
requirements, but correctional officers must usually be over eighteen or twenty-one years of age and have a high school diploma or the equivalent, although a growing
some
number
also have
college education. Applicants with a history of criminal convictions are automatically
ineligible in
most
has met with criticism. The employment of ex-offenders
states, a policy that
can encourage prison inmates by demonstrating that there are career opportunities available to
them
after their release
and that recidivism is not inevitable.
corrections system should set an example for other public
ex-offenders
who meet
criminal activity.
It is
such
has been argued too that the
officers
would be
by hiring
private employers
and who have diverted
the necessary requirements
also possible that
It
and
better
their lives
equipped
from
to deal
with
prison inmates, by virtue of having once been in the same position.
The number state;
of corrections officers
who
some states have an annual turnover rate
leave their jobs each year differs from state to
of 5 percent, whereas others lose nearly a third
of their officers each year. The average career of a corrections officer lasts about ten years.
The
division
between those responsible
remains in place; but there
is
for security
and those responsible
for
"program"
a larger sense of social purpose, of belonging to a profession
providing a useful social service, than previously obtained. Unionization has played a role in this,
with the guard force developing a voice in the governance of the prison independent of
management. But state, that
a
more
substantial reason has
have been devoted to
and the National
Institute of Corrections
governmental units
for staff training,
been the funds and energies,
every
staff training at
level.
The National
federal
have provided federal funds to the
states
and other
and the American Correctional Association has
played an important part in giving prison
staffs a
and
Institute of Justice
also
sense of belonging to a vocation with stan-
dards and values worthy of respect.
Women now serve as frontline guards in most prisons. than
men to control the prisoners,
that they
Fears that they
would be subjected
disproportionately be the objects of violence have
all
proved
to
be
to rape, false.
would be
and
less able
that they
would
The number of women
prison guards has steadily increased, to the benefit of safety and order in the prisons. Likewise, because affirmative-action
and Hispanic
it
has
come
to
minorities,
what used
to be a
predominantly Caucasian male guard force has
composition. (As an example, the guard force of 866
changed
its
Prisoner
#12345 wrote was made up
371; Hispanic, 30; American Indian,
A
be understood, for reasons of efficiency buttressed by
employment pressures, that the guard force should include African-American
major problem in the prison
as follows:
at Stateville in the
3; others, 14.)
staffing systems of the states is the lack of continuity in
leadership at the commissioner or director level, a problem that stems from too cal interference in the
new commissioner
year that
men, 663; women, 203; whites, 448; blacks,
much politi-
governance of the prisons. Each newly appointed governor selects a
or director of corrections;
when
things go
—
wrong
or are thought by the
The Contemporary Prison
/
255
In recent years, affir-
mative action hiring policies
have rapidly
changed the composition oj prison
forces.
guard
Formerly domi-
nated hy Caucasian males, the guard force at Stateville in the
early
1
990s was nearly
one-quarter female
and nearly one-half African-American and Hispanic.
public to have gone
—
wrong
director, at fault or not,
is
in the administration of the prison system, the
commissioner or
usually sacrificed to the political winds.
Three Emerging Issues Private Prisons In both the state
and the
federal systems, a
new
category of prisons
is
emerging: private
prisons built and sometimes operated by private corporations. There are several variations
among private
prisons.
Some
are simply built
by
private
companies and leased
to the govern-
ment, to be run by the same departments of corrections that currently run publicly owned prisons. Others are built
themselves in what
is,
and run by corporations quick
for the
most
part, a
new
to see
an opportunity to establish
field of enterprise. Still
and owned by governments who employ private companies
other prisons are built
to operate
them.
Certain limited types of privatization within the prison system are not new; for
some
time prison systems have contracted out for specific services such as medical care, counseling,
and education.
Privatization of
and has raised alarm among groups organizations.
whole
facilities,
however,
as diverse as municipal
The delegation by government,
is
new
to the
modern
employee unions and
to private business, of the
power
prison
civil rights
to
imprison
and, necessarily, the power to use force to maintain order, prevent escape, and the like raises
troublesome
legal
and
ethical questions.
Worrisome too
is
the creation of an entire industry
with a pecuniary interest in maintaining, or even increasing, the
number of people
incarcer-
256
Norval Morris
/
ated.
Given the current influence of special
interests over
government decisions, the
possibil-
prison industry lobby could affect important decisions, such as whether to
ity that a private
develop alternatives to imprisonment, seems credible. It is
to the
unclear whether private prisons are the wave T)f the future of corrections. In addition
above concerns, there
is
mixed evidence
promise of less-expensive, more
as to
whether they are
fulfilling their initial
efficient service.
Intermediate Punishments
The problems created by the overcrowding of the prisons sheer expense of supporting so
many prisoners,
increase the imposition of "intermediate punishments."
onment and probation, which broadly body
surgery or an aspirin for every
The commonsense there are
many
punishments;
also, there
1980s and 1990s, and the
To confine punishments
describes current practice,
is
to impris-
like prescribing either
pain.
expansion of intermediate punishments
case for the
in prison
in the
generated political pressure to substantially
is
as follows:
who could safely be punished by community-based intermediate are many on probation who require closer supervision than ordi-
nary probation provides. The near
vacuum between
prison and probation should be
filled
with a range of intermediate punishments.
What, then, are these intermediate punishments, and what are the claims made
for
them?
Intermediate punishments are house arrest, conditions of residence, periodic imprisonment, residential
and nonresidential treatment programs
tronic controls
on movement so
nity service, fines
and
restitution,
that
for
drugs and alcohol, the use of elec-
comprehensive supervision can be achieved, commu-
boot camp, and a wide variety of arrangements
for intensive
probation supervision. Throughout the United States, and more extensively in Europe, there has been extensive experimentation with
where in the United
States have they
all
of these intermediate punishments
—but no-
been institutionalized into a comprehensive and gradu-
ated system of punishments.
Three claims are made
for intermediate
punishments: they will reduce prison crowding;
they will save money; and they will reduce recidivism, thus better protecting the community.
Are these claims valid? In the short run intermediate punishments crowding,
first
tion than from those in prison or those
who
are prison-bound,
criminals sentenced to intermediate punishments will sentences, so that their sentences will be revoked
Will these punishments save
ments are much run
this
is
less expensive.
not
much
reduce
money? Prison
Hence,
it is
fail
and they is
and second because many
to observe the conditions of their will
be sent to prison.
very expensive;
all
intermediate punish-
argued, they will save public money. In the longer
probably true, but in the period of their introduction they will increase correc-
tional costs, since
new
resources have to be provided
rigorously enforced, as they It
will
because of their tendency to draw more clients from those on ordinary proba-
must be
if
if
intermediate punishments are to be
they are to be effective.
remains uncertain whether intermediate punishments will reduce recidivism and bet-
ter protect the
community. So
far,
there are very few methodologically satisfactory studies of
the later conduct of criminals sentenced to intermediate punishments. All that can responsi-
The Contemporary Prison
bly be claimed at present
is
that intermediate
punishments do not appear
257
/
an
to lead to
in-
crease in recidivism rates.
That intermediate punishments have not been shown to be reductive of crime should
come
as
no surprise
—
neither has any other punishment. Neither the lash nor the execu-
tioner, neither the psychiatrist
shown
to provide
nor the psychologist
—and
certainly not the prison
—has been
measurable increments of crime control. Despite the long history of pun-
ishment, scholarship has so
far failed to establish a link
between punishment and crime con-
other than in the individual case.
trol,
Prison as a punishment for crime differs from community-based punishments in this respect:
if
an increasing
rate of
imprisonment
fails
to deter criminality, fails to reduce crime
rates, that very failure will contribute to a public demand, swiftly echoed by politicians, for
more imprisonment and even
still
less
use of community-based punishments. The irony
that the less effective the prisons are in reducing crime, the higher the
imprisonment.
men couldn't
It is
put
"Humpty Dumpty"
the
Humpty
principle:
if all
the kings horses
together again, then, by heavens,
men. Generations of research have
failed to disturb the
demand
we need more
and
still
all
the king's
horses and
commonsensical but
false
increased severity of punishment will produce less crime, that increased reliance
onment
is
to
Much
on impris-
be preferred to other nonincarcerative punishments.
same
the
offenders, like
crime
rates.
analysis applies to treatment
punishment programs, seem
Measurable systemwide
effects
to
programs
as part of the sentencing struc-
have only marginal
effects, if any,
crime
What
rates.
it
means
is
itself
does not serve to
that although system effects are substantial, fine-
tuning that system by using reforms toward severity or leniency has not been
measurable
the case for intermediate punishments as a
effects. So,
crime control
is
swamped beyond
bailout,
violence and, perhaps
of
shown more
to
have
effective
and
and continued
state, are
overwhelmed,
by the criminogenic consequences of an entrenched culture of
more significant, by the
existence of a locked-in underclass, denied the
conditions necessary for a productive and peaceful
class interlocking in a
ation
means
a matter of belief or speculation, not knowledge.
In the United States, the criminal justice systems, federal
minimum
on gross
an inoculum.
This does not mean, of course, that the criminal justice system
down
for adult
have never been shown, either for increased se-
verity as a deterrent or for increased treatment as
hold
more
view that
though the Humpty Dumpty principle does not apply. Treatment programs
ture,
is
more
for
unique way. Booming crime
rates are
life,
with race, ethnicity, and
one important cost of the cre-
toleration of these evil conditions.
Ultimately, the case for intermediate punishments rests not
on
utilitarian
tion
and cost-saving grounds, though both
on
principles of justice. Jus-
tice,
not crime control,
is
are relevant.
It
rests
crime-preven-
the major purpose of sentencing, of distributing punishments.
Crime
control justifies the system; principles of justice should control the imposition of sentences
on convicted
criminals.
Justice requires the creation of a graduated,
comprehensive system of criminal punish-
ments incorporating intermediate punishments, with much the
punishment of choice. Values of proportionality
in
less reliance
on imprisonment
as
punishment, limited by concepts of
258
Norval Morris
/
desert, require a range of
middle range
—lacking
punishments between incarceration and probation. Lacking
a set of
comprehensive, graduated punishments
many
system will inevitably impose
—
that
a criminal justice
sentences that are either too severe or too lenient, too
socially protective or too socially lax.
The
A major impediment to ing
its
Politics oj
Imprisonment
reducing the use of imprisonment in the United States, and to bring-
imposition into accord with that of other developed countries,
having be-
lies in its
come, over the past two decades, the plaything of politics. Being "tough on crime" has become a necessary precondition of election to political office
and of the retention of incumbency.
reform in the early 1960s have been unjustly maligned, and the public
Efforts at social
has been misled by a series of political platforms that
make
unreal promises of effective crime
reduction by means of increased severity of punishment, by capital punishment, by the length-
ening of prison terms, and by
imposed on
all
false
assurances that condign incarcerative punishment will be
criminals.
Wars on crime and wars on drugs
are regularly declared in powerful rhetoric promising
the enemy's surrender. But success never attends these efforts; there armistice. Instead, a
new war is
declared, as
the previous
if
is
no victory and no
war had never taken place
—and
not even the rhetoric changes.
am
I
far
more
skilled at retrospection than prediction; lacking a safety net,
hazard a guess as to
when our political masters will acknowledge
mendacious means
is
a sin against the future. But
it is
The one ing
number
and
by these
it is
political irresponsibility
growth of imprisonment.
potential break in this depressing pattern
of governors
shall not
entirely proper to conclude this over-
view of U.S. prisons of the past quarter century by stressing that that has generated the cancerous
I
that vote gathering
legislatures face
is at
the state level,
where an
increas-
daunting financial dilemmas. Prisons are built
but cannot be opened for lack of funds to run them. Educational budgets are cut to find dollars for prisons. Perhaps the choice
between schools and prisons
will force a
break in the
political rhetoric favoring incarceration.
Bibliographic Note For the numerical data on prisons, jails, and prisoners, see the Sourcebook oj Criminal Justice Statistics, published annually by the Bureau of Justice Sourcebook courts, I
is
a nearly 800-page
and criminals and of
know
of
of organization
Hence
Statistics of the U.S.
Department of Justice. The 1993
compendium of basic statistics on crime and criminal punishments,
federal
and
state criminal justice systems.
no adequate current description
of the "American prison,"
this essay relies generally
is
the diversity
on three decades of my own involvement, to a greater or less degree,
in prison policy decisions in England, Australia, Scandinavia, Japan,
years
and such
and practice in the prisons of the United States that I doubt that one could be written.
my focus has been on the prisons of the U.S.
and the United States. In recent
Bureau of Prisons and on the prisons of the
state
somewhat plagiaristically on some of my own earlier writings, in particular The Habitual Criminal (London: Longmans, Green, 1951) and The Future oj Imprisonment (Chicago: of Illinois.
I
also rely
University of Chicago Press, 1974).
The Contemporary Prison
1
1
chose
Stateville in Illinois as
have been in touch with
its
my paradigm prison for this essay for two reasons:
first,
/
259
because
administration for over two decades and, for three years, served as a
special master for a federal district court in a case involving living conditions in that prison;
second, because of James
B.
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1977), dealing with
and Imprisonment
Perspectives on Prisons
aspects of the prison culture.
The Society oj Captives:
and
Jacobs's superb study, Stateville: The Penitentiary in Mass Society life
in that prison.
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press,
The same author's New 1983) further analyzes
An earlier influential effort to describe that culture
A Study of a Minimum Security Prison
is
Gresham
Sykes's
(Princeton: Princeton University Press,
1958).
Books that provide departure points for consideration of the modern American prison are Blake McKelvey, American
Prisons:
A
History
ojGood
Intentions (Montclair, N.J.: Patterson-Smith, 1977),
Donald Clemmer, ThePrison Community (New York: Rinehart, 1958), Daniel Glaser, The Effectiveness oja Prison and Parole System (Indianapolis: Bobbs-Merrill, 1964), and Gordon Hawkins, The Prison (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1976).
For a history of the federal Bureau of Prisons, see Paul Keve, Prisons and the American Conscience:
A
History of U.S. Federal Corrections (Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1991).
There
is
a long history of articles
and books on prison reform, including authors such as Jeremy
—
Stephen, John Howard, and Montesquieu and the Of recent interest are William Nagel, The New Red Barn: A Critical Look at the Modern American Prison (New York: Walker, 1973), John Irwin, Prisons in Turmoil (Boston: Little, Brown, 1980), and Michael Sherman and Gordon Hawkins, Imprisonment in America: Choosing the Future
Bentham, John Stuart
Mill, Sir James Fitzjames
flow continues.
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1981).
On styles of governance of prisons, see John Dilulio, Governing Prisons: A Comparative Study oj Management (New York: Free Press, 1987). On the impact of imprisonment on crime
Correctional rates, see
oj Crime
Franklin Zimring and
(New York: Oxford
racially disproportionate
Gordon Hawkins,
and
the Restraint
On race and imprisonment, and the effect of
imprisonment on community groups, see Michael Tonry, Malign
(New York: Oxford University bibliographic note many important
Race, Crime, and Punishment in America I
Incapacitation: Penal Confinement
University Press, 1995).
have omitted from
this
imprisonment in the United
Neglect:
Press, 1995).
studies of the history of
States because they are dealt with elsewhere in this
volume.
PART
II
Themes and Variation;
CHAPTER NINE
The Australian Ex PERIENCE The Convict Colony
John Hirst
T
^\
hroughout history convicts have been removed from the society
in
which
they have offended. Sometimes they have been sent into exile, the policy Britain followed in
sending convicts to the American colonies. Sometimes
they have been sent to special penal settlements, like those the French ran
j.
in their colonies of
sent to found the society in
Guiana and
New
which they were
Caledonia. Only once have convicts been
to endure their punishment. This was the
strange beginning of European settlement in Australia.
A
Republic of Convicts
In the late eighteenth century, Great Britain had to find a of convicted criminals. After
no longer send convicts across
it
colony to supply
nance in the
area.
its
is
government began
a matter of dispute.
Some
Why
clear that
it
could
to search for
experts argue that
to
Prime Minister William
the deliberations over the convict colony at Botany Bay
it
was simply
hoped
advance a grand strategy Pitt
and
his
the British decided to colonize
of convicts. Others assert that in addition Britain
navy and merchant vessels and
It is
numbers
independence,
named by English Captain James Cook on
voyage along the eastern coast of Australia in 1770.
kingdom
deal with growing
their
could found a convict colony. In 1786 the cabinet de-
cided on Botany Bay, a harbor discovered and
of ridding the
won
the Atlantic, so the British
another overseas possession where
Botany Bay with convicts
way to
North American colonies
its
a
way
to use the for
domi-
was himself closely involved
that at this time he
in
was preoccu-
pied with plans to check or outmatch the other European powers in the Indian and Pacific
Oceans. Since policymakers had long used convicts to advance trade and settlement within the empire, Pitt
and
his colleagues likely
to dispatch convicts to Australia.
had some such thoughts
in
mind when they decided
That speck of new European settlement was certainly made
the occasion for a large territorial claim: the eastern third of the continent,
South Wales, and the adjacent islands of the Britain
number
Pacific
adopted the plan of sending convicts
of alternatives.
One
of these
was
known
as
New
to Australia after first
chores during their free time. Ignoring official
requirements that convicts labor from sunrise to sunset,
examining and rejecting a
outlined in
modern form by
overseers
often dismissed their
charges in the late afternoon, thus allowing the prisoners to take on
work for wages. From
Two
Ocean.
the penitentiary,
Australian convicts per-
forming household
Years in
New
South Wales by P. Cunningham (1828, reprinted 1966).
264
John Hirst
/
Howard
English penal reformer John
posed
new kind
a
in his
1777
Howard
treatise, State of the Prisons.
which convicts would
of prison, in
punishment according
receive
pro-
to the
seriousness of their crimes. In his plan, prisoners werejo be classified by their crimes, kept in
and put
cells,
work under
to
Parliament accepted the penitentiary idea in
strict discipline.
principle, passing the Penitentiary Act in 1779. But because of the
required, the penitentiaries were not built. Transportation tive
—
huge
initial
expenditure
more appealing
a far
alterna-
not only was cheap but also promised to reduce crime by the simple expedient of
it
removing criminals. The government began might be
One
to look for a
new
location to
which convicts
sent.
option that advanced
far
enough
an island in the Gambia River in West to form, as
it
officers
cultivating the land, a pursuit in
Those who acquired British
to receive cabinet
approval was to send convicts to
where they would be
Africa,
left to
their
own
devices
were, a convict republic. Convicts would be encouraged to elect a chief,
would appoint subordinate
The
was
large estates
and maintain law and order. They were
which
would undoubtedly do
a few
would become
who
to survive
by
better than the rest.
the employers of convicts
who arrived later.
government would have no involvement with the operation of the colony, other
than supplying
it
with the resources
it
needed
to get started
and posting
a ship at the
mouth
of the river to prevent escape.
This scheme, abandoned after a House of Commons committee reported that the climate
was too unhealthy, shows how transportation was conceived authorities
had no
according to the nature of their offenses. In the
power over the crime. nals
The
rest
as a
punishment. Clearly, the
new society who ended up with
interest in assigning convicts to different positions in this
would undoubtedly be not
British ministers believed the
and exposing them
free-for-all, the convicts
the timid
first
offenders but those hardened in
scheme would punish
to the uncertainties
sufficiently
by exiling crimi-
and dangers of the wilderness. Their
attitude
drove Jeremy Bentham, the leading English penal reformer of the time, to despair. He could not understand offer certainty
how
ministers
and gradation
who had shown some
in
lack of discrimination were essential features.
a
few
it
turned out, these minimal government
be involved in
this
anomalous
Australians
commonly envision
Gambian
society; in
case the British government
New South Wales it
the
entailed.
more ordinary colony. The
reverse
is
closer to the
New South Wales started as a colony peopled by convicts and ex-convicts whose gov-
ernors were preoccupied with ensuring the survival of the colony and enhancing
Then
was not
government became
the early British outpost in Australia as a prison or penal
settlement that gradually developed into a truth.
life.
structures did not prevent the development
complicit in the moral topsy-turvydom that
fully
damn the project. own devices in Australia. A governor,
and a detachment of marines would oversee convict
of something like a republic of convicts. In the itself to
which could
which uncertainty and
leave the convicts to their
officers of civil administration,
But as
to a plan in
When the government finally settled on Botany
Bay, he immediately began to collect information to
The government did not
interest in penitentiaries,
punishment, could turn
the British
government belatedly attempted
to transform the
penal settlement, where penal principles determined convicts'
its
growth.
colony into a conventional
fates.
The Australian Experience
265
/
Peopling the Colony
Opinion on
Australia's
time. After the British
founding population, the convicts, has changed over the course of
government abandoned transportation
Australians themselves
came
to share the world's
New
to
South Wales
in 1840,
view of the practice as shameful. This out-
many
to
lump
and preferring not
to
speak of them. In the early twentieth century, however, a nationalist
look caused
the convicts into a single category,
assuming the worst of them
reaction against this self-abasement caused Australians to depict the convicts as innocent
victims of an unjust, hierarchical British society lar
and a draconian
law. This remains the
popu-
view, but since the 1950s comprehensive studies of the records have shown that most
convicts were ordinary criminals reaction to this view. a separate
range of
and
They
colony.
support of
cite in
this
no
rant for the claim in Convict Workers that there were
world. Finally, variety must be accepted:
who were close
to
a great
work
British
gives
no war-
regular criminals or a criminal under-
among the convicts were professional London thieves, employed
ne'er-do-wells in and out of work, skilled workers regularly
country laborers
were not
brought
view recent British research that
and casual nature of most crime, though the
highlights the petty
that the convicts
men and women who
group but were ordinary working-class
skills to the
been an academic
ne'er-do-wells. Recently there has
The authors of Convict Workers have argued
being innocent victims.
in their trade,
Statistical analysis of the
and
convict
records establishes that convicts were generally young and convicted of offenses against property; that
they came disproportionately from the towns and
convicted of a previous offense; and that nearly sprinkling of educated and professional people.
cities; that
came from
all
over half had been
the lower classes, with only a
The nonconvict marines and
who
civilians
oversaw the convicts became well aware of the variations and knew that an individual convict's usefulness
and
tractability
were not closely related
and frequency of
to the nature
his crimes.
In sail for
1787 the
of eleven British ships, carrying
first fleet
Botany Bay under the
command
remarkably healthy, due chiefly to the care taken by the ships be brought to first-class condition
During the voyage he allowed convicts food
at
750 convicts and 250 marines,
Navy Captain Arthur
of
Phillip. Before
set
The voyage was
Phillip.
he sailed he insisted that
and amply supplied with food and medicine.
to exercise
on deck and provided them with
every port of call. There were only 32 deaths before the
fleet
reached
its
fresh
destination
on
January 26, 1788.
By
contrast, the
voyage of the second
deaths, a rate of 25 percent.
The
disaster
fleet in
1790 was horrendous: there were 267
prompted
official efforts to
improve conditions
aboard the convict ships. This was achieved not through legislation but through a number of administrative devices adopted during the next thirty years.
recommended by Jeremy Bentham rectly
Bentham did have an influence on
strictures against
it
as a system of
Britain started paying
its
Thus
sort
indi-
the administration of transportation even while his
punishment were being ignored.
shipping contractors according to the
reached the colony
alive,
were appointed
each ship, and captains were
to
The devices used were of the
in his other role, as administrative reformer.
giving gratuities to captains
number of convicts who
who ran healthy ships.
made
subject to
them
Naval surgeons
in matters of the
— 266
/
John Hirst
were forbidden
convicts' health. Captains
engage in private trade or to carry cargo. With
to
these measures, the convict ships were rendered remarkably safe
dangerous
to travel to Australia as a convict than to sail to the
1815 the death
rate
was
less
than
1
percent,
compared with an average
the eighteenth-century convict voyages to the Australia
was
as
bad
as the worst to America,
objections to transportation
—
and healthy;
American
when
it
was
less
United States as a migrant. After
colonies.
rate of
10 percent on
Not one of the voyages
nearly half died.
to
Thus one of Bentham's
and uncertainty of convict voyages
the supposed dangers
rang hollow in light of the government's success.
were sent
Overall, 187,000 convicts
to Australia, nearly all of
them
1788 and 1815, long wars with France forced Britain to sharply curtail were more often pressed into service
convicts. Instead, convicts
work on
the docks.
Wales each
when
1830s,
in
1815 boosted
number
that
program did not produce
majority of the population. Their children were
to
New
transportation of
armed
to
forces or into to
New
South
2,000-3,000 annually; in the
transportation peaked, an average of 5,000 convicts arrived in the colony each
year. Nevertheless, the British
sponsored
its
During the wars only a few hundred convicts were sent
The peace
year.
in the
1815. Between
after
a large-scale migration of free
a society in
free,
working people
which convicts were the
and from 1831 the government to Australia.
When
transportation
South Wales ceased in 1840, convicts and ex-convicts composed one-third of the
population.
Founding the Colony Soon
he reached Botany Bay in 1788, Phillip discovered Sydney Harbor a few miles to
after
the north.
He
fixed the site of the
now stands. The
new settlement there, on the
spot where
downtown Sydney
marines immediately made clear that they were nonpersons in the internal
government of the new settlement. They would repel invasion and put down they would not supervise the for their
own encampment,
work
of the convicts.
the marines
ernor Phillip accordingly had to find
The
supervisors' reward at
one or two convicts
first
for their
others allowed the convicts ings. Since
it
was
difficult
settlement, the colony's law, architecture,
all
would not involve themselves his overseers
was freedom from
rebellion, but
Even when the ground was being cleared
toil.
in the operation.
Gov-
from among the ranks of the convicts. Later they were paid by being allotted
own use. Some employed these convicts in businesses they ran; to work on their own account and took a portion of their earn-
and expensive
government
also
to attract
drew on
nonconvict professional people
to the
skilled convicts for services in medicine,
and surveying. Overseers, superintendents, and professional people were
further encouraged to
good
Since the marines took
service
by the granting or promise of pardons.
no interest in
also recruited convicts for the colony's
the maintenance of law
first
police force.
When
and order, Governor the convict police
Phillip
came
exercise civil authority not only over their fellows but over the marines as well, the
normal standards he was
manding
officer of the
right: the
marines were already subject to a discipline that derived from a
marines protested strongly. By
all
much
to
comin the
higher au-
thority than that of the governor's police. Nevertheless Phillip, forced to follow the logic of a
convict republic, backed his police and sent the marines' of Norfolk Island, fifteen
commander
to the
remote outpost
hundred miles away. Convicts and ex-convicts thus remained the
mainstay of the colony's police force for the whole period of transportation.
The Australian Experience
composed
Since convicts
three-quarters of the original population of
/
267
New South Wales,
they were given legal rights denied to convicts in Britain. They could give evidence in court, for
without
it
known. This
most proceedings and transactions
was important
right
give evidence in court against their overseers
and sue first
own
case in the civil court of
welfare, because
and masters. Convicts could
to protect these possessions, the chief threat to
ship by two convicts
colony could not have been
in the
to the convicts'
on the way
lost
officially
allowed them to
also
own property
which came from other convicts. The
New South Wales was brought against
whose luggage was
it
the master of a transport
to the colony. In Britain, convicts
could not sue, but they could be sued; their status as convicts could not be allowed to shield
them from
victs, since a
to
The governors of the new colony sought
the law.
work. As a
result,
convicts, of course,
it
was
a penalty that convicts
wanted
jettisoned their interests to
None initially
nonpayment
convict sent to jail (for the
to abridge the right to sue con-
of a debt, for example)
was not available
might seek. Shopkeepers who supplied the
to retain the right to sue
them, and
it
took time before the court
accommodate those of the governors. would have been necessary had
of these convict rights
intended, as a military government.
then have prevailed, and any concessions
the colony been run, as
A much more summary
made
to convicts
was
form of justice would
would not have borne
the full
implication of rights under English law. Instead, in the later stages of planning for the colony, the British
was
government had provided
to be presided over
for a civilian court, albeit in a military form.
by a judge-advocate,
consist of six military or naval officers, ity vote.
However,
practice. Convicts
who was
who, with
and
its
the judge, determined verdicts
This court
jury was to
by
a major-
in actuality the civilian court of the colony strictly followed English legal
charged with serious crimes appeared before
before the courts established later, as innocents of proof
a military officer,
was high, and
acquittals
whose
guilt
had
it,
to
and even more securely be proved. The standard
were common. (For minor crimes and offenses against the
labor code, convicts appeared before a court of petty sessions; as in England, this court
composed
was
of unpaid magistrates.)
of a civilian court was likely the work of the British Home Secretary Lord who otherwise did not play a prominent part in planning the settlement that came to
The provision Sydney,
bear his name. In refusing to subject convicts to some unusual and arbitrary authority, Sydney
expressed a to
work on
common British misgiving. the roads of the
would be outraged by such
Ministers
kingdom always had a
scheme.
who contemplated acknowledge
to
putting excess convicts
that British public opinion
A free-born Englishman might be
hanged and flogged,
but he could not be worked in chains by some tyrannical overseer. The application of the
normal processes of English law
to convicts in
New South Wales shows how far from general
acceptance was the delegated, institutional authority envisioned for the penitentiary by Bentham
and other reformers. Building the Colony's
The
own
original plan for feeding the convicts
Economy
was deceptively simple: convicts would grow
their
food on public farms, and ex-convicts would be given small land grants so that they
could become a
self-sufficient peasantry. In practice,
his public farms productive.
Governor Phillip had great trouble making
Not only did he operate
in
an alien climate, but he also had
contend with reluctant laborers and overseers with no experience or
interest in the
to
work.
268
/
John Hirst
Even the
threat of famine could not motivate the convict workers,
and starvation was averted
only by the arrival of new shipments of food from England and deliveries arranged by Phillip
from Cape Colony (South Africa) and Batavia (Djakarta, Indonesia).
When Phillip left New South Wales two
years, into the
in 1792, the
hands of the military
government of the colony
officers of the
New
for over
fell,
South Wales Corps, which
re-
placed the marines early that year. The officers abandoned public farming and redirected the convicts to private farms that the
prospered; for the the government
The
first
still
the
members
of the corps just before
time, the colony approached self-sufficiency in grain production. But
used the
store in turn purchased
the treasury in
Crown had granted to
hands and with interested supervision, Australian agriculture
Phillip's departure. In private
who worked
feed the convicts
official store to
for the officers.
supply of grain from the officer-farmers with
its
London. Thus, as
bills
originally planned, the convicts ate food they
on
issued
had grown
themselves, but in the process military officers milked huge profits from the British taxpayer.
The
government did not allow such a
British
two-year interregnum of the
on the public funds
raid
to continue,
but the
New South Wales Corps set the colony on a social and economic
course that was never reversed.
The
was
result of the corps' profiteering
first
that the treasury bills gave the officers the
wherewithal to begin overseas trade. Producing no product feed
itself,
the colony
now had
for export
The rum became
the officers imported tea, sugar, tobacco, and most notably rum. a sort of internal currency, for
and only just able
to
funds in sterling courtesy of the British taxpayer. With these
it
was
inducement
the best
for a time
to get labor out of convicts.
From
these beginnings the officer-merchants diversified, securing their economic position by de-
veloping products for export: sealskins, sandalwood, whale
The second
result of the corps'
interregnum was that
oil,
and from the 1830s on, wool.
officers started
assistants in their trading enterprises. Convicts ran the officers'
would not
sacrifice their dignity
by engaging
in business.
convicts used their newly minted skills to set their patrons.
Within twenty
On gaining freedom, some of these
up businesses themselves; some even
years, the richest people in the colony
chants and bankers. Beneath them in the colony's
economy was
a
—
Former
farm
a thirty-acre
more than matched by that into land.
—
The success of
same terms given
half the convicts in
New
to those
who came
on
their
to the
that old convicts
government by a
would employ new which ended
series of civilian governors.
for private employers. after a struggle,
and
all
free.
arrivals
—was
in 1794,
to
Approximately
South Wales had ex-convict masters a quarter-century
After the officers' interregnum,
was
unquestioned right
colony
founding of the colony. Thus, the British government's original scheme
—
for
and tradesmen, a few of whom bought
ex-convict businessmen rested
convict labor on the
settlement
provided
large landed estates, but their wealth
of the ex-convict merchants
all
officially
provided a precarious living for a minority.
and gentlemen migrants held
officers
eclipsed
were ex-convict mer-
wide array of ex-convict
shopkeepers, publicans, and tradesmen. The economic resource ex-convicts
using convicts as
shops so that the gentlemen
for the
after the
Gambia River
realized in Australia.
New
South Wales returned
to
From then on, a majority of the convicts worked
The ploy of feeding the convicts from the government employers became responsible
for feeding
By the time of Governor Lachlan Macquarie (1810-22), convicts
store
was halted
and clothing their convicts. in private service
were also
— The Australian Experience
269
/
An
engraving of
Samuel Terry, one oj the
many
ex-convicts
who amassed fortunes in
New
South Wales.
This illustration, which
appeared
in
a libelous
anonymous biography published after Terry's death, depicts
him
in
the dress of a gentle-
man;
his wife,
mean-
while, wears a menial's
clothing to save money.
From The History of Samuel Terry in Botany Bay (1838).
paid a wage by their employers. This wage originated in a right claimed by convicts in the
days
at
Sydney. Convict overseers, ignoring the
official
first
requirement that convicts work from
sunrise to sunset, assigned their charges taskwork of such a fixed nature that the convicts
could finish the work by early afternoon. The convicts came to expect afternoon "their
own
time," as they put
tem, though
on
did manage to
it
extra work, for
it
—and
shift
the
government was
knock-off time to 3
which they were
finally
p.m. In the
if
to find
it.
p.m.,
into private service.
they had to be paid.
The
If
the
any extra work, the convict could go elsewhere in the afternoon
Eventually Governor Macquarie ruled, as part of his policy to establish better order
and decency,
that in private service, the division of the
ingly notional as
more convicts worked
Convicts were to serve one master
full
receive an annual wage. Private masters
same
afternoons the convicts took
moved
they worked for their master after 3
convict's master did not have
time
paid.
This arrangement continued after most of the convicts
understanding was that
free
obliged to accept this sys-
rations as
were issued
for their
time,
day (which was becoming increas-
own master in
and
were also required
to convicts in
the afternoon) should cease.
in return for rights foregone they
government
to
were
to
supply their servants with the
service.
From
their wages, convicts
could buy luxury items such as tea and sugar, which were not part of the standard flour-and-meat ration. Formerly these luxuries had been purchased out of their extra earnings.
Regulating the Colony's Citizens
Even though most convicts worked of the government. In America, the
the merchants
who had
for private masters, they
government had taken no
remained the responsibility interest in the convicts at
all:
shipped them across the Atlantic had simply sold them to private
masters for the term of their sentence. The
fate
of convicts in the
American colonies had
270
/
John Hirst
depended on
the
whim of masters and on the weak protection of the local courts. But in New to know where the convicts were and whether
South Wales, the government at a minimum had
On
they were alive or dead.
had the
During
on convicts only by order of the
inflicted
him
to the
same court
their
confinement extra punishment could be
court; masters
were prohibited from
that
heard the complaints of convicts against masters.
The Australian prohibition on
private
punishment of convicts
surprising. In
is
masters had beaten convicts, and in Britain corporal punishment was
household
its
Governor King pursued the
officer
same time King,
was
control.
and unashamedly beat
through the military and
As convicts
The reason
for this
which doused
and the prohibition
was arguing with the
the colony in rum.
clearly part of a larger trial of strength.
his convict servants.
civil courts,
like the other early governors,
officers over their trading activities,
servants
its
an incident from the tenure of Governor Philip King (1800-1806). Despite
the stricture, a certain military officer regularly
held. At the
America
a central part of
subjects only through the courts.
passed into private hands, the government did not relinquish clear in
still
were in the hands of the govern-
discipline. But in Australia at first all convicts
ment, and the government could control
becomes
inflicting cor-
A master who had a complaint against a convict laborer had to
poral punishment themselves. take
matters concerning their detention and release the convicts
all
right to petition the governor.
Lowly convicts,
The
military
case of the beaten
turns out, were pro-
it
Crown in order to clip the wings of overweening subjects. The Crown also reserved the right to take convicts away from masters,
tected by the
tion against practice
on
ill
treatment. In the 1820s the
the grounds that
it
New South Wales Supreme
the ultimate sanc-
Court overturned
threatened the right to private property, since
removed, land would be worthless. But both the
British Parliament
and
if
this
convicts were
British
law
officers
overruled the colonial court, concluding that the necessity of public responsibility for convicts
outweighed private
victs
would eventually allow
interests. it
The
dominion over con-
colonial government's ultimate
to establish closer control of
them
in the
second phase of the
colony's history.
Besides overseeing the use of convicts by private employers, the government of
South Wales always kept some convicts in in
its
own
hands.
A number of these were
government administration and on public works; others were under punishment
ing penal settlements for crimes committed in the colony. Since fed, the
government
produced by both
store
free
and ex-convict
settlers.
from the
For governors
convicts in government hands
new
Those
who
at outly-
had for
to
be
goods
did business with the government
British treasury.
The most pressing requirement placed on
flow of
these convicts
remained in business, serving as an important market
store thus enjoyed a subsidy
in public expenditure.
all
New
employed
the local government by Britain
after Phillip, this
was economy
meant minimizing the number of
and maximizing the number
in private service. But
when
the
convicts to the colony exceeded what the private economy could absorb, the
government was obliged
to take direct responsibility for the excess.
To
ease
government ex-
penditure, Governor King introduced a device that was to have a long history in penal practice:
the ticket-of- leave.
living while
Under
this dispensation, convicts
remaining convicts, but they were
liable to
were allowed
to
make
their
be recalled to bond labor
if
own they
The Australian Experience
271
/
offended again. So effective was this threat that ticket-of-leave convicts became renowned for their steadiness. In
early days, the ticket
its
was given not on the
basis of
good behavior or
time already served but according to the convict's chance of supporting himself by wages, business, or landholding.
It
was, in short, a reward for enterprise and
who
given to gentlemen convicts
money
arrived with
or letters of
skill.
Tickets were also
recommendation from
home. In
1812 the
British
government
New
convicts were set free in
expressed misgivings about the readiness with which
first
South Wales.
A
committee of the House of Commons,
select
charged with examining the transportation system, expressed surprise
dons granted, especially
to convicts
who
received
of state for colonies accepted the committee's
should
rest in
them on
number
at the
arrival in Australia.
recommendation
The
of par-
secretary
on pardons
that the final say
London. Both the committee and the minister thought pardons were debased
unless distributed carefully, to those
who had shown
clear signs of reformation.
Governor Macquarie was very disturbed at the prospect of being reduced
to
recommending
pardons instead of granting them. He pleaded to keep his power, promising in return abide by
new
tickets-of-leave.
own
regulations.
He
this proposal. In practice,
still felt
performed special duties or
to impress the secretary of state,
however, Macquarie frequently broke
obliged to give pardons and tickets-of-leave to those
who brought
offenders to justice,
no matter how
little
had served. And of course, the claims of gentlemen could not be overlooked. For
own
the convicts put their
right to receive a ticket-of-leave as
soon
of convicts
and
regulations: they
had served
as they
In his pragmatic approach to pardons of a republic of convicts.
on the new
interpretation
their
tickets-of-leave,
who
time they their part,
assumed they had
minimum
a
term.
Macquarie embraced the logic
He saw the colony's prosperity as due overwhelmingly to
and ex-convicts, and he considered
to
periods of eligibility for pardons and
Macquarie himself drew up these regulations
and the minister accepted his
minimum
regulations that set
that the colony
the efforts
belonged to them. Although
he wanted a well-ordered society, he did not want that order to deny any position to an ex-convict. Free migrants
who
did not like
he believed, should not come to
this,
New South
Wales. In pursuit of these views, he appointed three ex-convicts as magistrates, invited them to his table at
Government House, and expected
The ascent of ex-convicts absurdity forecast by vice
is virtue,
London
virtue vice,
Free gentlemen in
the free gentlemen to treat
them
as equals.
to the seat of justice represented the full realization of the
/
wits
And
New
when
Britain
all that's vile is
South Wales
first
founded
its
moral
colony of thieves: "There
voted nice."
bitterly resented the forced social contact
ex-convicts, though in business they associated with
them
with
quite willingly. Historians usually
take the part of the ex-convicts in this regard, deploring the exclusiveness and, as they see
the hypocrisy of the free gentlemen.
What
the historians overlook
been placed on ex-convict enterprise, because
free
is
that
no
strictures
it,
had
gentlemen had been confident, until
Macquarie's move, that an untainted reputation before the law would ensure their superiority over any ex-convict, no matter
how
Macquarie's policy; in
action
fact, his
wealthy.
The
was one of
Britain to take stock of the social oddity
it
had
British Colonial Office
was dismayed
several considerations that
created.
at
soon forced
211
I
John Hirst
Male Freedom and Female Confinement For the colony's
an
first
thirty years of existence
institutional regime of
ments owned
chiefly
properties there
convicts lived
no convict was subject
confinement or punishment. Those
by ex-convicts worked,
ate,
and drank with
anything approaching
to
who
lived in small establish-
On
their masters.
larger
was an orderly routine and a stricter work discipline, but after working hours
away from
rough huts, where they cooked
their masters in
own
their
food. In
wool industry, which became the colony's prime means of support, convict shepherds
the
and stockmen were scattered throughout the country,
and working away from
living
their
masters and subject to only intermittent surveillance. Similarly, convicts
employed as domestic servants in Sydney and
slept outside their master's
the other
house in a detached kitchen. Although servants
them
the servants were often convicted robbers, so security lay in keeping
who worked time after 3
for the
p.m.,
government
in the
for
outside. Convicts
visit
for the
the
most freedom and the most opportunity
government
in Sydney.
To prevent them from roving
abuse
to
it
were those
freely after 3 p.m.,
ernor Macquarie had his convict architect construct a large barracks to house them.
May 1819 and
term "barracks"
still
is
one of the
stands,
significant:
though
the features of the penitentiary. classification,
On
Its large,
left
first
The standard punishment was
to
South Wales from the beginning, in a
roam
the
town
for the
to
special difficulty to the governors: there
Domestic service was almost the
for her.
was
little
convicts' chief
institutional
at
purposes
been sent
to every six males.
purpose was to serve
regime there was no bar to in this matter
demand
for
open
them
service
the
from
to female convicts,
women were left in
men. Apparently, masters a female
to
as workers.
and
in this
the government's hands.
that female convicts disrupted their households, declared
more depraved than
was
woman convict into the control or single, the women presented a
free a
Married
sole occupation
they so seldom gave satisfaction that numerous
prompt and cheerful
women
much preferred to
remain responsible
who found
Women had
about one female
The only intervention of government
encourage marriage, since governors
husband than
be closely confined.
men. In the absence of an
sexual intercourse in the colony.
convicts
to convict
a flogging in
work around town, returning
free to
ratio of
the standpoint of the British government,
Employers,
did not have any of
play.
as sexual partners for the
of a
it
open sleeping rooms paid no attention cells.
Gov-
opened
It
Georgian Sydney. Macquarie's use of the
a residence for prisoners,
the barracks each day to
was female convicts who were the
New
From
glories of
was
Saturday and Sunday, however, they were
work or It
it
and there were no separate
the barracks yard. Convicts night.
to
pubs and
drunkenness and absenteeism.
The convicts with
of
their free
they earned enough to pay for rooms in private houses. The absence of strict
grogshops. Approximately a quarter of the court-imposed floggings they received were
working
in
slept
South Wales
towns were not provided with housing. In
supervision gave the convicts ample opportunity to mix with each other and to illicit
London
New
house to provide added security against robbers, in
inside their master's
towns usually
in
women
failed to see that in expecting
maid or cook, they asked more than they did of
most men, who worked out of doors and away from the master's
eye.
Female convicts
in
The Australian Experience
273
/
A
convict
work gang
assembling outside (he Convict Barracks, in Sidney. Lithograph by
Augustus Earle, 1830.
private
employment could not
Since the
women were
King established second town sleep
on
eat
was thus
under
their
them
in a
room above
head of Sydney Harbor. There was
the premises, so
own roof or wander after hours and
form of prison.
a
unwilling to undertake such confining work, in 1804 Governor
a cloth factory for
at the
and
sleep
take extra work. Domestic service
some women lodged
the
jail at
insufficient
outside.
Parramatta, the colony's
room
for all the
inmates to
Most cohabited with men or raised
funds to pay rent through prostitution. These solutions to the housing problem were equally
immoral
Reverend Samuel Marsden. Largely
in the eyes of Parramatta's evangelical parson, the
because of his lobbying
among his English patrons the colony's government was pressured to
prevent immorality.
solution
The built a
Its
isolation of the
new
factory that
was
to confine the
women was
would sometimes be
committed offenses were sent here, factory, convict classification
women
even more
strictly.
when Governor Macquarie Female Penitentiary. Women who
not achieved until 1821,
as
called the
were those without
appeared
for the first time
a steady
work assignment.
on Australian
soil.
In the
Women
were
separated into three classes, distinguished from each other by differences in diet, dress, and
indulgences awarded. In the third, or penal, class were of the local courts.
If
women newly sent there by sentence
they behaved, they then progressed through the second class to the
from which they were
eligible for
assignment to outside work. Also in the
first
class
first,
were
women convicts newly transported to New South Wales who were awaiting their first assignment, women between assignments, and women who had become pregnant. Inside the walled institution, the class
inmates were cut off from outside society except that members of the
could go out to church and receive
Six cells their fellows
were provided
would be
for
punishment within the factory
a satisfactory
first
visitors.
punishment
in
for incorrigible
hopes that isolation from
women. Simple
confine-
274
John Hirst
/
many seemed to court return when on assignment outside. Women had seldom been flogged in the colony, and
merit to the factory did not appear to have the desired effect, for to its walls
1817 operated
the prohibition of the practice in Britain in
women convicts of New South Wales were isolation, in
which
the
British prison reformers
first"
in the colony. In the factory, the
to experience the
had such
punishment of cellular
faith.
The Critique of Transportation
From
its
beginnings, the British practice of convict transportation had
Bentham was
the
most
and he established the arguments
persistent,
used against the system
until
it
was abandoned. Just
its critics.
Jeremy
that the penal reformers
as the plan to
send convicts
to
New
South Wales was being adopted, he developed his version of the penitentiary. Bentham called it
the panopticon because the cells were to radiate
"all-seeing" supervisor
around
from which an
a central point
would monitor them. Even while plans
for transportation
went
for-
ward, he offered to run such an institution for the government, since he was sure he could
make
from the prisoners'
a profit
became At
first,
the founding of
New
Bentham's panopticon. William at
labor.
To keep
on
attention focused
his scheme,
Bentham
a fierce critic of the convict colony.
Pitt,
South Wales did not appear
to threaten the future of
the prime minister, inspected a
model of the panopticon
Bentham's house and authorized him to proceed with construction, with the understand-
ing that
on
all
Bentham would run the
the sites
institution.
Bentham proposed, so
frustration the scheme, shuffled
panopticon plan was that
Bentham was
finally
the
But the project met opposition from landholders
government dragged
To Bentham's
its feet.
discarded in 1820, after a long quarrel over the compensation
to receive in return for the
money he had
spent.
At one stage in these tortuous negotiations, Bentham was told that Britain had for the
panopticon because of improvements in
to write a
pamphlet, "Panopticon versus
and unable
to deter
New South Wales.
New South Wales," in
Bentham's arguments against transportation: inflicted, unlikely to
infinite
between departments, was delayed and thwarted. The
it
was
less
him
1802. The pamphlet outlined
costly, uncertain in the
punishment
reform because those employing convicts were interested solely in
because punishment took place
need
This news prompted
at a distance. In
it
profit,
New South Wales, Bentham
claimed, transportation had reached unprecedented lows, for convicts sent there did not enter established, moral communities as they nies. In
selves,
New
and they
to thieving
was
and
appalling.
set the
tone of the whole society.
to the
American colo-
dissipation.
Even the worst
under sentence, the colony thing under the
name
Bentham was
of
It
was
in fact a society of thieves
committed
The colony was awash with rum, and the calendar of new crimes jails,
even the hulks, could claim
mates from committing further major crime.
On the
failed completely: "I
punishment bearing the
test
at least to
prevent their in-
of the incapacitation of the criminal
question whether the world ever saw anyleast
resemblance to
it."
a close student of the colony, so he did have evidence for the particular
What he missed was the movement of ex-convicts into made them as firm supporters of law and work discithose who had come to the colony freely. This transformation explains why disorder
outrages and crimes he reported.
business and property holding, which pline as
had when transported
South Wales, convicts were under the charge of people no better than them-
Visions from Prison Ihe
art
on
this
and the following pages was produced in the
early
the California State Prison System's Arts in Corrections program.
1990s by inmates in
Founded
in 1980, Arts
in Corrections brings prisoners together with professional artists for instruction in the
visual arts, dance,
program
Lester Slusher,
is
and
theater. In addition to offering a creative outlet for inmates, the
intended as a vehicle for more effective rehabilitation.
Three Amigos (1992),
acrylic
on canvas panel, 24" x 30"
Lester Slusher,
Good News/Bad News
(1992), acrylic on canvas, 24"
x 30"
Timothy Lyons, Untitled (1994),monoprint,
Lester Slusher,
Count
(1993),
mixed media, 16" x 14" x 2"
U"x20"
Ejren Avalos, La Abuelita (1994), pastel, 18" x 12"
Ronnie Goodman, The Life (1995),
oil
pastel 19" x 13"
Frank Schennch, Untitled (1995), monoprint, 11" x 14"
iiiift
i#r
':
Louise Richardson, They're
Watching You
(1994), monoprint, 13" x 10"
Stephen Salovitz, Heart
Time
(1994), acrylic on canvas, 16" x20"
Anthony Arroz, Out of Chains (1994), ink/oil pastel, 26" x 30"
ry*. 4 /;T1V
v
" ,
IM F
Roy Cortez, In
My House
«
(1993), acrylic on canvas, 14" x
W
The Australian Experience
never crippled the convict colony and kitchen.
Bentham was
superior to transportation to
New
sion of the
finement. In
why
New
was not
nomic
clearly
been
it
more amenable
potentially
to control
and
re-
the whole enterprise of founding a convict colony signaled the growth in
Bentham recorded
as
that of a thieves'
American colonies had
government capacity and reach, of which Bentham was a prophet and
Even
275
South Wales. However, ongoing governmental supervi-
South Wales scheme made
fact,
the prevailing tone
certain that transportation to the
/
his complaints, the colony
instructor.
was well launched toward eco-
success. Soon, however, others noticed the prosperity of ex-convicts, supplying fur-
ther ammunition to critics
who asked how transportation could be a deterrent when ex-convicts
accumulated fortunes.
During the Napoleonic Wars few convicts were sent
ernment had
trouble in staving off criticisms of
little
its
to
New South Wales, With
convict colony.
and the gov-
the
end of the
wars in 1815 and the onset of economic depression, crime in Britain increased, and the number of transported convicts rose rapidly. The increasing numbers
could not
all
rose, to the
alarm of the treasury. The
Home
Office,
badgered the Colonial Office to make the convicts' Radicals,
now
sent to the colony
be employed privately, so government expenditure on convict maintenance
worried about the English crime wave,
lot
more
painful.
and law reformers belabored the government over
its
An assortment of Whigs,
convict colony and
its
appar-
ent failure to deter crime in Britain.
To
1818 the
set all this criticism to rest, in
Bigge as a commissioner of inquiry into
pared victs.
its
British
government appointed John Thomas
convict colony.
The government was now
pre-
colony was not an appropriate place for the punishment of con-
to consider that the
Bigge was charged by the colonial secretary to inquire whether a system of "general
discipline, constant
work and
vigilant superintendence"
represented a distinct advance for the
language of
its critics
to describe a
new penology
—
could be created in the colony. This the government
was now using the
proper punishment.
Transportation had been an effective punishment at
first,
asserted the British colonial
secretary, because
New South Wales had been distant, foreign, and unfathomable; now trans-
portation had lost
its
way
terrors because the early reports of
to tales of general prosperity
hunger and wretchedness had given
and outstanding individual success. Some convicts were
now asking to be sent to New South Wales. But the minister deluded himself when he claimed there had been a time when New South Wales was actually administered with the aim of punishing convicts and deterring potential criminals. He believed
strict
regulations
had been
uniformly enforced and "hard labour, moderate food and constant superintendence" had
been the norm in the early days, when in tasks
fact convicts
in the colony, but to avoid
it
official
had been done by those who did not have the
status, skills, or influence
it.
After eighteen
months
of inspection
South Wales could indeed be made a
fit
and inquiry
who had come as free
people and
in the colony, Bigge
decided that
New
place for punishment. Convicts, Bigge concluded,
should be kept out of the towns and assigned as tlers
had been plied with rum and
had been completed by midday. There had, of course, been much hard labor performed
far as
possible to the
more prosperous
set-
who would take more care over the convicts' discipline
and reformation. Nor should convicts
receive
wages or expect
to receive tickets-of-leave or
276
John Hirst
/
pardons
as a matter of right. Further, Bigge
be kept of
all
offenses
recommended, accurate
committed by the convicts
in the colony.
central records should
Any
property the convicts
brought with them should be confiscated and held until the owners demonstrated they were reformed. Ex-convicts should no longer be given land or convict assistance once they became free. Bigge's
tus.
plan was to reshape the society of New South Wales so that the economic distinc-
between owners and workers would more closely match
tions
Under
his system free emigrants
would perform hard labor
become a
fate to
for
their distinctions in legal sta-
would be employers while convicts and ex-convicts
them. In these ways, Bigge believed, transportation would
dread, and fewer stories of ex-convicts accumulating wealth
would circulate.
From Colony to Prison The
British
vict
colony policy for the two decades before transportation to mainland Australia was halted
government accepted
Bigge's
recommendations, which formed the basis of con-
in 1840.
A steady stream of convicts arrived, but demand for workers for the expanding economy When Bigge toured the colony, most settlement was still confined
soon outstripped supply. to the
narrow plain between mountain and
sea,
within a radius of 50 miles from Sydney. In
the twenty-two years before transportation ended, settlement
and south of Sydney, and this era
wool became the
selves in isolated
all
the
would spread 500 miles north
good land across the mountains would be occupied. During
staple of the colony,
shepherd huts in the
and criminals from
The expansion of settlement was so rapid
that
it
It
500 miles
to the north.
Moreton Bay operated
the penal
was never disturbed was Norfolk
Ocean northeast first
when
it
became
the free city of
The penal settlement whose
Island, a tiny volcanic
speck
far
isola-
out in the Pacific
of Sydney.
governor to assume
He complied with
Brisbane.
and then by Moreton Bay,
of Sydney,
until 1839,
Brisbane, the capital of the future colony of Queensland.
The
among these was
Newcastle, located on the coast 100 miles north of Sydney, which closed in 1823.
at
was succeeded by Port Macquarie, 250 miles north
tion
towns found them-
overtook the isolated places chosen for
penal settlements to punish crime committed in the colony. First
colony
British
far interior of Australia.
office after the
acceptance of Bigge's report was
the instructions of the Colonial Office
and made
a
Thomas
number
of
important changes, but he did not respond wholeheartedly to Bigge's vision. Brisbane repealed Macquarie's convict wage order. In doing so, he also freed masters
from the obligation issue the
same
to
supply the standard
ration of
meat and
a
ration. Nonetheless,
more generous
most masters continued
ration of flour. Tea, sugar,
to
and tobacco
were
now
victs
could have these whenever they wanted, since these luxuries could be purchased out of
their
guaranteed wage. The loss of the wage was thus a clear decline in convict status, but not
all
supplied as indulgences that could be revoked for misbehavior. Previously, con-
convicts were reduced to the
same
level.
Convicts in skilled and responsible jobs were
given extra rewards and indulgences, which might include
Brisbane was leave
went only
to
still
money payments.
much stricter than Macquarie had been in ensuring those who had served the minimum time set down in the
that tickets-ofregulations. For
— The Australian Experience
AUSTRALIA IN
/
277
1835
/° y
f
u
i
I*
WESTERN
k
w
\
NEW SOUTH WALES
AUSTRALIA
V
Moreton Bay (later
i
^—
I, Perth
^
Port
^-s «\ *»
Newcastle n/^
Sydney*'
J£L \^ 200
400
600
800
1
1
r
1
1000
/
Macquarie /
h.
\ffK
500
/ Brisbane) o\
/
Melbourne
miles
kilometers
VANDIEMENS LAND
l^—**) \
IHkJbart
^^Port Arthur
convicts transported for seven years, Brisbane set the
minimum
than under Macquarie); fourteen-year convicts had to serve eligible
and the
lifers
eight years. These
transportation. But Brisbane
still
saw
at
minimums would remain
the
who caught bushrangers (renegades who who provided information to the police.
need
four years (one year
at least six
the
same
for exceptions, for instance in
lived in the
more
years before they were until the
end of
rewarding those
bush and survived by robbery) or those
Large-scale efforts at reforming the convict colony did not start until Brisbane's successor,
Governor Ralph Darling (1826-31), took
metier was administration. of
New
He
set
office.
Darling was a military man, but his
about restructuring the various government departments
South Wales and introduced boards and committees
process the
official
quired the colonists to cratic style
to inquire into, report on,
and
business of the colony. Dealing with this bureaucratic government re-
showed up
become more and more adept
at filling
out forms. Darling's bureau-
in the administration of convict affairs: starting
each newly arriving convict was given an identification number. a satisfactory place for
punishment,
it
now had
a
If
on January
1,
the colony could be
governor ready for the
task.
1827,
made
278
John Hirst
/
On
his arrival Darling
was surprised
to find that nearly
were convicts. They worked in the most sensitive
offices
dents, the
lists
the clerks in the
sent from Britain detailing the dates of conviction
each convict. Others worked in the
where charges
all
areas.
in criminal cases
The convict
clerks
government
Some handled
convict in-
and the sentence length
offices of the attorney general
and the
were drawn up.
were thus well placed
to collect bribes. Critics alleged that convict
clerks set standard fees for altering the lengths of sentences listed in the indent: so a reduction for
from fourteen years
to seven,
Darling wanted to replace
life.
enough pay
to
for
solicitor general,
all
something more
if
the original sentence
much
for
had been
the convict clerks, but he found he could not offer
tempt educated young migrants into the
service. If free
they preferred to seek their fortune in livestock and land.
Still,
migrants had any wit,
Darling was generally success-
replacing convicts in the most sensitive areas, but the cost of employing free people
ful in
fostered the temptation to revert to convicts.
To have
created a government service staffed
only with nonconvicts would have been a crippling expense. Elsewhere, Darling succeeded in tightening government control of convicts by systematizing ticket-of-leave practices.
He allowed
convicts six
months
off their
minimum term
for
every bushranger or two runaways they caught and twelve months for giving information on receivers of stolen property. Despite his mission to strengthen discipline, though, Darling
continued to award tickets to those
who undertook particularly worthy or dangerous work, And for all its new concern for better order
such as accompanying an exploratory expedition. in
New
South Wales, the
convicts in to
British
government
still
wanted occasional exceptions made. In
people of standing and influence could mention to the secretary of state the names of
Britain,
whom they were interested, and he would pass the word to the colonial governor
do whatever was possible The
colonial
for
them.
government found
only after convicts had served a
relatively easy to
it
minimum
ensure that tickets-of-leave were given
time. First of
all it
indents, clear records of each convict's date of conviction
possessed, in the form of the
and period of sentence. Second,
it
accepted Commissioner Bigge's recommendation that the colonial government collect records
from
all its district
courts
on
committed by and punishments awarded
offenses
to convicts.
This data collection proved essential to governors interested in bringing greater discipline to the process. istrates,
It
who
allowed them to counter the self-interest of masters and the leniency of mag-
liberally
recommended
tickets-of-leave. Before records
were centralized, even
who recommended only the well-behaved and not the not be aware of how convicts had behaved in other districts, unless they
conscientious masters and magistrates
merely useful could
took the trouble of asking the magistrates there. deserving convicts Setting lection ficials
up
who had
served their
the central records of
and recording
of information
started requiring magistrates
Now the governor could guarantee that only
minimum
term would receive tickets-of-leave.
punishment took some time. Under Brisbane, the
had proceeded
who
When
sent or sought information
names and numbers of the ships on which the
col-
Darling arrived, his of-
on convicts
to give the
convicts arrived, in addition to the individuals'
names. Without that extra information, separating impossible. Darling's assignment of a
sloppily.
number
to
all
the
John Smiths from each other was
each convict was the best solution to the
The Australian Experience
problem, but the numbers never came into general use outside government
became
name
period of transportation, the
rest of the
of a convict's ship
/
279
For the
circles.
and the number of its voyage
part of the convict's identity tag.
Darling set
up
the Office of the Principal Superintendent of Convicts to keep convict
records and transact
all
convict matters. There, a relatively complete and reliable record sys-
tem was eventually established. By the 1830s the superintendent of convicts could report on the behavior of to inquire of the
requested.
The
most convicts whose cases were referred
shows up
efficiency of this office
from the Goulburn magistrates
tions
to him.
became standard
It
practice
superintendent whenever any indulgences, not merely tickets-of-leave, were
period the office
approved 135
in
its
tickets
recommenda-
pattern of response to
for tickets-of-leave
between 1838 and 1840.
In this
but refused 78. Though recommended by the local
bench, the refused convicts had central records that told against them. Darling's bureaucratic reforms brought some order to a formerly random process.
The Problem of Assignment
He instructed
Darling set up a board to process applications for the assignment of all convicts. the board to grant convicts to
good masters who oversaw the conduct of their servants and
refuse convicts to abusive or lax masters.
From then
on, the government
withdraw convicts from offending masters. Previously, the
larly
had been
largely
empty, but since the demand for servants
threat to
now
to
would more reguwithdraw servants
exceeded the supply,
this
measure no longer burdened the government with the maintenance of extra convicts. Concould easily be reassigned elsewhere, and in
victs tive
fact
Darling instituted a regular administra-
process to carry out this operation.
His successor, Governor Richard Bourke (183 1-37), tightened the regulations for screening potential masters and overseeing the use of servants. Bourke insisted that a servant to
someone
else
—
a very
common
practice
—
the master
had
to
if
a master lent
inform Sydney and
seek approval from the magistrates. As competition for servants became keener, more complex procedures were adopted for allotting servants. All told, Governor Bourke's regulations
on convict assignment occupied lowed by examples of Forms signment process. This was a
word
to the
governor in the
A
eight tightly
far cry
at crucial stages
on
quick note to his
how
victs
As
be lazy
by Darling and Bourke or,
being masters them-
a result, cases of
them too much freedom
still
to find loopholes in regulations
uitable distribution. Darling's regulations
a
office.
who might
selves, not interested in enforcing all of Sydney's rules.
convicts, employers learned
fol-
various stages in the as-
at
of assignment attempted
local magistrates,
transferring servants or permitting
Government Gazette,
in the
from the old days, when servants were obtained by
street or a
The thorough bureaucratic oversight depended
packed pages
through F, which were required
extreme laxity in
turned up. In applying for
designed to ensure an eq-
were subverted by people applying
for
more con-
than they really needed; Bourke's attempt to apportion convicts according to the amount
of land held
purpose.
was upset by masters who took out
Some gave
fictitious leases to their
eligible to receive convicts.
leases
on uncleared land
children and servants,
solely for this
who would
then become
280
John Hirst
/
Despite efforts ciples. Private
at
reform, private assignment remained the gravest affront to penal prin-
own profit and
masters would always consider their
convenience before pun-
ishment and reformation of their convict servants. Further, the diversity of tasks in private
employment produced
inequalities in
work requirements and treatment
missioner Bigge would have been happy
and the other towns and
if all
set to rural labor.
recommendation, which impinged
the convicts could have
of convicts.
Com-
been kept out of Sydney
But the British government's attempt to follow
directly
on the operation of the
colonial
this
economy, was
a
signal failure.
In 1826, the British secretary of state informed Governor Darling that transportation still
not dreaded sufficiently in Britain.
He then
instructed Darling to
convicts from the towns
and assign the able-bodied ones
The comparatively easy
task of herding sheep
of
most convicts, making transportation
remain
a light
punishment;
if
a less dreadful
most convicts
would be
was
the skilled
than shepherding.
labor as the rural occupation
punishment. The minister pointed
work at
their trades, transportation
would
which they were notorious. Only hard work
in the country,
would punish and reform them.
Darling refused to implement the instruction. assign
field
all
they were kept in the towns, they would have greater opportu-
nity to pursue the dissipation for
the minister believed,
to field labor rather
had replaced
out that as long as skilled convicts were allowed to
remove
to
new settlers in the
He
reported that he would attempt to
countryside but that ending assignment in Sydney
"injurious in the highest degree." Unskilled convicts continued to be assigned for
domestic service in Sydney until almost the end of transportation. Depriving Sydney of skilled convict workers was almost unthinkable because they were the
and other tradespeople. Further, convicts serving the government's public
the
works and labored
tailors,
as building-tradesmen
for private builders
its
shoemakers,
were employed in
on the weekends: "Thus has
Town of Sydney been built." Economics was a very stubborn fact to put against the needs
of punishment to prosper
and reformation. So long as the
and grow wool using convict
British
labor, these
government wanted
New South Wales
were unanswerable arguments, and the
minister did not pursue the matter further.
Among Commissioner free emigrants,
recommendations was one
that convicts
be assigned to
whom he regarded as more suitable masters than ex-convicts.
The governors
Bigge's
could not ban employment by ex-convicts altogether, because these masters supplied jobs to so
many
convicts in the private sector. Britain responded to Bigge's recommendation by en-
couraging the immigration of
free settlers
with
capital.
Simultaneously, the growth of the
sheep industry in the 1820s and 1830s made the colony more attractive to them. In parts of
New
South Wales, something
of gentlemen employed
more pastureland forced land was held
at first
great
like a plantation society
numbers
the flocks
developed: large estates in the hands
of convict laborers. But the insatiable
beyond
the official limits
demand
for
of settlement. This far afield,
without any permission and then only by annual license. With the
proprietors of these squatting runs frequently absent, convicts working there were actually controlled by ex-convict, ticket-of-leave, or even convict overseers. Control of any sort had to
be lax
when workers mounted on horseback were
not the disciplinary regime Bigge had envisaged.
scattered over such a large area. This
was
The Australian Experience
With
the growth of free migrant enterprise
and the boom
/
281
economy, the governors
in the
could have denied convict workers to ex-convicts without creating any surplus. However,
such a blanket exclusion was never contemplated. The most attempted by the colonial
government
1835) was
(in
to link
an employer's entitlement to convict labor to the posses-
minimum area of land. The requirement was many ex-convict settlers with grants of thirty
set at forty acres, effectively ex-
sion of a
first
cluding
acres. Later, the
requirement
fell
to
twenty acres, which excluded almost no one. The regulation was changed because the eco-
nomic
interests of ex-convict
have been
difficult to
damage
and
free settlers
were so inextricably linked
The
the one without hurting the other.
hearted attempt to exclude lowly ex-convicts from access to the convict
proceed by reference to size of land rather than legal status shows
how
that
it
would
fact that this half-
work
force
had
to
firmly the colonists
held to the view that legal status should not affect economic opportunity. By this time, an ex-convict party formed in the 1830s for ex-convicts.
would have
It
was urging self-government and
fiercely resisted
full political rights
any general exclusion of ex-convicts from
the benefits of convict labor.
Reform Van Diemen's Land, now known
as
in
Van Diemen's Land
Tasmania, was
first
settled as part of
New South Wales in
1803. The island off the southeastern coast of Australia became a separate colony in 1825. There, the
employment of convict labor by
private masters
purposes of punishment and reformation in a
was the work of Governor George Arthur (1824-36), tor
who
was controlled
way never achieved
for the higher
in the parent colony. This
a meticulous, indefatigable administra-
mastered the assignment system by taking direct charge of
it
himself for a year.
Arthur distributed convicts according to his assessment of the order and discipline maintained in the private establishments applying for them. Certain people could be forbidden to receive convicts
—innkeepers, those without
free overseers,
and ex-convicts. This
last
group
could be more readily denied on the island because they did not have the wealth or promi-
nence of their
New
To monitor
South Wales counterparts.
the worthiness of convict masters, Arthur maintained
called a "spy" system.
and
He placed
ears, to play the part of
aries in
New
certed attack
drawn from
major generals
to his
their
ranks.
opponents
parallel to Arthur's
the customary right of landowners to be ruled
own
his
Cromwell. Governors used some stipendi-
South Wales, but in the parent colony there was no
on
what
stipendiary magistrates in each district to serve as his eyes
Such
officials
con-
by unpaid magistrates
could be relied on to give a local gloss to central
directives.
The convict records had ever existed establish this
in
New
set
up by Arthur were
also
more complete and comprehensive than
South Wales. There, a number of
what crimes and labor offenses
a convict
registers
had
to
be consulted to
had committed. In Van Diemen's Land,
information appeared in one place, the so-called Black Books (which, unlike the
all
New
South Wales records, have survived). This resource allowed Arthur to closely match punish-
ment and indulgence and convicts was
to convict behavior.
The control Arthur exercised over both masters
easier to achieve here than in
New
South Wales because settlement in Van
— 282
John Hirst
/
Diemen's Land was closely confined. He would not have done so well in This
narrow neck of
land connected the
Tasman Peninsula to Van Diemen's Land. It was guarded by a
line
of dogs and illumi-
nated at night by
though none of
this
a wider area but also
would have daunted him.
C. Hutchins, after
Governor Arthur gave
a
sketch by Captain C.
Hext, circa 1845.
When
his
New
South Wales,
was older and more complex
term was up, Arthur went
home
execrated by the colonists, a distinction that he took as a sign of his success. his
name
to Port Arthur, the penal settlement
oil
lamps. Lithograph by
S.
where society not only was spread over
place of additional punishment. Located
narrow connection
The ruins fact that
Arthur
mainland and was guarded by
why Port Arthur has come
to
their time in civil society
tution because, built
first
impose
and
classification
and not
life
who barred escape.
solitary
principles of
its critics,
little
notice
It is
also
an atypical
had been taken of lash.
insti-
buildings were designed to late to the
convicts' original crimes
The ruins of Port Arthur
modernize the system of transportation and make
it
are
monu-
conform
to the
the proponents of the penitentiary.
Places oj Dread in
South Wales had
later, its
confinement on the inmates. This system came
and most further offenses were punished with the to the attempt to
and not simply because most convicts
in penal settlements.
under Arthur and extended
convict colonies of Australia, where
New
had only a very
symbolize the convict system as a whole. Port
in fact quite unrepresentative of convict
worked out
ments
dogs
a chain of
he designed as a it
of this settlement are the largest physical remains of the convict era in Australia, a
explains
is
to the
on the rugged Tasman Peninsula,
its
own
New
penal settlements,
folk Island. In addition to reforming policy
at
South Wales Port Macquarie,
Moreton Bay, and Nor-
toward the general convict population, Governor
The Australian Experience
made
Darling
impose regular and uniform discipline
a concerted attempt to
and severe punishments were
lishments. Harsh labor
283
/
at these estab-
common in the settlements before Dar-
but they were not consistently applied to everyone. Although populated by transported
ling,
convicts
who had been
convicted of additional offenses in the colony, the penal settlements
New
tended toward the laxity and inequity that characterized early
had no
South Wales as
interest in penal discipline
and
fervently
At Port Macquarie in the 1820s, the
whole,
wished themselves elsewhere.
officers, like their
counterparts in the
South Wales settlements of the 1790s, employed convicts on their
and provided generous indulgences and taskwork. Convicts alone trative offices
a
These were small settlements in the charge of military detachments that
for similar reasons.
and performed the
light
work
filled
penal settlements.
at the
own
New
first
farms and gardens
minor adminis-
the
From
the ranks of these
twice-convicted prisoners, their keepers had to find overseers and constables. Skilled workers
were
much
demand, so they
in
easily
avoided heavy labor. Friends outside the penal
settlements could send the inmates food, clothing, and other goods, carried from Sydney in
government
vessels free of charge.
retail trading.
Both
children were allowed to
given time to settlements,
own
work on
New
Some
men and women
convicts were thus able to engage in the business of
convicts were sent to these settlements,
join husbands and
their
own
and wives and
fathers serving time there. Married
account to support their families. In forming
South Wales was clearly governed by the same
beliefs that
men were
its first
penal
had led
to its
establishment as a place of exile rather than of systematic punishment.
Governor Darling wanted
to
make
more
these places
prison-like: they
were
to
become
places of dread capable of deterring the convicts from further crime, just as the British gov-
ernment wanted
New South Wales to
lation in order. Darling issued
new
settlements from farming or trading enterprise
—which sustained
on
their
irregularities
ment to a prison farm. To make beasts
be a fearful place that would help keep
regulations to prevent officers
own
He hoped
account.
and disrupted discipline
agricultural labor
to
—and
far
own popuat the
penal
stamp out private
to
reduce the
more strenuous, he forbade
and the plow. But regulations could go only so
its
and convicts
settle-
the use of draft
while the personnel of the penal
settlements remained the same.
Wish
victs at the class.
He
did, however, regularize the practice
by creating two
penal settlements and restricting the more desirable jobs to
classes of con-
members
of the
first
Convicts gained entry to this class based on time served and good behavior. All me-
chanics, meanwhile, were to
work
in the field unless their skills
were urgently required
where, and then only as a temporary measure. So here, as in Sydney, ignore skill and to put families altogether still
and
as he might, Darling could not avoid using convicts as overseers, constables,
servants to officers.
all
else-
was impossible
to
men to a uniform, hard labor. Even Darling was not prepared to ban
from the settlements, so the wives and children of first-class inmates were
allowed to join their menfolk
at
Port Macquarie
and Moreton Bay.
For Norfolk Island, however, Darling planned something
was to order that the women there
no women be allowed represent the
it
—
the wives of soldiers
there in the future. Darling
most extreme form of punishment
though Darling stated
that the absence of women
wanted
in
New
would
One
of his
first
acts
—be removed and
that
different.
and convicts
a sentence to Norfolk Island to
South Wales short of death. Al-
lead to an increase in homosexuality
284
on the any
John Hirst
/
island,
he thought the presence of a few
case, deterrence
women would not make much difference.
was the primary aim. Whether he was
right
He did not want the discipline of
Darling correctly gauged the significance of barring women. the prison disturbed
congress between
ment
New
in
by the comforting
regularities of family
life
or the irregularities of casual
men and women, interaction that had been part of life in every other settle-
South Wales. Norfolk Island became the closest thing
and would
to a prison
In
about homosexuality or not,
in fact
have been one
if
New
the Convicts themselves
South Wales had
had not been the
wardens.
Hated by the other inmates as
traitors
and
fearing always for the security of their jobs, the
Norfolk Island wardens were tyrannical and cruel. There was
restraint
little
on
power,
their
so the convicts, isolated and degraded, were driven to desperate measures. Three times
1826, 1834, and 1842
way
throw
to
off the
—
—
in
the inmates attempted to seize the island. Short of mutiny, another
yoke of a Norfolk Island sentence was
murderer then enjoyed the
respite of a trip to
Sydney
to kill a fellow convict.
for his trial,
The
which gave him the chance
of escape or, failing that, the certainty of a death sentence.
To stop
this abuse, the
The leaders of the 1834
Supreme Court
revolt
court, "Let a man's heart be
him and he sixteen
took
had
this
is
were thus
what
it
will
instituted hearings
and executions on the
tried at the scene of the crime.
when he comes
their sentences to the
of
them
here, his Man's heart
is
condemned
given the heart of a Beast." Thirty of the rebels were
news
One
island.
told the
taken from
to death, but
commuted to life imprisonment on the island. When the chaplain
condemned men,
those
and those who had been reprieved were
who were to hang rejoiced at their deliverance,
desolate.
Maintaining the penal settlements, whether at Norfolk Island, Port Macquarie, or Moreton
was an expensive business. Darling,
Bay,
possible large
on them. At
the
same
like all governors,
time, the private
enough and was expanding so rapidly
gland.
The
settlers
clamored
for
more
that
economy it
was supposed of
absorbed
on mainland
ordinary convicts, for assignment to the
Work on
was hard, and
the roads
all
to
spend
as
little
as
South Wales had grown
the convicts sent from En-
laborers. Darling decided he could reduce costs at the
penal settlements and increase the labor supply in the colony offenders to work, in irons,
New
roads. This
would
if
he put some of the hardened
free the existing
road workers,
settlers.
as in all
government work, the supervision was poor.
Unrestrained by the interests and concerns of private masters, the overseers were either extremely harsh or
far
too lax with their charges. Convicts thus had plenty of incentive and
opportunity to run away. Overseers sometimes arranged temporary or permanent convict absences for a price or in return for the absentee's rations. Private masters in the neighbor-
hood
of road gangs were not
beyond seducing road workers
The new penal road gangs were kept this restricted
were
now
motion,
it
into their service.
in irons with their legs chained together; although
did not prevent escape. As a result of Darling's policy, runaways
seasoned offenders and more desperate
to
remain
free.
Thus, though bringing
many places, in this matter the governor fostered disorder on a large scale. Hardened convicts who escaped from road gangs represented a large proportion of the bushrangers who proliferated during Darling's tenure. This was the price the colony order and rule to bear in
The Australian Experience
285
/
A
road gang on the
Bathurst road, painted
by Augustus Earle, circa 1840. Forced to
perform hard labor at the
command
oj brutal
overseers, convicts generally labored
under
conditions Jar
more
harsh than
this
color suggests.
paid for keeping
some
of the worst convicts inside
its
borders instead of sending them to
penal settlements.
Governor Bourke overcame the disadvantages of Darling's policy by
In the early 1830s,
keeping the iron gangs locked up in crude caravans military
detachment
soldiers
still
to
night and by arranging for a small
last
did not directly supervise convict work, for the
that kept convicts at
But this too had that
at
guard them day and night. This
its
measure was a first
work. Under Bourke's system, the runaway
cost.
real
coup. Though
time they served as the force rate
dropped dramatically.
Maintaining the military was expensive; in 1834 Bourke reported
he could not work any more convicts in irons unless he had more
money
to finance a
larger garrison.
The
closer supervision of convict assignment, the establishment of central records, the
granting of indulgences only for good behavior, and the stiffening of punishment at the penal settlements were the changes introduced following Bigge's report to a credible penal colony. lies
of the old order
goals.
The pressure
By the end of Bourke's tenure
had been contained
if
make New South Wales
as governor, the
most glaring anoma-
not abolished, but reform was stopped short of
to contain costs constantly
overwhelmed other considerations
in
its
admin-
istering the convict colony.
Just as cost-cutting led to disorder, so the need to impose order breached another penal principle.
To encourage
the capture of bushrangers, tickets-of-leave were granted as rewards.
This violated the policy of granting indulgences only to the well-behaved, for those
who
caught bushrangers were more like their captives than the sober, industrious, and honest servants envisaged in the ticket-of-leave rules. Darling
had issued many regulations
in the
cause of good order and discipline, but he sometimes regularized the indefensible, such as
water-
286
/
John Hirst
when he
set the
conditions for the employment of convicts as overseers (a practice that re-
common
mained
in the colony
and universal
many points the who were keen enough about
in the penal settlements). At
system depended on private masters and unpaid magistrates,
work but not about supporting
Sydney bureaucracy
in
monitor and control convict punishment. Making communities into prisons
is
getting convicts to
the
its
attempt to
no easy
thing.
The Convict Colony as Slave Society The reforms made
after
Commissioner
Bigge's evaluation did
little
to satisfy the critics.
The
new penology, who promoted the penitentiary, would not revise their views on transportation no matter what changes were made in the colonies. If all their other arguments
zealots of the
failed, they, like
Bentham, argued
In the 1830s,
when
against transportation
oped
that
was made with new
new and damning argument
a
punishment
at a
distance
the prospects for social reform of vigor.
against
it,
all
was
sorts
who controlled and
bond
profited from
had claimed
of slave owners. Previously, critics
was depicted as more entrenched:
it
made
labor were likely to
work, but private
to
succumb
own level. Now the
had abolished
slavery,
and now
it
to all the vices
an immoral soci-
that transportation created
corruption of con-
arose out of the immoral relationship between
immune from
masters and convict servants, and no individual, however virtuous, was Britain
bright, the case
asserting that the assignment of convicts to
ety because convicts reduced their neighbors to their vict society
poor deterrent.
The opponents of the convict colony devel-
private masters constituted slavery. Convicts, of course, should be
masters
a
seemed so
would have
it.
to abolish transportation.
However, the antitransportation cause by no means attracted the degree of support enjoyed by the antislavery movement. There was
reformed House of
and got
rid of
charge of the
by making it
abolish slavery,
work on
declared
it
illegal.
the roads in chains, a
plenty of support for transportation in the
a last-ditch attempt in
who shaped government initiated the first
itself.
scheme
decisive
first
that
policy
on
moves
Whig 1833
was cheap
colonial secretary in
to save transportation
This was to be achieved by having
had
to
took
office in
against transportation.
the issue were Lord
when law
be abandoned
Two years later the Whig government, which
Tory interlude, made the
who had
made
punishment worse than death
convicts
brief
still
the time-honored grounds that transportation
unsavory characters. Edward George Stanley, the
bill to
a
Commons, on
John
who
Russell,
1835
all
new
officers
after the
The two ministers as
home
secretary
major reform of the criminal law, and Henry George Grey, Viscount Howick,
acted as under secretary for colonies in the
first
Whig administration and was now
secretary of state for war.
Deeply involved South Wales as ishments,
and an economist as well
New South Wales since
South Wales, and
demonstration from totally
to rid Africa of slavery,
both
men
thought of
New
They were strongly influenced by Thoughts on Secondary Pun.
teer against
New
campaign
an attack on transportation written by Archbishop Richard Whately in 1 832 Whately,
a philosopher
on
in the
a slave society.
first
much
as a
churchman, became the most eminent pamphle-
Bentham. His work contained
of that
was wrong.
Its
principles that transportation
incompatible with colonization.
devised the plan of transportation to
little
detailed information
strength lay rather in the spirited
was an
ineffective
punishment and
No convict, he said, was as wicked as the person who
New
South Wales.
The Australian Experience
Arguments of this was
who were determined
impressed Russell and Howick,
sort
to
287
/
do what
not what was simply convenient. They had a high sense of their responsibility and
right,
were appalled
at the state of society in
excrescence." Russell and
New South Wales, which Whately called a "monstrous
Howick knew
that
if
they did not
act, the barbarity
could well
continue for some time, since transportation was a convenience both to Britain and to the colonists.
Though
two ministers accepted the case against the current system of transpor-
the
abandon transportation completely. The two were put
tation, they did not
want
cost of alternatives
and even more by the
find
it
very hard to get
to
work
after serving their term.
Howick: the assignment of convicts
employed on public works
would be more
tion
The victs
in the
But one thing was clear to Russell and
to private masters
would have
were
to cease. If convicts
colony or confined in colonial penitentiaries, transporta-
by Russell and Howick was
could be transported because, on becoming
overwhelmed by viciousness. Therefore, to be provided. Russell
to
would
acceptable.
difficulty perceived
free,
number
that only a limited
alternatives to transportation to Australia
and Howick planned
to continue
it
on
for penitentiaries at
a reduced scale to
of con-
they would flood into a society already
home and
for
Van Diemen's Land and Norfolk
now on, convicts would of course remain in the government's hands so
that
would have
more convicts
New
South
Island.
From
be sent to Bermuda. Finally, Russell decided to abandon transportation to
Wales and
by the
off
realization that convicts, staying in Britain,
punishment and
reformation could be properly controlled and "slavery" avoided. Like most reformers, Russell
had
touching
a
faith in the ability of
wardens and superintendents
to abstain
from the capri-
ciousness and tyranny to which private masters were thought to be particularly prone.
Radical Impatience
House
In the
of
Commons, one man steadfastly opposed
transportation in any form: William
Molesworth, an ambitious young Radical. The Radicals had grown increasingly impatient the pace port.
and scope of reform under Whig governments,
Molesworth was among those who planned either
them. In domestic matters, the Radicals had the Tories it
was
With
would support
the
possible that Tories
this in
Whigs
against
little
whom
to radicalize the
for radical reform.
find a
Molesworth came
to
Whigs
or to unseat
But in colonial matters
common ground
mind, Molesworth became a keen student of colonial
which were receiving
at
they had given their sup-
hope of influencing the government, since
moves
and Radicals might
to
against the Whigs.
affairs.
support Edward Gibbon Wakefield's systematic colonization plans,
their first trial in the
new colony of South Australia.
Wakefield's regime
involved the orderly sale and settlement of land and the use of the proceeds to pay for the passage of free workers so that convicts would not have to be used. Wakefield's system con-
vinced Molesworth that transportation to the Australian colonies should be abandoned completely, if
because sufficient funds could be raised to pay for the migration of a
land was sold
at a
In April 1837, select
free labor force
higher price.
Molesworth successfully moved
committee on transportation. Lord Russell,
must be abandoned, cooperated with him. As the accordance with usual practice became
its
in the
House of Commons
who had
to establish a
already decided that assignment
instigator of the committee,
Molesworth in
chairman. Russell and Howick were
among those
288
John Hirst
/
when
appointed to the committee, and
recommending
vent Molesworth from
condemn
fied to
the present system
it
drafted
its
report they used their influence to pre-
the total abolition of transportation.
and
to use the evidence of the
They were
committee
satis-
to support the
changes they had decided on.
As chairman of the committee, Molesworth was
He
cross-examining witnesses.
in charge of collecting evidence
and
very easily showed that the assignment of convicts to private
masters produced unequal treatment and that this inequity had nothing to do with the nature of offenders' crimes. Molesworth devoted himself to collecting evidence that strate the
for his inquisitorial role
and depravity
Even
in Australia.
The evidence
showed
actually
markably honest. Molesworth
Bentham before him, he had
so, like
that the
first
down
to their level.
generation of native-born Australians was re-
also referred speciously to "slaves" left
and
"slavery" to bolster his
without a shred of decency.
Single-minded in his mission, he brushed aside any attempt to consider
from the
but
to distort his evidence
dragged the whole community
argument: one mention of these and colonial society was
differ
libertine,
he adopted puritanical standards and reaped a rich harvest of crime
to support his central claim that convicts
might
would demon-
moral corruption of the convict colonies. He was himself a notorious
how
the convict
slave.
Transportation Defended
Though
the colonists
the British certain
wanted transportation
government
enough over the
now
planned
years.
Commons
select
to continue, they
modify or abandon
Molesworth enshrined
committee. The reputation of
at
those
Even though they had were driven to
to
wholesale denunciation of
in the report presented
official
that
This eventuality had seemed
free colonists in a convict
ways been dubious; now Molesworth had given an scorn directed
were not greatly surprised
it.
What enraged the colonists was the
colonial society, a criticism that
of
to
endorsement
by
his
House
colony had
to all the jokes
al-
and
who sought their fortunes in New South Wales or Van Diemen's Land. little
expectation of changing British government policy, the colonists
defend their reputation and the system of transportation as a whole. In answer
Archbishop Whately, Governor Arthur of Van Diemen's Land, the convict colony's high
priest,
defended transportation
in
two pamphlets. These defenses are of particular
interest in
the history of the prison because, in explaining the advantages of transportation, they devel-
oped
a scathing critique of the principles
and
practice of the
new, penitentiary-oriented pe-
nology. Arthur's defenses contained the following chief points: •
A prisoner who is isolated in a cell with Bible and crank handle is much less likely to reform than
if
he
is
kept in
civil
society
under the control of private masters. Convicts learn
that they can follow later; they mix with people other than convicts while
they become accustomed to the habits of social
life
and so
are
a
job
under punishment;
more ready
for the transition
to freedom. •
When
transportation
when condemned
is
condemned
for failing to deter, masters are depicted as indulgent;
for failing to reform, masters are depicted as tyrants. If masters followed
either of these courses, they
would
the middle course of firm yet
get very
little
work out
fair discipline. Private
of convicts. Most masters adopt
masters of decent character with an
The Australian Experience
interest in the convicts'
who •
work are
infinitely superior as a controlling
the crime, but
to the type of
men
wardens and guards, against whose is
allegedly the great
who
is
felt
differently
and tyranny there
be fed, better to do so
at a
be
little
if
pain
will
be
check.
weakness of transportation. Certainly convicts are well
fed in the colonies, but given the appalling deprivation that so to endure, the harshest prison
by each. And
will
fit
and mental
do the adjusting? The adjusters
to
arbitrariness
make punishment
differ in their physical
same measure of pain will be
be finely adjusted in a penitentiary,
Failure to deter
finely adjusted to
Men
not this a will-o'-the-wisp?
is
characteristics, so that the
•
289
can be recruited as wardens and overseers.
Assignment in private service admittedly cannot be
can
body
/
many of the British poor have
regime will be superior to their
distance than at
home. In any
lot.
Since prisoners have to
case, deterrence
not the most
is
important requirement for the reduction of crime. The roots of crime are poverty, wretchedness, unemployment, and lack of education. By removing these, governments
would do more
The most ex-convict
reduce crime than by creating severer punishment.
to
William Bland, was himself an
incisive of the defenders of transportation, Dr.
who had been transported
tained in Letters
for killing his
opponent
in a duel. His views
were con-
Charles Buller Esq. M.P. Dr. Bland penetrated further into the underlying
to
new penology, exposing them with a wonderful clarity. He attributed the new penology to "hypothetical prejudices as to vice and virtue, representing
assumptions of the support for the
two
these qualities as
distinct essences;
and on the moral, physical and general nature of man,
through which the
human being is contemplated
requiring nothing
more than
as a
mere chemical or mechanical element,
a clever state chemist, or state mechanist, to
be dealt with ac-
cordingly."
On
the likely effects of the penitentiary regime, he wrote:
The exclusion of Convicts from
them
of
all
returning to that
remembered
society but their
own and
of their keepers,
all
comprehend,
if
the case be otherwise, that
undergo when not sustained by appropriate
either
moral or religious
introduced through the
it
must be
left
medium
truths,
exercise. In it
a
divests
mere blank,
informed their analyses of
why
had
state, far
receive or
which can alone be advantageously
of the gentler feelings
of the defenders of transportation
such a
ill-fitted to
is
and sentiments.
In contrast to the individualistic orientation of the penal reformers a sense of
and penitentiary back-
people as social beings. This sense
people became criminals and of the circumstances in which
criminals were most likely to reform.
Even such
a stern figure as
Governor Arthur reported
numbers of transported convicts were not perversely wicked. Like everyone
Arthur had seen people another
.
community from which they have been entirely estranged. For, let it be human mind cannot be divested of its store of images, but by the
worse than that of any other species of utter seclusion,
that large
.
those morbid changes which the faculties of man, whether mental or bodily,
are observed to
ers, all
.
that the
substitution of other images; or
subject to
all
virtuous habits and sympathies and renders them, year by year, less fitted for
—and not by
who were
criminals in one social setting
the reformatory
become good
methods of the new penology.
else,
subjects in
290
/
John Hirst
An Experiment
at Norfolk Island
Needless to say, none of the defenses of transportation
made any impact on
the British gov-
ernment. Lawmakers took the colonists' defense of such a corrupting institution as further evidence of
its
undesirable nature. Only one document from the colonies was heeded in
London. This was a report on transportation from Captain Alexander Maconochie, gone
Van Diemen's Land
to
as private secretary to the governor
John Franklin (1837-43). After sively against
He found
a
who
who had
succeeded Arthur,
assignment as a punishment and denounced the character of the master
the colonists harsh
Sir
few months in the colony, Maconochie pronounced deci-
and overbearing
in their relations to each other
government. Following the standard critique of the
evils of slave society,
and
class.
to the
Maconochie
inter-
preted this rudeness as a carryover of habits gained in the control of convicts. That the colonists
were as Maconochie described them cannot be doubted,
new colony where numbers were
roughness in every
and the
social hierarchy
tended toward
for settlers
small, fortunes
were
still
made,
to be
was uncertain.
A condemnation of colonial society was just what the critics of transportation in London wanted
predisposed them to consider the novel part of
to hear. Their receptiveness
—
Maconochie's paper
his scheme for the
punishment and reformation of convicts. Maconochie
proposed that convicts should be sentenced not certain
amount
earn marks for
of labor,
measured by a system of marks. Under
work and good conduct and
would be obtained only by selves, the
ate
to a period of time in the
lose
them
for
colony but to a
would
this system, convicts
bad behavior. Food and clothing
the expenditure of marks, so the less convicts indulged them-
sooner they would have sufficient marks to gain freedom. Prisoners would associ-
and work with companions of
their
own
choosing, and
all
would
lose
marks
if
one
offended.
Maconochie believed
his
system would make corporal punishment and physical coer-
cion unnecessary. The system would encourage a sense of individual responsibility and mutual trust,
which would
in turn ensure the prisoner's successful reintegration into society. In
Maconochie's view, prisons should in with the larger society outside. at the
fact
be mini-societies that remained in close contact
He allowed that there should be a short period
of punishment
beginning of the sentence but argued that the prime purpose of detention was reform.
Others had proposed particular points of Maconochie's scheme, but the scheme as a
whole was
his
own. Though he was
a critic of transportation as
it
was currently practiced,
his
preoccupation with the social education and reintegration of prisoners no doubt arose from his experience in Australia.
midst of
civil society
What he
learned by witnessing punishment in progress in the
turned his mind away from the penal reformers' obsession with the
physical structure of the prison. Maconochie's scheme, as fully elaborated later,
conduct of prisons, but he drew tation.
The
first,
brief
it
up
at first as
punishment stage would take place
the reformatory stage convicts
would work on
was
for the
an alternative method of conducting transpor-
the roads
in isolated spots in the colony; in
and other public works. From
there,
they would proceed to private employment under a ticket-of-leave, the one part of the existing system that Maconochie retained.
Lord Russell invited Maconochie Island, not with the
to institute his
scheme
as
an experiment on Norfolk
hardened offenders already there but with convicts sent
directly
from
The Australian Experience
Britain, since
folk Island
New South Wales could
no longer
was not an appropriate place because
Maconochie argued
receive them. it
was cut
off
/
that
291
Nor-
from society and because two
different penal systems could not operate so close to each other. But the offer applied only to
Norfolk Island
—
perhaps precisely because
it
was isolated
—
so Maconochie accepted
it.
When
he arrived there, he solved one of the problems he had foreseen by ignoring the instruction
was not
that his system
by the marks system ticket-of- leave
were
to
apply to the old hands. Old and
in a modified form, still officially
made
new convicts alike were governed
necessary because sentences and eligibility for
defined by periods of time.
Maconochie took down the gibbet, threw open locked doors, removed the bars from the
windows
of his house,
and acted
as
if
he were in charge of a civilized community. He brought
with him books and musical instruments for the prisoners' use, he encouraged the cultivation of garden plots,
and he erected Protestant and Catholic chapels. With members of his
family,
Maconochie walked unescorted around the island and chatted with the prisoners, who were
no longer expected
to cringe in the
presence of a government
the island demonstrated an important part of
of moral
power over prisoners by
small
and of
jails
official.
The lack of barriers on
Maconochie 's system of reform: the exercise
the person in charge.
It
made him an advocate
large personal discretion for their keepers, a position that later
of
proved his
undoing.
Although circumstances on Norfolk Island were
less
than
ideal,
Maconochie rated
his
experiment a success. The prisoners, especially the old hands, responded well to the abolition of harsh
of the
punishments and
marks did work. But
to the
freedoms they were trusted not to abuse. The dynamic
in the colonists' eyes the old
hands were on Norfolk Island not
to
A
view of the penal
settlement on Norfolk Island in 1854.
292
/
John Hirst
be reformed but to suffer so that the
keep
to their
rived
on the
island,
when he gave
day the inmates were
that
free to
rum and lemon
dinner with
would be deterred from crime and
rest of the convicts
work. Conflict between Maconochie and the colonists flared soon
and fireworks
he
ar-
the convicts a holiday to celebrate the queen's birthday.
On
roam over man,
for every
When news
in the evening.
the island
and swim
in the surf.
after
They enjoyed
a
performed by convicts in the afternoon,
a play
of this event reached the mainland, the colonists
were incensed. The episode convinced them that Maconochie was unhinged and that his experiment would ruin them. Lord Russell took the same view and gave the governor of New
South Wales, George Gipps (1838-46), the power protected Maconochie for
some
to dismiss
Maconochie
when he eventually visited the
years;
at
island
any time. Gipps
unannounced he
was agreeably surprised. But his favorable report to London came too late:
the Colonial Office
had already decided
Norfolk Island
Maconochie. After
to dismiss
a four-year interlude,
re-
verted to a place of terror.
Maconochie returned
new Birmingham missed
after
two
Prison.
years.
to Britain
and
in
Undermined by
1849 was given the chance his
deputy and by
to try his
Maconochie had used unauthorized punishments. As part of his policy initial stage
in daily installments. Because
he had
to
of reform, he
had
inflicted
that bringing a pris-
whippings on one convict
prove his system within an inimical legal and admin-
Maconochie was predisposed
Maconochie produced
he was dis-
A subsequent inquiry revealed that during his tenure at Birmingham,
oner to submission was the
istrative structure,
system in the
visiting justices,
to ignore the rules.
Undaunted by criticism,
a stream of pamphlets in support of his system.
the penal regime in England, but Walter Crofton,
who was
He had no impact on
in charge of Irish prisons, ac-
cepted Maconochie's scheme except for the assumption of mutual responsibility among groups
Maconochie
of prisoners.
Principles" of the
had an
also
effect across the Atlantic: the
American Prison Association
understanding of the means to achieve
The indeterminate sentence
(that
is,
it,
reflected his
1870 "Declaration of
emphasis on reformation and his
even taking some language from his pamphlets.
a sentence not defined
by a period of time) owes most
to
his advocacy.
The Final Days In the 1840s, with the abolition of transportation to victs
went
to
Van Diemen's Land.
government and worked
the
in gangs.
condemned them even more roundly than originally
difficult to
More the gangs
planned
South Wales,
all
transported con-
now taboo, they were kept by
Gangs of convicts under convict overseers were noto-
rious in Australia for inefficiency, corruption,
had
New
Since private assignment was
and tyranny. The Molesworth committee had
the system of assignment.
to appoint free superintendents
The
British
government
and overseers, but since these were
obtain and expensive to pay, convicts were used instead. convicts were sent to
had
to
be increased.
Van Diemen's Land than had been expected,
When
the local
economy went
so the size of
into recession, convicts reach-
ing the end of their period in the gangs could not find work. Disaster loomed. The governor, Sir
John Eardley-Wilmot (1843-46), continued
the officials
who had
initiated
it,
to report positively
on the gang system
to
but adverse reports reached the Colonial Office by other
The Australian Experience
channels. The most disturbing
When
this
came
state for colonies in
regretted having
news was
to the attention of
that
William
homosexuality was Gladstone,
E.
who
rife
among
293
/
the convicts.
served briefly as secretary of
1846, he dismissed Governor Eardley-Wilmot. Officials in London
abandoned assignment so
now
hastily.
Gladstone was succeeded by the third earl Grey, formerly Viscount Howick. Grey sus-
pended transportation to Van Diemen's Land Empire
in the British lia.
He hoped
for
that could take convicts
to transport convicts
two years and began
and
who had served some
and were hence considered reformed. Referred
tiary
would
to
hunt
than convicts, they
Grey did not think of these people
South Africa aroused such opposition that the boat had to
Only the squatters
1830s and 1840s backed
in the interior,
exiles.
A
who
in 1848,
few boatloads landed in
issue
a massive antitransportation
New
was decided by
movement
attracting free labor.
still
When
movement.
re-
to
Even
the whole exile operation
the defeat of the
transportation to
a
few leading
lights
hired convicts.
New
South Wales and Victoria in
Van Diemen's Land
(separated from the goldfields
the discovery of gold in
made punishment by exile
made
its
colony on
which transportation
to
by only a narrow stretch of water) an absurdity. Meanwhile, the rapid gold rush
resume
South Wales, but in the face of con-
Van Diemen's Land,
had trouble
it
of the island's antitransportation
The
to
to the
opinion was evenly divided. Giving up convicts, some argued, would imperil
the colony's prosperity because
1851, which
Wales refused
always had difficulty obtaining labor, supported the
certed opposition Earl Grey desisted. In
sumed
New South
to Australia.
dumping ground. Free working people who had come
assisted passages in the
importation of
on
sail
as
A boatload sent to
convicts, but colonies in every quarter of the globe refused to accept them.
Surviving without transportation for a decade,
on Austra-
part of their sentence in a peniten-
to as "exiles" rather
receive tickets-of-leave once transported. Earl
role as a convict
for other places
relieve the intolerable pressure
much more
Whig government
in February
Van Diemen's Land was abandoned.
rise in prices
during the
expensive for the British government.
1852 carried Earl Grey from
Britain did,
convicts to Australia, for the colony of Western Australia
office,
however, continue to send
had responded favorably
to Grey's
blandishments. Founded by free settlers in 1829, Western Australia had languished economically;
it
now
began on a small
made
little
sought salvation in cheap labor and the British treasury. Transportation
1850 and continued
scale in
until 1867. Nevertheless,
difference to the penal regime of Great Britain.
From
Western Australia
the early 1850s, the great
majority of British convicts served out their time within their homeland's borders.
The
policies
adopted
for Britain's post-transportation penal
to the experience of the Australian convict colonies.
ments
in lieu of transportation passed
regime owed something
When a bill promulgating other punish-
through the House of Lords in 1853, Earl Grey
suggested that the Australian ticket-of-leave system be adopted in Britain. The government
accepted the proposal, giving that old device for saving ticket-of-leave system, the practice of parole
Just to
when the
British
Guiana from 1852 and
portation
abandoned to
New
money
a
new
lease of
life.
From
the
and parole supervision eventually developed.
transportation, the French took
it
up, sending convicts
Caledonia from 1865. French debate over whether trans-
was an appropriate punishment had gone on
to the British experience in Australia.
One outcome
for decades,
with both sides pointing
of British transportation stood out very
294
/
John Hirst
clearly:
whatever
its
This decided the matter in the a strong motive,
punishment,
effectiveness as a
mind
of
it
had produced prosperous
colonies.
Emperor Louis-Napoleon. Though colonization was
French penal settlements remained
distinct institutions in the
both of which had been established by
free migrants.
government supervision, with a portion
available for private
two
colonies,
Most of the convicts worked under
employment
at a fee.
Further,
ex-convicts were obliged to remain in the colony for a period equal to that of their sentence.
Neither French colony prospered as
New South Wales had, with the result that the ex-convicts
had few opportunities. In Guiana, they faced a
worse than
pitiful plight far
their original
sentence. Thus, the French failed to duplicate the British experience.
Indeed, no one could have duplicated the British experience of transportation to
South Wales. There, the colony was a
the pressures of pioneering an alien land,
by military
how
ered
difficult
it
was
the second
at
first.
New South Wales.
ex-convicts were an influential party in public logic of the republic of convicts
settle-
Penal reformers discov-
The governors of Van
building a penal regime, in part because they did not face
the particular disadvantages present in
was
still
affairs.
working
The standards by which Australians judge society.
boundary between penal
had subsumed the
to reorient the colony for penal purposes.
Diemen's Land had more success
New
of free wardens,
and the hijacking of convicts and government stores
officers for private gain. Early in its history the
ment and colony disappeared;
by the absence
social oddity created
itself
In that larger, less-contained colony,
Until the
out in
end of transportation, the
New
South Wales.
the convict colony are usually those of civil
Forced labor under threat of the lash appears as an oppression, and Australia's conroundly condemned as American slavery. But
vict past is as
if
the convict colony
is
consid-
ered as a place for the punishment of crime, then our judgment will be less confident. The principles of
punishment by which transportation was condemned led
which we now have
little
The
confidence.
prison,
still its
to a penal
central institution,
is
regime in
not a scientific
instrument for the reformation of criminals but a form of barbarism. In The Fatal Shore (1987), the
most compelling book written on the convict system, Robert Hughes spent hundreds of tyranny and cruelty.
pages highlighting
its
to private masters
was "by
been
tried in English,
it
largely
presents
itself.
He then concluded that the assignment of convicts
most successful form of penal
American or European history"
The convict colony
how
far the
invites
This
judgment by the standards of
is its
most surprising
by convicts nevertheless maintained the
ex-convicts,
and gave them the opportunity
convict labor.
It is
for
rehabilitation that
had ever
(p. 586).
a civil society because that
characteristic
rule of
law
for
—
all,
is
that a society peopled so
imposed no
disability
on
economic success through employment of
a society without parallel, a strange, late flowering of the ancien regime in
crime and punishment.
Bibliographic Note
The argument over the reasons for the
British
government's decision to settle Australia with convicts
can be followed in Ged Martin, ed. The Founding of Australia: The Argument about Australia's Origins ,
(Sydney: Hale and Iremonger, 1978),
Ged
Origins of Australia's Capital Cities, ed. P.
Martin, "The Founding of
New
South Wales," in The
Statham (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989),
The Australian Experience
and Alan
Frost, Convicts
and Empire:
A
Naval Question,
1
776-181
1
295
/
(Melbourne: Oxford University
Press, 1980).
For the plans of the Gambia settlement and their modification Atkinson, "The First Plans for Governing
New South Wales,
1
for
New South Wales, see Alan
786-87," Australian
Historical Studies
24 (1990): 22-40.
On Bentham's rival plan for a panopticon and his criticism of New South Wales, see J The Works oj Jeremy Bentham, ed.
J.
Hume, "Bentham's Panopticon: An
Bowring,
1 1
.
Bentham,
(Edinburgh: William Tart, 1843), and
vols.
L. J.
Administrative History," Historical Studies 15 (1973): 703-21,
16 (1974): 36-54.
The
with in
social characteristics of the convicts are dealt
Australia (Melbourne:
Melbourne University
Press, 1965),
L. L.
Robson, The Convict
and Stephen Nicholas,
Settlers oj
ed., Convict
Workers: Reinterpreting Australia's Past (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1988); the operation of the convict system in A. G. L.
jrom Great
Britain
and Ireland
Shaw, Convicts and
to Australia
the Colonies:
and Other Parts ojthe
Faber, 1966), J. B. Hirst, Convict Society and
Its
Enemies:
A Study oj Penal
British
Transportation
Empire (London: Faber and
A History oj Early New South Wales (Sydney: A History ojthe Transportation oj
G. Allen and Unwin, 1983), and Robert Hughes, The Eatal Shore: Convicts to Australia,
1787-1868 (London: Collins
defense of the convict system
is
Harvill, 1987).
found in W. Bland,
The most
worked
fully
Letters to Charles Buller Esq.
local
M.P. jrom the
Australian Patriotic Association (Sydney, 1849).
John Ritchie, Punishment and Projit: The Reports oj CommissionerJohn Bigge on
the Colonies
ojNew
South Wales and Van Diemen's Land, 1822-1823 (Melbourne: Heinemann, 1970), assesses the British
government's major rethink on the colony. The
new departure on Norfolk Island
Barry, Alexander Maconochie ojNorjolk Island: A Study oja Pioneer in Penal Rejorm
is
studied byj. V.
(Melbourne Oxford :
University Press, 1958).
The following have been drawn on M. Bourdet-Pleville,
Justice in Chains:
for the treatment of transported convicts in other locations:
Erom
the Galleys to Devil's Island, trans.
Anthony Rippon
(London: Robert Hale, 1960); A. Roger Ekirch, Bound jor America: The Transportation oj Convicts to the Colonies,
Policy
and
1
the Origins of the
French Presence in
of
Economic History, Australian National
A
Short History oj
New
British
718-1 775 (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1987); Colin Forster, "French Penal
New Caledonia" (unpublished paper, Department
University);
Caledonia since 1774 (Sydney:
Charles Pean, Conquest oj Devil's Island (London:
Max
Martyn Lyons, The Totem and
New
the Tricolour:
South Wales University Press, 1986);
Parrish, 1953).
—
CHAPTER TEN
Local Justice The Jail
Sean McConville
That jailes should be, there
is
law, sense
and reason,
To punish bawdry, cheating, theft and treason, Though some against them have invective bin,
And call'd a Jaile a magazin of sin, An Universitie of villany, An Academy of foule blasphemy,
A sinke of drunkenesse, a den to Thieves, A treasury for Sergeants and for Shrieves, A mint for Baylifes, Marshals men and Jailers,
Who live by losses of captiv'd bewailers: A
nurse of Roguery, and an earthly
Where
Dev'ls or Jaylers in
— John
Taylor, "The Praise
of ajayle
hell,
mens shapes doe
dwell.
and Vertue
and Jaylers," 1630
o other public institution so well embodies the contradictions
we
live.
Certainly symbols
—
prisoner implies deliberation and process rather than
last resort, the
be turned away,
They take away
hold a
corruption, extortion, debauchery, contamination, ruin, and despair. Ref-
\j
uges of
to
summary disposal
have equally been identified with grand and petty tyranny, sadism,
jails
./V
among which
and instruments of order and law
jails
door from which the mad,
have also been, and
liberty, yet to
sick, destitute,
and unwanted could not
are, places of terror, degradation,
some they impart
a sense of
freedom and
and
suffering.
security. Jails
have
always attracted philanthropic and political criticism, yet as prosperity and security advances, in
some Western
societies the jail
does not fade away but rather grows and becomes an even
more common experience. Its
paradoxical nature and functions are well reflected in the heterogeneity of
and supporters. Across the
political
spectrum, some have found the
instrument for maintaining Arcadia or moving toward Utopia or a university for rebellion.
To some,
the
jail is a
—
jail
its critics
an indispensable
a platform for noblesse oblige
conduit transmitting social policy to the
lower depths; to others, more romantic, jails are a price of individual
liberty, since their walls
An
eighteenth-century
engraving of the "begging grate" at
London's Fleet jail,
from which prisoners plead for assistance
from
passersby.
— 298
/
SeAn McConville
hold back not only the criminal but also the coercive powers of the within walls than a
nium,
it
state: better to
be captive
member of a captive community. On the eve of a new century and millen-
remains certain that jails are with us and speak for us and shall continue to thrive on
their age-old contradictory functions.
and Gaols
Prisons, Jails,
Some
terminological points must be made.
The word
prison
is
essentially generic,
passing a range of detention institutions and devices. These include the
temporary detention such as the lockup, pound, or
The
crib.
latter
jail
were formerly found in
the smallest of towns for the overnight detention of drunks, prostitutes, offenders.
don for
The bridewell
is
encom-
and places of
and other minor
another type of prison. This was inaugurated by the City of Lon-
in the sixteenth century in a
hand-me-down
royal palace converted into a reformatory
misdemeanants, nuisances, and orphans. The county institutions modeled on
called houses of correction.
These names are
jurisdictions being
known
Cages and stocks should
also, in
some
Modern
as bridewells
my view,
and
jails
being called houses of correction.
be treated as a subspecies of prison.
whatever their names
and dishonest "correctional
municipality are called
gamated with houses of correction
—
no such
1865
in
—
it
usual
is
penitentiary, reformatory for men or women,
facility"
In England,
jails.
were
it
used, with police stations and lockups in
practice complicates this historical use of terms. In the United States
to designate state prisons,
or the pallid
still
as prisons. Prisons
distinction
(the distinction
is
run by the county or
now made. Jails were
between the two
below) and called local prisons. Long-term prisons (the equivalent of the
is
amal-
discussed
state prison in the
United States) and local prisons were eventually brought together under central government administration, with
being
all
known
as prisons
and with consignment thereto known
as
imprisonment. In England
and the
rest of the
United Kingdom, there are therefore no longer places
called jails, although there are prisons
and sections of prisons
ing pretrial prisoners and people serving short sentences. editors prefer the four-letter
jail,
and noun,
as verb
that function as jails
To confuse
to the six-letter prison
and
more space-consuming imprisonment, which they usually mean. Americans are by the now preferred
British spelling of jail
and both forms have long been
gaol.
The pronunciations
—
detain-
newspaper copy
it all,
to the
are exactly the same,
in use. Perhaps, in the gaol form, there
is
an unconscious
desire to gentrify a very disreputable organization, since the tabloid newspapers are
more prone stick to the
A jail
to jail than to gaol,
and the quality press
American spelling and
is
a
prefers the opposite. For clarity,
much I
shall
practice.
county or municipal prison, in the United
function in recent English imprisonment, for prisoner. Captive is clearly
even
further baffled
not right.
I
I
shall
be
States.
explicit.
It is
Where
I
deal with the
jail
difficult to find a substitute
see nothing illogical in describing
someone
as a
prisoner in a jail and so shall use that term as well as the sanitizing inmate.
And
if
terminology
is
an
must warn of complications around
as long as the
jail.
irritating start to
to follow.
In England
what the reader expects
There are not
its
many
to
be a simple
story,
I
public institutions that have been
provenance extends through the recorded history of
— Local Justice
the country;
and
in the United States
public administration and the ries,
as have
some
of
its
life
existed from early colonial times.
it
of the
community has
inevitably
affected
jail's
place in
changed over the centu-
functions and relations with derivative and substitute institutions.
These developments must be mentioned. Administration,
what happened
The
299
/
to prisoners
sion of central control over jails
is
and so
and financing inevitably
staffing,
be considered. More recently the exten-
will also
a significant development,
whether
it
be through a direct
administrative takeover by national government, as in England, or through regulation, legislation,
and court intervention,
and milestones
we
as
some
as in the United States. These will be
take a brief excursion into the dense
of our signposts
and surprising undergrowth
that
history.
is jail
This essay will slip to and fro across the Atlantic
but there should be no
fairly easily,
alarm and hopefully no confusion. The shared history of the United States and Great Britain is
nowhere more apparent than
in the legal heritage of the
two countries.
Inevitably, there
have been divergences, where local needs, sentiments, and inventiveness have prompted
changes follow.
in policy
As
and
institutions.
The story
is
complicated but not
and
in certain other matters (speech patterns
former colony has remained truer to the
common
ishes openly in the United States, but in
England
heritage than the parent. it
is
kept in what
.
.
to
is felt
we
seclusion of a terminological and bureaucratic shrubbery. But, as
any other name
that difficult to
all
certain usages, for example), the
The
jail flour-
be the decent
by
shall see, a jail
.
Early English Jails The Normans of the Conquest found numerous and well-established jails, which clearly were important components of English criminal justice. Seeking, a century
anarchy that had occurred during the reign of his predecessor, Henry justice procedures
and
institutions that
have endured the
tests of
Henry took The
care that in each county there should be at least sheriff was, of course, a royal
interests against local powers. Five
tered,
all
but the
eight centuries.
166 Assize of Clarendon,
one jail, under the charge of his
appointment, a functionary who upheld his master's
hundred years
tiniest vestiges of the sheriff s jail
Whig supremacy, were ceded
long period of
1
suppress the
introduced criminal
more than
Manyjails belonged to local magnates, church and secular, but at the
sheriff.
later, to
II
later, as
strong central government
fal-
powers were stripped away and, during the
to a magistracy that
had become the
voice,
apparatus, and substance of local government.
Although Henry others. jails.
By the
II
decreed one of his
jails for
early thirteenth century there
each county, he dared not extinguish
were only
five
Alongside these, however, operated a swarm of municipal
various franchise political deals
jails.
Some
all
counties that did not have sheriffs' jails
and lockups,
of these municipal ventures were established
as well as
under charters
between ambitious burgesses and an avaricious Crown. The franchise
jails
arose from the customary rights adhering to administrative entities such as manors, divisions of counties,
and
liberties
within towns. Belonging to ecclesiastical and secular lords, they
passed through a variety of owners, gradually dwindling in the
Crown and
restricted
number as they were squeezed by
by Parliament. As profit-making debtors'
jails, a
few managed
to
300
SeAn McConville
/
when
survive until the latter half of the nineteenth century, finished
them
were theoretically the Crown's, periodically
All jails trial)
and inspection
strict legislation
off.
by the king's justices.
A
be delivered
to
few were even more directly connected
(i.e.,
to central
emptied
for
government
From the beginning, the Tower of London London jails also operated ad hoc on government. Newgate belonged to jhe City of London but held prisoners
than this useful administrative fiction suggested. served as a
jail for state
behalf of central
from
all
A number
offenders.
of other
over the country on the directions of the Crown, privy council, or superior courts.
Prisoners included people in trouble for reasons of state and religion, together with notorious
criminals and even debtors. Other
London
sides their conventional local uses.
The
came
to serve the courts of
common
acquired various specialized functions, be-
jails
Fleet,
probably England's oldest purpose-built
and
pleas, chancery,
star
originally the bishop of Winchester's jail for petty offenders, whores,
used in Elizabeth's reign
to
jail,
chamber, whereas the Clink,
and
their associates,
hold recusants and added yet another term
was
to the glossary of
punishment.
Other jails were maintained in places that had special forests ties
and tin-mining areas
and way of
life
The church, which
(stannaries).
of these localities did not in
its
by
charters,
church-owned
such as
its
activi-
with the conventional machinery of justice.
fit
secular right as a landowner maintained jails for the
detention and reformatory prisons to serve located in part of a
rights secured
These institutions were needed because the
parallel
on
lay prison, or
system of
laity, also
ecclesiastical premises,
had
These were
clerical justice.
and continued
in
use for religious offenders until the Reformation.
Finance and Corruption
The notion of public money tions that ers,
is
of relatively recent origin,
were financed by user
and jails were among many
offic-
coroners, and judges and justices, together with their subordinates and servants, were
expected to obtain their income from functionaries.
The prospect of
these people were
fees,
so were the jailers, turnkeys, and other minor jail
extracting fees from prisoners
drawn chiefly from
the poor
of the nineteenth century, English jailers
and
and powerless
may
at first
seem
futile,
classes. Yet, until the
their subordinates
words of an eighteenth-century reformer, they "wrung
were paid in
this
emolument from
their
over the prisoners' bodies was an effective means of securing credit, since
had
to
since
beginning
way. In the
misery."
trol
all
Con-
accounts
be settled before the guest could depart.
In the large
town
jails,
livelihoods were so
handsome
major investments. In 1716, in the aftermath of their in
institu-
customs and excise
fees. Just as sheriffs, tax collectors,
London yielded
profits of three to four
that jailerships
were traded as
failed rebellion, Jacobites incarcerated
thousand pounds
to
William
Pitt,
Newgate's keeper.
Criminal celebrities such as Jack Sheppard and Jonathan Wild were also profit-makers, since the citizenry
was delighted
to
pay
to
gawk
at
and
talk to
them
execution. Yet these were mere windfalls. Bread-and-butter profits the prison. There were admittance
food, water,
and lodgings. The
last
and discharge
fees, fees for
as they awaited trial
came from
the daily
and
life
of
ironing and de-ironing, fees for
could range from a vermin-infested cellar to a room in the
— Local Justice
own
keeper's
made from such as
skittles
wonder
that
and sold nest egg
money was
house, depending, of course, on one's ability to pay. More
the tap
—an alehouse
and the services of
some jailerships had
their positions,
when
the office
prostitutes
a
some
visitors. In
were available
a large price tag.
which yielded
was
and
for prisoners
to all
jails,
to
1
be
entertainments
with funds.
It
was no
Turnkeys, porters, and clerks also bought
modest but not miserly income and
a retirement
Sometimes these positions were bought and
sold.
30
/
sublet, with
profits being shared between the owner and the worker.
The and
line
between fee-taking and extortion
is
easily crossed, as is that
between legitimate
such as Jonathan Wild, had compli-
illegitimate service. Eighteenth-century thieftakers,
cated but lucrative relationships with crime and criminals. Notionally they acted as a private police,
rewarded by victims and protective associations
criminals. profit, a
They were accepted
number
to recover property
and apprehend
as a type of fee-supported detective force. In the pursuit of
and
of corrupt relationships
tricks
were developed. Thieftakers
split fees
with thieves for the return of property, fenced property on which deals could not be made, spotted likely targets and commissioned thefts, and from time to time turned rebellious associates
over to the law and the gallows, pour encourager
London jailers, and probably
economy robbers,
of crime. Their jails were brothels, taps, criminal clubs,
and fraudsmen, and when
minions would bring
false
could use the
jail
jail's
as a sanctuary, leaving
to exclude pursuers as they it
their
raw material
embedded
and asylums
—prisoners—threatened
were
maw,
to
run out,
the professional thief or pretend bankrupt
and returning
at will.
Prison walls were as useful
And
keep wrongdoers in custody.
to
if
this
should be remembered that there were no professional police forces
obtaining admission to a
in the
for thieves,
charges to replenish the supply. Whereas the petty criminal or
debtor would be ground up in the
probable,
les autres.
those of other big towns, were similarly
jail
against the wishes of the jailer
sounds imat the time;
would have been extremely
difficult.
How
did those prisoners exist
corrupt relationship with the
who had
jailer,
no
neither friends nor family to support them,
creditor
on
a string?
Many
no
starved to death or died
from disease. For centuries, epidemics were a second form of jail delivery. The jails made no
do anything other than
pretense at reform, did not claim to
nothing in the way of sustenance; thus prisoners were relatively probably a minority
—supported themselves
their bodies. Prisoners also
newcomers had
to
imposed
pay up or
collective levies
strip off their clothes,
There was some outside support. side,
Jails
free
who had
—
cobblers, tailors,
and
Young women
sold
funds.
under the name of garnish or chummage:
which could be
sold.
might, for example, have gratings on their street
from which prisoners could beg from passersby; others designated
would
solicit
alms while chained in the
form of charity that lasted in England
Some
within the walls.
in the portable trades
saddlemakers. Others performed services for prisoners
and provided almost
detain,
street.
The pious
left
official
beggars,
bequests for prisoners'
until the late nineteenth century,
who
relief (a
when it was zealously
extinguished by disapproving bureaucrats). Municipalities occasionally stirred themselves. Foodstuffs confiscated for violations of trade regulations prisons. In 1572, the wide-ranging
Poor Law of Elizabeth
I
would sometimes be
sent to the
at last stipulated that the
counties
302
SeAn McConville
/
could use public funds to provide for poor prisoners, although evenly carried into
And on
effect.
could be expected to levy their
all
these donations
and
this provision
doles, the jailer
and
was very un-
his underlings
tolls.
Functions and Conditions Until relatively recent times the notion of using a
and indeed would have seemed
reform the offender was
jail to
were held
bizarre. People
execution of sentence, whether that be flogging, death, or banishment. as retribution
—
and
to await their trial
unknown
to await the
A minority were jailed
municipal trade laws, for petty criminal offenses, and for rea-
for violating
sons of state. The jail's great inconvenience and financial demands made this a severe punish-
ment
in
itself,
made up
the
even jail
for the wealthy, quite apart
—those
population
group of witnesses held
in civil
from the
perils to health.
Two
other groups
contempt (usually debt), and an unfortunate
to ensure their appearance.
The jail's danger, inconvenience, and generally coercive properties made
it
the ideal in-
strument to wring money due to the Crown from careless tax collectors and reluctant subjects.
Edward
Ill's
Debtors' Act in 1350 extended to private creditors this most useful
On
of squeezing, thus inaugurating centuries of incarceration for debt.
probably seems counterproductive to
money and
earning
in
many
malice and
tors'
instances, but in the course of time
ire
and the
belief
was
many years,
it
became obvious
to enforce
were
that people
payment of trifling sums;
credi-
pulled the levers of state power, and the satisfaction sought sometimes
beyond the purely
far
to coerce,
would be realized or friends and family induced to pay. This doubtless
being jailed and held, sometimes for
went
was
it
means of
debtor, since one thereby cuts off the
settling obligations. But the intention
that the debtor's property
happened
jail a
method
consideration,
first
financial. In
England and the American colonies by the eigh-
teenth century various societies settled the trifling debts of the poor and gave
Benjamin Franklin (author,
after all, of the
aphorism "Remember,
one of many prominent figures on both sides of the Atlantic philanthropic societies. The relief of poor debtors
was
also a
that time
them freedom. is
money") was
who had an interest in such common object of charitable
bequests.
A singular weakness in procedure was fully exploited by the dishonest debtor, even while the truly destitute remained firmly within the toils of the law. cerated,
no
further action could be taken
by his creditor
not, for example, seize the debtor's chattels. This
Once
to recover
anomaly
running up debt, these
the "politic debtor." De-
servants. This
amount
game with another gull. For such tricksters,
even easier by paying the
conduct business within
Crown
—
a class of
that
jailer to
allow them to "go abroad," that
a certain part of the city, escorted
some prisoners had themselves
debtors.
A more
life at
pitiful class of
debtor
by
had been tricked from
opted
to
to con-
the Fleet could be is,
a bailiff.
transferred to the Fleet
who
with
would continue
he could see was daily diminishing. The agreement released the cheat
tinue his profitable
privilege that
and
food,
until the creditor agreed to settle for a percentage of the
that
incar-
tricksters sat in jail, enjoying their creditor's substance,
which they would buy comfortable lodgings, good
him and
had been
emergence of
led to the
fraudsman well known in Shakespeare's time and probably before liberately
a debtor
money: the creditor could
made
to
move around and
So
attractive
was
by pretending
this
to
be
remain in jail consisted of those
Local Justice
who,
in the
knowledge
that debts
were canceled by death, chose
of preserving their remains of property
The hopeless known,
as
John
plight of
and possessions
some debtors and
lifelong captivity as a
for family
and
/
303
means The racket court at the
heirs.
Fleet in 1809.
the criminal pillagings of others were well-
Fleet to
So Rorers, Rascals, Banquerouts
were permitted
move about freely,
enjoying recreations or
politicke,
visits
friends will find a tricke,
from family and
friends with
Their Jaylor to corrupt, and
at their will
They walke abroad, and take
supervision.
their pleasure
still:
Whilst naked vertue, beggerly, despis'd, Beleaguered round, with miseries surpris'd,
Of hope
of any liberty defeated,
For passing of his word
is
merely cheated:
And dungeond up, may tell the wals his mones, And make relation to the senseless stones, Where sighs and grones, and tears may be his feast, Whilst man to man is worse than beast to beast. Till
death he there must take his sad abode,
Whilst
craft
and coozenage walke
at will
abroad.
("The Praise and Vertue of a Jayle and Jaylers")
Until the nineteenth century, jail
and
it
was
with which
life
could be
certainly not the restricted prisoner's
we have become
familiar.
that
the confines oj the
Taylor's verse shows:
With money, or with
At
time, prisoners within
made comfortable life
for those
of shame, discipline,
who had funds,
and submission
There was no uniform, nor were the days shaped by a
little
or no
304
SeAn McConville
/
penal routine; only a minority of prisoners were locked in separate
imposed, and there was no special
and one's
acolytes,
fellows, could
diet.
To
be accommodated,
move
in
and out
relatively freely, as
Dorrit
is
his
and servants
there were any)
(if
could tradesmen, friends, and gawkers. Children
could be born in jail and, with their debtor parent, Little
and
could approximate that pursued
life
outside, with the exception that one could not leave. Family
could
Penal labor was not
cells.
the extent that the rapacity of the keeper
live
out
much of their life
there (Dickens's
based on such a theme). Games and recreations were unhindered by any con-
sideration except custody. Squash rackets
is
thought to have originated in the
Fleet;
it
was
certainly played there.
tempting to describe the
It is
laissez-faire state of the jails, a state that persisted until the
nineteenth century (and beyond), as benign neglect. But malign neglect
haphazard miseries of jails were blended into
and
loss of
the debtor
pay
to
is
more
accurate.
freedom
produce the sanction
to
that
virtue united. If the jailed felon
was
a
living condi-
punished the wrongdoer and coerced
and contumacious. That the taxpayer was thereby justified
improve such conditions was
The
convenient and persuasive teleological doc-
Danger and ruinous expense combined with appalling
trine: squalor careens.
tions
a
in his unwillingness to
happy and convenient circumstance: parsimony and alive,
still
it
was by grace and
favor; the
misdemeanant
equally deserved his punishment. James Neild, disciple of the noble penal reformer John
Howard,
encountered in his work of jail reform
in the early years of the nineteenth century
and philanthropy a were provided
common
for the
view of the misery of the prisoner. This emphasized that
wrongdoer "who, having opposed the
ordinances, has
doom
rot in the
protection oj the laws. Leave
him
to his
of misery: Let
him
geon; and drag his unwieldy chain, at the mercy of his keeper."
appealed to the gentry of his county to pay
(which resulted, inter returned to
jail until
alia,
the
vapours of a dun-
Howard
himself,
when he
out of taxes and to improve conditions
jail fees
who had been found
in people
jails
abandoned
not guilty by the courts being
they had paid their keeper) was told "'Let them take care
to
keep
out,'
prefaced perhaps with an angry prayer." This fine old sentiment lives on and has been successfully transplanted to the
A
ington Post reporter about forced acts of
sodomy
twelve such assaults a week, in a
450
detainees. is
New World.
prominent judge in Prince George's County, Maryland, was in 1982 questioned by a Wash-
that
The judge's response was
you
get raped in that jail."
thing that's so bad you shut your the fact
it's
happening
in
of
jail
blunt:
in the county
prisoners,
"One
of the reasons
Another judge had
mind
to
it. It's
a
There were as
whom
it
carceris lives
out than to
—
many
were
as
pretrial
you shouldn't break the law
weaker stomach: "This
easier to blot
our society." Squalor
jail.
70 percent of
is
come
the kind of
to grips
with
a rationalization for neglect,
administrative lawlessness, and a pandering to popular vindictiveness. Frustration with crime, class
and
and race prejudice, and
a lack of
moral and
political leadership
ensure
its
longevity
vigor.
Jail
Reform
A number of developments in the late eighteenth century began the process of bringing a new kind of order to the
jails.
The
evangelical revival inside
and outside the Church of England
Local Justice
directed spiritual energy
were
and
and
practical attention to sources of misery
vice, of
305
/
which jails
Wesley brothers, undertook the dan-
clearly one. Various philanthropists, including the
gerous work of ministering in the jails and cataloging their deficiencies. In the United States, republican idealism and energy provided another impetus to reform. Correspondence crossed the Atlantic as experiments in penal reform were tried
tory
must acknowledge the
common
legal
and
A
and elsewhere.
commended
themselves to political
to study Pennsylvania's strict system of
man
penal discipline, which was based on separate confinement. That kindly son) Charles Dickens
came and looked
struck to England to
wage
a
two countries.
generation later the spark passed in the opposite
and France sending emissaries
direction, with Britain
several genera-
of this period of penal his-
institutional heritage of the
Experiments by English county magistrates easily leaders in Philadelphia
and evaluated; over
Any review
tions there was to be considerable cross-fertilization.
at the
Eastern State Penitentiary.
campaign against the
(and
jailbird's
He returned horror-
rationalistic cruelties of the separate sys-
tem, which was being promoted afresh in England, as a national model. Jails had begotten penitentiaries.
Before this extravagant experiment got under
way
there were
more modest attempts
to
men were separated from women,
curb the lawlessness of jails. In reform-minded jurisdictions
children from adults, felons from misdemeanants, remands (pretrials) from the convicted,
and debtors and other
civil
prisoners from the criminal. Jail fees were prohibited in England
in 1815. This obliged counties
money came for order
and
with prisoners. The United
leasing of prisoner labor, a
1917 and
in
pay
realistic salaries,
closer county supervision
Alabama
and with public
and greater expectations
could no longer claim to "own" their positions, nor could they
toward government and
late as the
to
—
discipline. Jailers
justify trading hostility
and municipalities
accountability of a kind
taxes,
States,
with
was slower
its
to
small-farmer ideology and residual
move
form of self- financing, did not,
until 1928. Vestiges of the fee
1940s jailers continued to be paid
for
to publicly financed jails.
The
example, stop in Florida until
system remained, and in some places as
fees instead of salaries
by
their counties.
At different paces, maybe, both American and Bntish politicians and administrators sought to
curb jail excesses and to find
had
in
new forms of punishment.
Felons (with some few exceptions)
England always been the responsibility of the Crown, which either executed them
from the early eighteenth century onward, transported them overseas, the conveniently discovered Australia.
The twelve -year hiatus between
American War of Independence and the landing of felons
The
vessels
were old warships
turned into a
new
nation,
to
for a
to
the outbreak of the
otherwise would have been
moored on
the
Thames and
be no more than a temporary
and American doors closed forever against
was muddle, make-do, and scandal ally the
who
(called hulks)
Portsmouth harbor. What had been thought
or,
America and then
Botany Bay compelled the "tem-
at
porary expedient" of keeping in floating prisons the felons transported.
to
in
local upset
British convicts.
There
while in British convict administration, but eventu-
hulks spawned land-based prisons for convicts
(i.e.,
convicted felons), quite separate
from the jails. These new prisons were administered directly by central government. In America, at
about the same time,
states
went into the construction of penitentiaries, and
system of incarceration was established: county- and municipality-run
misdemeanants, and debtors;
state penitentiaries for felons.
a similar dual
jails for
remands,
306
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/
At the opposite end of the continuum of culpability, reformers argued with increasing success that jailing and imprisonment were ruinous for children. Since
contaminated, and blasted young
on
children's prisons, based
ruption
(a silly
lives,
it
was argued,
alternatives
had
to
corrupted,
jails
be found. Separate
the theory that older criminals were the principal source of cor-
notion, given what
ingly took children out of the
we now know of the chemistry of the peer group),
increas-
where they had usually served short sentences of
jails,
a few
days or weeks, and put them instead into reformatories, where, in pressure-cooker condi-
and compassed ruination probably
tions, they spent years
own
Closer to our
jails.
made
obvious, and attempts were
most extreme
and
times, the expense to
far
more thoroughly than
in the
expedient became inescapably
folly of this
keep youthful offenders out of custody in
all
but the
cases.
Misery, Reform, and
The philosopher and might be better
critic C. S.
More Misery
Lewis observed in a famous essay on punishment that
it
under robber barons than under omnipotent moral busybodies. His
to live
reasoning was that the robber baron might sometimes relent, because he either slept or was
On
satiated.
the other hand, Lewis argued, "Those
torment us without end ing and not a
for they
The jailer and
his
may
was
endowed
own good
cast,
life
in jail
—and
a
It is
comparison of
cast in the robber
baron mold. Over every
and the senses with which every pawnbroker and mon-
they are to survive gave an instant financial reading.
If
prisoner was a person of substance, he might expect a greeting not too dissimilar, in
all
if
circumstances, from that which a world-worn hotelier might extend. But poor, the greeting and his prospects
The
that
way
his
us a
tell
lot
had but smale
about the
jail
hell hell,
.
on
.
.
must nedys aper when ye war
was apt
to
liest
earth, here
be
that probably
Then thou buried before thou
Thou
the
was
different.
experience of the well-to-do. "The Flet
lyberte therein, for ye
smacks of authenticity (and in prison?
the
landowner
into the Fleet (one of London's jails) in 1472, wrote to his wife in terms
a writer of Shakespeare's time,
back.
would be very
the prisoner
if
difference can be seen in contemporary reports/John Paston, an English
who found
will
tempt-
us toward the robber baron.
tilt
minions were undoubtedly
a very cold eye
eylender must be
torment us for our
plausible to apply this perspective to
little
reformed and unreformed jails
newcomer
who
do so with the approval of their own conscience."
upon thy
bier
and
histrionic,
is
a fayir preson, but ye
callyd."
Thomas Dekker,
but his lament for the poor prisoner
from firsthand experience): "Art thou poor and
art
dead.
treadest
Thou
earnest thy winding-sheet
upon thy grave
thou especially shalt be sure to find
it:
If
at
every step.
If
on thy
there be any
there be degrees of torments in
here thou shalt taste them." Until the nineteenth century few observers
worrying in the very different
wonder, should have his
lot in
a
person
who was
version of equity, and
jail, it
particularly
Why,
they would
poor and
the well-off in
jail.
when free And why should a person not use his wealth possible to the way he would if free? That was their
poor, miserable, and in danger of starvation
any way improved when
to maintain himself in
that there
lives of the
would have found anything
as close as
in jail?
would have seemed absurd and possibly wicked
should be equality in the misery of the jail.
to
them
to suggest
Local Justice
307
/
Early-nincteenth-
century engraving of the poorest pris-
oners of London's Marshalsea.
The past, as
lives of the
now, only
poor and the rich were, therefore, very different in jail, although
a very select
company
of the rich were jailed.
The only condition
in the
that
both
shared was that they were captives. This meant that you could not leave and, as Paston complained,
had
to
appear when called. Both rich and poor might be chained, although since one
of the jailer's devices for raising funds
was
to charge his prisoners for not
chances are that the prisoner with funds was
were very
Food and lodging in
different.
free of
the jailer's apartments, or in a special part of the jail,
were as different as they could be from necessities in the tion, disease,
and desperation were the
lot of the
teenth century. William Smith, a doctor
who
class of
human beings,
motion with vermin, butic
and venereal
Starvation, intimida-
poor prisoner certainly
London
women
almost naked, with only a few
their bodies rotting with the
until the late eigh-
jails in
the mid- 1770s,
of the very lowest filthy rags
and most
almost alive and in
bad distemper, and covered
in itch, scor-
ulcers."
The incarcerated merchant or landowner, tucking probably had
common ward.
visited the
described the prisoners as "vagrants and disorderly
wretched
wearing chains, the
encumbrances. But the days of the two
little
into
lamb chops
idea of the misery that dwelt within a few score
at the jailer's table, feet.
Periodically,
308
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/
however, the walls, in the
common ward
visited the loftier parts of the
form of deadly jail
these periodic epidemics swept
whom
fever.
No
jail,
and even went beyond the
respecter of social position or of hefty fee-payers,
away the jurymen, lawyers, judges, and magistrates before
the prisoners were produced. (The stench of the prisoners,
and
a belief in the mias-
matic transmission of disease, are the origin of the posy that senior judges
still
carry
opening of new court terms in England.) Released prisoners carried the disease to communities. Where the earliest
jail
argument
altruistic
failed, the threat of
women, young from
old, criminal
tried)
probably did not make too it
from
fenders; step
were
to
eating,
civil,
many
killing
two was
become
men from
from misdemeanant, convicted from un-
felon
inroads into the differential treatment of rich and
to establish order in the place of
reform process, however, was inimical
from
the jails egalitarian
Although the regulation of jails (the separation of
poor,
jails
home
reforms were preventive health measures.
in their infliction of suffering.
stop
their
plague prevailed, and some of
A number of factors came together in the nineteenth century to make
began
on the
locked-up anarchy. The next stage in the
to a diversity of jail lifestyles. Step
one had been
people through disease or from making prisoners more hardened to imagine that jails could be
better
by being subject
used
to controls
working, associating with others, reading
—and
make
to
criminals better. Prisoners
on every aspect
of daily
in religion, dress,
and exercise. Through
sleeping,
life:
by coerced habits of regularity, or
the deterrence of carefully calculated discomfort or pain or ,
through educationally and religiously structured reform, or by combinations of these, fenders could be changed into law-abiding citizens tion to control
all
aspects of the environment
highly uniform. There
would be no
was
to of-
—
Such
so ran the theory.
clearly
going to make the
place for the carousing
of-
a determina-
jail
experience
and unregulated misery of earlier
centuries. It
would be
foolish for the sake of
giene,
and medical treatment. But the
misery.
argument
price of these
To prevent mutual contamination,
for a free
to claim that these
The moral busybodies
prisoner worse off than before.
solitude
at least
changes
ensured
improvements was
was imposed on the
the poor
left
minimum
food, hy-
a different
prisoners.
person to imagine the impact of prolonged separate confinement on the
mind; and even though most of those in
jails
kind of
It is
hard
human
served only days or weeks, this was a very
heavy punishment. Forms of labor were devised that could be minutely measured and that
machines made inescapable. together but
Much
thought went into food that would keep body and soul
would do no more. Sleep was seen
as
an indulgence and was regulated
accordingly. In truth, the misery of the robber baron
and the reformers
is
hard to measure. Certainly
any exercise of imagination would prevent one from joining in what until recent times was a paean of unquestioned praise squalor, danger,
ness of
human
for the
work
of the early (and later) prison reformers.
life.
But
how
are
we
to react to those
stantly refined a system of hygienic suffering? Surely
abundance of imagination or none excessive
The
and barbarism of the premodem jail evoke our pity and wonder at the cheap-
when he wrote
at all.
who
designed, implemented, and con-
one must
Samuel Coleridge's
recoil
from what was either an
derisive indignation
of Cold Bath Fields, one of London's pioneering reformed
was not jails:
— Local Justice
/
309
As he went through Cold-Bath Fields he saw
A And
solitary cell;
the Devil
was pleased,
for
it
For improving his prisons in
gave
him
a hint
Hell.
Uniformity of punishment might be defended as another aspect of equality before the law: riches should not shield
of
But what about those
it.
court appearance?
one from just punishment, nor poverty expose one
who are sent
punishment but simply
to jail not for
The nineteenth- and early-twentieth-century reformers
including pretrial detainees
— should be treated
in the
to
an excess
to ensure their
stressed that
all
same way. But why should an
unconvicted person be obliged to forgo the comfort and privileges of his means simply because he
is
vide secure
There must, of course, be such restrictions as are necessary to pro-
in detention?
and
but other than these, what right
safe custody,
be to impose deprivations on the unconvicted? For prison reformers
who
looked
more
far
in their hearts probably believed that
was
to
be
guilty.
prisoners.
About
Here clearly
to administrative
it
all
mattered
—moral
or political
we must
this injustice
also
—can
there
blame those
convenience than to right and
little,
since to be accused
who
and detained
half the average daily population of the jails today consists of pretrial is
another reform to
make
the devil grin.
Moving Debtors out of Jail Debtors were gradually cleared out of the for
contempt of court, and not
private debts until the
for debt,
1960s and
jails,
although the fiction that one was being jailed
allowed people to be imprisoned in England for
for public debt,
tury,
local taxes,
even now. In America,
most jurisdictions
in the nineteenth cen-
such as
coercive imprisonment for private debt ceased in
although other forms of debtor imprisonment, often masked by a contempt of court or
criminal citation, have continued into perplexing.
One
modern
times. Certainly the English
lessness or dishonesty they
had caused
a loss to their creditors,
which was viewed much
they had stolen. This view was vigorously espoused, for example, by edly liberal Gladstone
sums involved, ice, that
Committee on prisons
debtors'
marked
found the issue
school of thought was apt to think of all debtors as criminals, since by reck-
and
as late as 1895.
defaulters' miserable lives,
the progress of
To
members
as
if
of the suppos-
others, the pettiness of the
and the misfortune, rather than mal-
most debtors into custody spurred campaigns
for
changes in
the law.
Debt raised certain titled to
difficult issues in political
intervene in what
was
to enforce a contract,
eighteenth century there
legal thought.
essentially a matter of private contract
damage might such intervention inadvertently do was being used
and
was no
was
clear
to
Was government
en-
and property? What
commerce? Conversely, when
the
jail
there not, ipso facto, a public interest? In the later
answer
to these questions.
Piecemeal solutions were
found in periodic Insolvent Debtors Acts, which released debtors from the English jails, eased overcrowding, and salved the public conscience. In 1813 Parliament set up a court to deal with insolvent debtors, thus obviating the need for regular legislative action. But
new ways of
handling the problems were not easily adopted, and in the succeeding thirty years there were
more than
forty
such
acts.
310
SeAn McConville
/
An
increase in wealth
and the ease of
credit led to laws that, in the latter part of the
nineteenth century, began again to increase the
men, known
as tallymen, brought
inevitably a crop of defaulters
wives' debts at this time,
number of jailed debtors. Door-to-door sales-
household goods on credit
was produced
and there was much public
to the
working
Husbands were
for the jails.
classes,
and
liable for their
criticism of the resultant family disas-
Public and commercial opinion was confused and divided, but the frequent tinkering
ters.
with the law eventually had an
some 60 percent
tuted
came
In 1776
of jail inmates.
The
glish jail committals.
Prison
effect.
John Howard had found
By 1877 debtors accounted
England exclusively
last jail in
—
closed in 1862 and was demolished in 1868.
a
dwindling element in the population and
jurisdictions, he has
all
life
The
of the
for
for debtors
privately
jails.
that debtors consti-
only 3 percent of En-
—the
Queen's
committed debtor be-
Today, in most common-law
but vanished.
One American colony (Georgia) was founded with the intention that it should be a haven New World should mean a fresh start. This history, and a republican distaste for coercive incarceration, made Americans uneasy with the jailing of debtors. Some states prohibited the practice in their constitutions, but others confor
poor debtors, and there was a sense that the
tinued in the English tradition. Pennsylvania, for example, both as colony and as its
concern with the
evils of jailing for
actually forbid the practice until 1842. Indeed, as recently as
oner
—
a person
ing debt
who was in contempt of court because he
—continues
the offenses
is
officials.
failed to follow
This type of pris-
schedules concern-
be found in the American jails in small numbers. The
to
showed
1969 Maine debtors were jailed
obey the repayment instructions of court-appointed
for failing to
state,
debt by successive steps of amelioration but did not
civil
nature of
concealed, since in most jurisdictions they have been subjected to the criminal
code.
There are more of those
who
court orders to pay family support.
are incarcerated because of their failure to
Some
of these
to convince the court. This path to custody
may follow either a civil or a criminal process, and
the objective of punishment continues to be intermingled with that of coercion. are not great, but neither
do they seem
to
obey laws or
men plead inability but go to jail if they fail
be
totally negligible. Unfortunately,
The numbers
our knowledge
from complete. In 1968-69 almost 7 percent of those commit-
of the national statistics
is far
ted to jails in Nebraska
had been found
guilty of failing to support their families; at the Mil-
waukee, Wisconsin, county jail in 1966 just under 4 percent of prisoners were there
same reason. Some of these men feckless
and could pay were they
are obdurate
and angry and
to put their lives in order;
and probably a small number do
not pay because they cannot. Under budgetary, social, and political pressures a states have recently ers. If
begun more aggressively
these efforts result in an increased
again see a significant debtor population. able.
to seek
number
will
coming before
Whether such jailings are
Payment coerced through incarceration can hope
term way and
number
and prosecute family-support
of cases
to
for the
will not pay; others are
work
the courts,
cost-effective
is
in only a general
of
default-
we may
question-
and long-
always be thwarted by a federal system of administration and diverse
jurisdictions.
Incarceration for an offense of dishonesty or dishonor has always carried a stigma in respectable circles, but
when jailing for debt was
fairly
widespread the experience was treated
Local Justice
more lightly and did not permanently damage sometimes provoked sympathy
young men, was seen
as
reputations.
ones misfortune
for
otherwise respectable
—adding
Montagu Williams,
Counsel, wrote his widely read memoirs, Leaves of a
1 1
To have been an imprisoned debtor
or, in the case of
no more than the sowing of wild oats
recklessness to the staidness of middle-age.
3
/
Life,
the spice of youthful
a distinguished Queen's
in the 1890s.
He
recalled his
own
youthful escapades with debt, spunging houses (a type of profit-making halfway house for debtors), moneylenders, latter
was
a
and
bailiffs,
nobleman who, because
as well as the experiences of family friends.
The immunity arose from
to escape arrest.
was obliged
of his debts,
the fact that the family lived in
Windsor, and debtors could not be arrested within the precincts of his semicaptive
the law,
tolerable, the Williams's guest
life
and each Sunday he would go
debt were stayed on that day. back, and he tarried in
He
London,
to
eventually
fell
Monday. These and other adventures Williams ways of the
have forfeited both social position and
Changes
in Jail
of the
The
Cloisters at
a royal palace.
To make
took advantage of another indulgence of safe in the
into the
knowledge
relates
that all arrests for
hands when a clock was
bailiffs'
London past the midnight hour and into the
geois middle age returned to the
One
with Williams's family
to lodge
first
set
minutes of an arrestable
with aplomb, though had he, in bour-
feckless nobility
and
his youth, he
would quickly
legal practice.
Procedure and Function Bail
As has been seen, from the
earliest
times one of the main functions of the jail has been to hold
accused people pending their
trial.
From
of ensuring appearance at
—
provide securities in the community. Indeed the roots of
trial
to
equally early times there was an alternative
means
peacekeeping in the English-speaking nations go back to the mutual surveillance and collective responsibilities of
Anglo-Saxon England. Groups often families were responsible, under
a tithingman, for ensuring obedience to the law in their area. Part of this obligation included
the duty to
produce a wrongdoer. Failure
to locate or give
up an offender meant
tion of a collective fine, called a "grithbryce" or "fightwitt." suffer
The knowledge
the imposi-
that
all
could
through the misdeeds of one was a powerful and simple means of enforcing the law.
also accorded with
one of the inclinations of the Anglo-Saxon tradition
—
a
weak
state
It
and
decentralization of power.
The enforcement
of collective responsibility
live a settled agrarian life.
but there
is
nowhere
is,
of course, entirely practical
Not only does everyone know everyone
for a fugitive to go, since all other
else in
when people
such communities,
communities would look with suspi-
cion and hostility on a stranger unable to account for himself. Collective responsibility
not be practical in
modern urbanized
and
between people. But the notion of giving security
a lack of ties
remains. Bail has
pearance In
—
come
to
conditions,
mean monetary
which
are
marked by
may
mobility, anonymity,
to ensure
appearance
or other property being pledged to guarantee ap-
the pledge being either the accused's or that of a relative, friend, or supporter.
modern
times, a major
appear has been that
drawback
many accused
ther they nor their families
and
in the notion of accepting a pledge of security to
people are from the poorest sections of society, and nei-
friends have property to pledge.
The solution is, of course,
to
312
jail
SeAn McConville
/
such people. But the problem with
tions.
ability to
overcrowded it
in
many jurisdic-
undoubtedly hampers one's
prepare a defense. Under the pressure of numbers, expense, and concerns about
schemes have been developed
equity,
this is that the jails are
moreover, expensive to hold a person in jail, and
It is,
that involve a personal assessment of the accused
of the chances of his honoring a promise to appear
There are bound
if
allowed to be
be failures with such schemes, but
to
for the
at large
pending
and
trial.
most part they work well
We may not live in the glass bowl of Anglo-Saxon England, but modern bureaucracy
enough.
and technology make running
it
difficult to live the life of a fugitive,
not a solution to their problems and will simply
is
and most people
make
extent, therefore, the jail has spilled out into society, but without
and
and the problem
latitude as
major
ill
effects.
To some Consider-
now make bail schemes essential to the administration of justice, who have the responsibility of risk assessment is to refine their (including statistically based risk-assessment tables) to give the accused as much
ations of cost
procedures
realize that
things worse.
is
fairness
for those
compatible with the protection of society.
Apart from release on a promise to appear (which
accused person
is
on own recognizance),
called release
some
there are various forms of hybrid custody, involving
release
and some confinement.
who does not have a home or settled accommodation,
granted bail on condition that he reside in a hostel
—
for
An
example, might be
in the United States usually called a
halfway house or (for those hopelessly addicted to euphemisms) a community correctional facility.
In the last decade the jail has
become
electronic, with the
development and use of
devices that oblige the wearer to remain at home. Certain liberal and libertarian critics have issued dire warnings about these devices, variously called "tags" or "electronic handcuffs."
The worry is,
is
of course,
that
an authoritarian government might abuse them. The use or not of devices
no defense against authoritarian government, and perhaps some comfort will be
taken from the absence so
far of reports of dissident professors
being electronically hand-
cuffed to their homes. Far from being a sinister development, these devices, though not with-
out problems, have saved both expense and hardship in the case of the limited group of offenders on
whom they can be used
(people with a
minimum
level of maturity, telephones,
and homes). In the United States, but not in England, a commercial bail-bonding industry developed.
This
is
based on risk assessment, but by a profit-making concern rather than a probation
also
officer or other official.
Once bail
is set,
a
person unable to deposit the whole amount with the
court can apply to a bail-bonding agency, which, for a fee of 10 percent of the total bail, will
pledge the
full
sum required by the court. Should the client abscond,
and the 10 percent guarantees,
fee is
which allow people
and the bonder has
for
to
a considerable
return to the court any It is
payment
difficult to
bonded
assuming that
be
at large
who
inducement
risk.
The courts
fee
forfeits bail,
otherwise would have to be in custody,
and
to
pursue and
fugitives.
account for the nondevelopment of the bail-bonding industry in En-
jailer for the privilege of
was justified on
bonder
happy to accept such
realistically to assess risk
gland. In at least one English jail, until the nineteenth century,
pay the
the
are
being
at large
the basis that a bailiff
had
it
was possible
for a
debtor to
within a certain area adjacent to the
to
accompany
the debtor outside the
jail.
jail.
The
Even
Local Justice
more
to the point,
debtor,
and so
it
common law provided
was argued
that the jailer
who
that the jailer
was
liable for the
/
3
1
3
debts of an escaped
charged a debtor to go outside the
was
jail
charging for the extra risk he assumed.
But despite this precedent for payment to assume
develop in England.
A number
risk,
commercial
suggestive but not conclusive explanations.
The multiple
and the consequent problems of retrieving a
fugitive
bonding
bail
of differences in the administration of the
failed to
two countries
are
jurisdictions of the United States
may
constitute one reason
American
law-enforcement agencies prefer to permit a commercial concern to assume that risk and inconvenience, and clearly there
The
dicted people.
rise of
a strong
is
demand
tury,
and the concomitant extinction of most user
may
be another consideration. In
remained more last
for the service
from accused and
in-
strong central government in Britain during the nineteenth cen-
faithful to the
twenty years or so the
method of financing public services,
fees as a
this, as in several
other matters, the United States long
common-law tradition than its administrative
bail
bondsman
has, however, lost
much
parent.
Over the
of his trade because of
court-administered bail-bonding schemes, which are thought to be fairer and less scandalprone.
The Jail, For some centuries the
the
Workhouse, and the House of Correction
competed with other
jail
against able-bodied beggars go
which sought
to counter
the Black Death. threat to social
some
back
of the
The vagabond was
harmony and
institutions for the pauper. English laws
at least as far as the
Ordinance of Labourers of 1349,
economic devastation and
social
upheaval that followed
many reasons deemed to be a particularly dangerous He could but would not work. When he wandered the
for
stability.
country alone he was a seductive example to those bent to the discipline of labor; traveling with companions, he threatened the peace. Whipping, branding, mutilation, and even hanging were used to suppress the menace, but asteries
and the sixteenth-century wave of
people from the land and a at the piles of society.
all
in
and
starts.
The dissolution of the mon-
agricultural enclosures
way of life and added
Henry VIII and
fits
swept
to fears that a tide of
his successors
—notably
a great
number
of
vagabonds was lapping
Elizabeth
I
—brought
in vari-
ous remedial and conservative laws. In essence these provided upkeep for the deserving poor,
work
for those
who were unemployed, and punishment
for those
who
work. The house of correction and the poorhouse thus rapidly became
could but would not rivals of the jail.
The common view of the unworthy poor and the petty criminal may best be seen in the catalog of such types in Elizabeth's
first
Poor Law of 1572. All were defined as "vagabonds."
They included proctors and procurators and people who conducted "Subtyll ful
craftye
unlaw-
Games," those pretending to have knowledge of "Phisnmye, Palmestrye, and other abused
Scyences," landless and masterless people
who
could not account for the means by which
they earned their livelihood, entertainers such as "fencers, Bearwardes;
Enterludes and minstrels"
who were
magistrate's license, "Juglars, Pedlars, liberated prisoners. Laborers
who
this roster of petty criminality, as
Common
Players in
not attached to a nobleman, wanderers without a
Tynkers and Petye Chapmen" as well as shipmen and
refused to
work
for
customary wages were included in
were the manufacturers of counterfeit passes, which were
314
/
SeAn McConville
"Casuals" (the itinerant poor) chop fire-
wood
at a
London
workhouse
in
The forced
labor,
J
895.
mea-
ger food rations, and
shameful pauper's uniforms of the workhouse presented jailers with the challenge of making jail
life
even more severe,
and hence more of a deterrent.
necessary for the poor to
Oxford and Cambridge lor.
move around
who
the country. Finally, there
were those scholars of
did not possess a license from their chancellor or vice-chancel-
A great ragbag of the suspicious, disreputable, and idle. Work was prescribed for all these drones. Used as deterrents to continued idleness were
various corporal punishments: whipping and ear-boring for a vice for the second;
and hanging for a
third.
For those
first
offense; involuntary ser-
who were not vagabonds but who were
without work, Elizabeth's act of 1575 provided that work should be provided and that every
county was
to establish a
house of correction
houses of correction were modeled
was
after
for those
who
refused to do this work. These
London's Bridewell, which, as has been mentioned,
a type of reformatory prison for vagabonds, petty offenders,
trade-training,
and
a
and orphans. Penal
gime. These measures were consolidated and extended by acts in 1597. Thereafter the of the poor
labor,
generous recourse to the whip were the principal elements in the
and the policing
re-
relief
of the petty criminal remained closely associated tasks of the
magistracy and a triumvirate of institutions
—
jail,
workhouse, and house of correction.
Local Justice
An
mean
overlapping clientele did not
willfully idle as distinct to
from unfortunate, inept
How
work? The overlap and
a reluctance of the counties to provide
house of correction into the
the gradual assimilation of the vival at the
jail,
Some
used
There was an attempted
jail.
re-
punishment of misdemeanants and usually sharing the same
for the
legal distinctions
tion could not be used for the tions
task, or unwilling
proper funding resulted in
end of the eighteenth century, but by then most houses of correction were simply
wings of the keeper.
did one decide that someone was
an assigned workhouse
at
15
one of the three was com-
that assignment to
pletely random, but there was a degree of chance.
3
/
remained, the most important being that the house of correc-
confinement of debtors or condemned
were maintained by doors and
philosophies,
a
few
felons.
But the distinc-
corridor rather than separate institutions,
feet of
and administrations. In contemporary documents one occasionally
finds refer-
ences to the "sheriffs side" (the jail part of the hybrid) or the "magistrates' side" (the house of
and
correction portion). In 1865, legislation amalgamated the houses of correction
England. Strictly speaking, after that date England no longer had
and house of correction, which ought more properly
lated jail
to
known by
be
jails in
but only the assimi-
jails
the generic
"prison."
There was a
late
challenge from the
Poor Law had been intended to give teenth century the doles
—
forces
—
that
was deemed
or, as
some would
see
it,
Edwin Chadwick argued
his disciple
This would have the
relief.
and unsubsidized
more entranced by the
economists such as Jeremy
Act of 1834, workhouses were
set
up throughout
The workhouses served groups or unions of
would
live a life
of declining hardship
the country, financed
parishes, about six
by a
hundred
workhouse and union thereafter cast a shadow over English working-class
and minutely deterrent
minimum
—was
levels
that jails
and
had
to
deliberately
—and they were
on boards
—how much more
And
jail
of the jail?
(The terms
all.
life,
shadow
a
made
unless the
severe
was more
if
unpalatable,
if
workhouse food was
If
a shameful pauper's uni-
"casuals" (the itinerant poor)
would
it
were obliged
be necessary to make the discipline
deterrent, the
vagabond might decide
to take his
lodgings there, instead of the workhouse, by the simple expedient of committing
audacious petty offense (the
one
who
is
that
self-consciously, relentlessly,
be even more deterrent.
form was provided and hard penal labor enforced, to sleep
local poor-rate.
in
faded from memory.)
The problem with the deterrent workhouse reduced to
at
long term, the country would benefit from increased
underemployment and indolence. By the Poor Law Amendment
rather than dole-supported
now
to that
the subjugation of labor to market
much more stringent administration
for a
productivity; in the short term, the laboring classes
has only
By the nine-
impediments
they contended, of forcing labor onto the market
effect,
price. In the
The Elizabethan
society.
as
essential for the prosperity of a country ever
of poor true
the workhouse.
possibilities of the first industrial revolution. Political
Bentham and
its
rival,
an unsettled agrarian
and subsidies of the old Poor Law were seen
freedom of movement of labor
enormous
other
jail's
stability to
jail
some
being the one public institution that cannot keep out some-
determined to enter). There also had to be somewhere to send those
haved in the workhouse, and unless
jail
held over the rebellious pauper? Yet
if
conditions were
science
and
more
official
severe,
what
who misbe-
threat could be
determination had reduced the
316
/
SeAn McConville
workhouse since the
minimum
diet to the
shame
of being a
that
would support
how could the jails go
life,
workhouse inmate was so
great,
And
further?
what margin of shame was
left
for the jailbird?
This conundrum, which arose entirely from the simplistic psychology of the utilitarians,
Bentham and Chadwick, was never
principally
nors of English local prisons (that
and keepers of workhouses sniped house conditions were
is,
at
less stringent,
resolved. Into the twentieth century, gover-
prisons that by then were performing
jail
functions)
each other ovej matters of diet and discipline.
If
work-
argued the governors, there would be fewer instances of
paupers breaking equipment or destroying their clothes (two favorite offenses) in order to be
removed
But
to jail.
if
incarceration really punished, countered poor law administrators, and
governors ceased fattening up criminals, then the paupers' calculations would be different,
and they would submit
More generous
to the discipline of the
workhouse and
the labor market.
which began just before World War
social policy,
I,
and new ideas about
the social dimensions of citizenship, together with higher standards of living
combined
to
make
among the poor, much to elimi-
these debates moot. State-provided old-age pensions did
nate one large group of the poor. There was an increasing recognition of the effects of the trade cycle,
and
acknowledge
classic political
that
economy (on which
unemployment was
the
workhouse had been based) had
to
frequently not a matter of character and choice. Sur-
veys showed that dire poverty could be experienced even by those in full-time employment.
The workhouse became an asylum function.
Workhouse
for the elderly
and sick and
much
and allowances,
Social policy again allowed for "outdoor relief (doles institutionalization),
lost
of
its
deterrent
infirmaries treated the paupers as patients rather than social criminals.
which the
political
as distinct
from
economists of early capitalism had pronounced
anathema. Yet, for all its unpleasant deterrence
and moral tyrannizing,
vided control, support, and asylum for the lower strata of society
institutionalization
—those who
had pro-
teetered
among
unemployability, homelessness, acute material deprivatibn, personal inadequacies and hard-
and petty wrongdoing. Most, but not
ships, sickness, insanity,
all,
of this pitiful residue
was
swept up by the welfare provisions of the post- 1945 period in Britain and by developments that
had similar effects in the United
as well as
developments
into the indispensable jail.
inadequates.
A
States. Yet political,
in psychiatry,
support
replaced by a concern that state support
of
Bentham and
tide of
Asylums are no longer available
belief that welfare
dence. Albeit in
economic, and administrative changes,
have again raised a
modern terminology,
all
is
a
vagabonds and swept them
for the mildly mentally
ill
or social
path to integration for the marginal has been
too frequently
is
a cause of indolence
and depen-
antiwelfare arguments uncannily echo the sentiments
his nineteenth-century followers,
contending that
human
action can be un-
derstood merely as pleasure-seeking and pain-avoidance and that the task of public administration is to
compute
the
of the pauper (the poor
optimum application of both. Coercion, condemnation, and control
who
seek public support) are again fashionable. The answers to
complicated economic and social problems are sought
and vagabond have been abandoned, replaced by fender, as social
with
this
group.
in
simple formulas. The terms pauper
welfare dependant
and
petty persistent of-
and penal policymakers, administrators, and philanthropists
try to deal
Local Justice
But whatever handle.
therefore
it is
called, this
body of the homeless and unconnected
has nothing to lose and nowhere to go;
It
immune from
penal threat;
it
it
be
3
1
7
difficult to
has nothing and wants nothing and
only in the present and
lives
will
/
is
largely indifferent to
is
any but immediate inducement. Although on any given day these modern vagabonds compose only a small percentage of the total population of the
makes them
hopeless, addicted to alcohol is
a
and
a significant drain
group of nuisances
a
frequent recommittal
major management problem. Workless, homeless, and
and drugs, prey
that, in the last
administrators have concluded
jails, their
to various
mental and physical
ills
—here again
decades of the twentieth century, some politicians and
may be
ethically
and economically
dealt with
by means of
criminal rather than social policy.
The Mentally The trend toward using the jail in mental health policy.
as a substitute
The marked decline
since the 1960s in the use of mental hospitals as
asylums and the greater reliance on medication to
ments
in their favor.
Too many
lives
III
mental hospital has been reinforced by changes
treat the
mentally
were unnecessarily lived out
ill
in the
doubtless have argu-
shade of the asylum.
But one consequence of this development has been to feed the mentally
They have always gone the 1850s
all
there, of course.
ill
into the
Two acts of Parliament in 1845
jails.
ensured that by
English counties had lunatic asylums, locally financed and managed, overseen
and inspected by central government's Lunacy Commission. face value statistics that
showed an apparent subsequent
It
would be
foolish to take at
decline in jail committals of lunatics
or imbeciles. Prison medical services, obsessed with malingering, have always
been more
at
The day room oj the Broadmoor criminal lunatic
asylum
in
1867. Despite the establishment oj asylums in all
English counties
by the 1850s, the mentally
ill
continued
committed
to jails.
to
be
318
SeAn McConville
/
ease in dealing with bodily rather than mental illness.
Even today such
are the uncertainties
of diagnosis that few reliable estimates can be obtained for the proportion of the mentally
among
prisoners, but the
numbers
are probably substantial. (A
ill
1991 English study con-
cluded that 37 percent of males and 56 percent of females serving sentences of more than six
months were
suffering from a medically identifiable mental disorder.)
In the nineteenth century, statistics were further distorted because one authority financially responsible for the care of the mentally
when
had
local authorities
magistrates, acting in
and another
for criminals.
by
as the local interest,
central
seem frequently
committed the patient
to the
county asylum
From
not confirmed, well and good.
at central
to
have committed
whom they thought
government) people
Central government met the costs of diagnosis and,
ill.
was
For example,
support the institutionalized insane in England in the 1890s,
to
what they saw
to the jails (by then controlled
mentally
ill
if
government expense.
the local authority's perspective the
might be
was confirmed,
insanity
If
insanity
problem was
was
satis-
way. This shell game continues in some jurisdictions today.
factorily solved either
Jails as Cinderella Institutions In
England
English municipalities and counties had been jail-holders for more than seven hundred years
when,
in 1876,
it
was decided
was decided almost
step
to bring
promised by Tory leader Benjamin those
who
government administration. This
central
A
Disraeli in
what was
great reduction in taxes
be his
to
last election
was
campaign. To
argued that shifting jail costs from local to national taxpayers was an illusionary
savings, the response
combine
jails,
them under
entirely for party political reasons.
was
that a unitary administration
their populations,
would be
and thereby cut overhead
costs
able to close the smaller
and generally
rationalize the
system. These calculations were based on erroneous, misleading, and superficial assumptions,
and the savings never materialized. The jails, however,
government, whose administrator, formly deterrent. That story
from
this
is
Sir
Edmund Du
fell
under the control of central
Cane, determined to make them uni-
told elsewhere in this book, but
it
needs to be noted here that
time England, unlike the United States, no longer had locally operated jails.
It
was
not that jails ceased to exist but simply that their form of administration had been changed.
Within a generation, one central government department was running the
remand prisons or
local prisons)
and another the convict prisons
(for
Although unitary and central control meant that standards could more certain level,
it
mean
did not
A major consequence called)
was
totally cut off
was
punishment
—became an
nity but instead
—which had
no longer be adapted
were managed
in
easily
be brought to a
to the
came
to
be
It
also
meant
that the jails
their principal source of
were
experiment and
requirements and resources of a
commu-
accordance with the views of a very small group of senior
officers. Inertia fell like a curtain.
invested in the
as
been put forward as an additional
administrative fetish.
from the magistracy, which had been
innovation. Jails could
(known
a particularly desirable one.
of nationalization (as central government's takeover
that uniformity in
reason for the takeover
government
that this level
jails
long-term prisoners).
new administration,
the jails
And since
central government's reputation
was
became obsessively secret as civil servants sought
Local Justice
to
guard against
political
official
It
3
1
9
embarrassment. The protective curtain was penetrated by an occa-
sional journalistic expose, coroner's inquiry, or
ened
/
book
of memoirs, but these merely height-
defensiveness.
has not been until very recent years that the near paranoia of British officialdom has
been replaced by a qualified willingness to allow academics, journalists, and television cam-
behind the
eras
which events access
—
albeit
and the public
—has
certainly to be
welcomed
and the customs and
of local prisons that operated in local prison.
own system was two
whereas the
the jail cutoff point prison.) Sir
England
to
and
official accountability.
be applied colloquially to the centralized system
after
1877, even though government preferred the it
was operating its
jail (local
prison) sentence
At the time central government took control of the jails,
of convict prisons.
years,
a certain historical resonance,
practices of previous centuries.
in the interests of public education
As noted, the term jail has continued
term
arrange open days, during
far as to
admitted. The spectacle of relatively free public
is
annual and necessarily carefully regulated
recalling Charles Dickens's Marshalsea It is
have gone so
walls. Political directives
are staged
is
The
and
longest,
minimum
rarely
imposed,
convict sentence was three years. (In the United States
usually one year: any longer sentence will send the offender to state
Edmund Du
Cane, appointed to run the newly acquired local prisons for central
government, had come into prison work as a soldier seconded to manage the convict system. Administering convict and local prisons in tandem, he naturally stuck to his
ways of doing things and gave preference
to trusted convict prison staff,
own
whom
tested
he appoin-
ted to senior positions in the local prisons. Blatantly, but largely unchallenged, convict pris-
ons were accorded more standing, and their better
continued to be paid more and to enjoy
staff
working conditions, even though both types of prison were under the same central
control.
Although an integrated system of pnson occurred after Sir
Edmund Du
staffing
and management eventually emerged,
tions, necessary
and unnecessary, were drawn between convict prisons (which,
characteristic of
modern
officialdom,
came
to
in a trope
be called training prisons) and local prisons.
Local prisons have remained the poor relatives, with inferior conditions and premises. This
portion of their inmates are pretrial
and
endure premises that are vastly inferior
conditions of confinement that are
Equally curious
which
it is
is
all
to those
provided for convicted criminals and
too frequently uncivilized.
the continued political
hard to find any functional
and
basis. In Sir
official toleration of these disparities, for
Edmund Du
Cane's day, convict prisons
undoubtedly had custody of some wicked and dangerous criminals, but the bulk of the country's prison business. In 1877,
There were more than 187,000 committals
the equivalent figure for the convict prisons
local prisons
handled
when there were just over 20,000 persons
in English local prisons, convict prisons held half that
picture.
is
common sense might indicate, since a substantial detainees, who are legally innocent yet who are obliged
a very curious inversion of what equity
to
it
Cane's departure from the scene. Even then various distinc-
was only
number. But
that gives only part of the
to local prisons in that year, 1
percent of that, or
whereas
some 1,900 com-
mittals (including license revocations).
And although
security
a minority of convicts
was undoubtedly
were grave
risks.
a central task in convict prisons,
probably only
Convict prisons took prisoners already sorted and
320
SeAn McConville
/
medically examined, deloused, and reasonably decent and clean. Over the years
classified,
that they
were held, the
risks
posed by individual prisoners could be assessed.
on the
Jails,
other hand, received people directly from the streets or the police lockup, in a great variety of
conditions
—emotional,
mental, physical, and hygienic
—
of
all
ages and degrees of criminal
experience, having committed or at least having been accused of committing every kind of crime, from petty theft to murder. Because of the stressful conditions under which they were received, ers all
and since so many of them were unknown
had
by an enormous daily turnover, since
more demanding than management prison. Yet the latter continued,
more
minor offend-
was compounded
more hardened inmates of the convict scale, to
be more prestigious.
But the reasoning of the
when he was promoted
official
One can who saw
into a convict prison
one recognizes that the supposed wickedness of his cap-
measure of a prison manager's
status rankings thus
cities this
daunting stage army was undoubtedly
on some topsy-turvy
this in criminals' inverted rankings.
difficult to follow, until
tives is the
this
of the supposedly
himself as achieving the success of his career is
these seemingly
in the late nineteenth century the average stay per
committal was only about ten days. Control of
understand
equalities,
maximum-security treatment. In the big
to receive
mimic those
status, rather
than the difficulty of his
task. Official
of the underworld. Propinquity results in
some odd
transferences.
Transference cannot (or so one hopes) be offered as an explanation of scholarly indiffer-
ence toward the jail. Of several academic studies in penal history, only one or two have dealt with jails, and by in
England and
far the
most acclaimed have
imprisonment
state
ishment doled out by the tively insignificant. lives of the
It
state,
in the
in recent times concentrated
United
States.
on convict policy
Yet in terms of the
amount
of pun-
convict prisons and their American equivalents were rela-
has been the
rough and poor. Could
jails, it
be
not the convict prisons, that have most touched the that, like the officials, politicians,
and reformers they
study, most scholars attach a higher significance to the experiences of a minority of "serious"
prisoners than to the conditions and consequences of a system of mass punishment?
In the United States
Ignorance of or indifference toward the
The structure of public administration
jail is
as evident in the United States as in England.
in the United States, especially the jealous preserva-
tion of local powers, expresses basic antigovernment concerns of eighteenth-century
Whig
thought, which was the principal source of the country's constitutional arrangements. The pattern of penal administration inherited from colonial government, and developed within a federal structure of power, led to
of jails.
an enormous proliferation of local authorities and therefore
As in England, they were municipality- and county-based and were well established
long before the states dipped their toes in the water of penal administration. At the national level this administrative caution was even more pronounced. The federal
government
at first
contracted with states and counties to lodge the limited
number
of pris-
oners produced by federal courts. This population increased, rising in 1895 to some twentyfive
hundred
federal prisoners in state prisons
less inclined to act as at
underpaid hosts, and
in
States
became
federal prison for civilians
opened
and fifteen thousand in local jails. 1895 the
first
Fort Leavenworth. Thenceforward there were to be three levels of penal administration in
Local Justice
the United States
about the
last
—
and
local, state,
two,
little
population, annual committals, and even the
tion has only recently
of the national
become
ratus of the federal
The
is
and often
American
gives
jails
total jail
unknown
and demographic informa-
many gaps
in
our knowledge
and truncated appa-
a
it
low
priority;
and
in part this lack of
was not published
local
until 1931,
government.
and the survey
now
censuses started only in 1978 and are
jail
con-
five years.
Although there were American penal reformers
John Howard, none were prepared or able surveyed the
jails,
gers of frontier
who
to cover the
claimed to follow the example of
United States in the way that Howard
houses of correction, and prisons of the United Kingdom and parts of
continental Europe.
A vast and
continually expanding territory and the difficulties and dan-
probably made such an enterprise impossible. Historical uncertainty about
life
the basic statistics there were
social,
although there remain
from the extraordinary and expanding dimensions of
used even today. Periodic
ducted every
1
government, which generally impedes the collection of national informa-
national survey of
first
method
results
The
jails.
of jails in the country were
picture. In part, this has reflected the restricted role
jail
tion about local administration
knowledge
number
Elementary judicial,
available,
32
Although there was reasonably good information
federal.
systematic information was collected about the
until well into the twentieth century.
/
is
therefore
some appalling
compounded by our ignorance about jail conditions. That but we would be on very uncertain ground if we
jails is clear,
new nation there were jails that the historian John McMaster, looking back a century from the 1880s, claimed "would now be thought unfit places of habitation for the vilest and most loathsome of beasts." He mentioned
asserted that
were in
all
a similar state. In the early days of the
two Massachusetts jails. In the jail
at
Northampton,
cells
barely four feet high were
similar height
—and without window, chimney, or even
institutions survived into the next generation.
The
filled
with
had
cells of a
a hole in the wall for light.
And such
gases from the sewers that were supposed to ventilate them. Worcester's
District of
Columbia
jail
jail in
the 1820s,
described as "the foulest prison in the United States," consisted of sixteen cells built over a sewer; convicted, unconvicted, and even witnesses,
up
to eighty in
number, were confined
in
the cells.
McMaster was writing
for a generation that
of penitentiaries, reformatories, asylums,
most
states,
had
installed in these places
such as infirmaries, workshops, and material progress
all
ist
He
cells so infested
also
home
that, in
emblems and instruments of progress and humanity
libraries. It
around the time of McMaster's
was understandable
that,
with evidence of
to large
self-satisfied retrospective,
his first incarceration, in
and vicious
on the rats,
floor that
as
him
other-
Eugene Debs, the
social-
Cook County
Jail.
There he
with insects that the prisoners were bloody from scratching.
impossible, indeed, to find a place
was
investments in a vast range
certainly did not have information to persuade
and labor organizer, experienced
found
its
around him, he should regard the conditions of the young republic
having vanished completely. wise. But
took pride in
and houses of correction and of refuge and
It
was not covered with vermin. The
was jail
of such a size that a guard's fox terrier beat a retreat
when confronted by them. Debs may have been given to the agitator's exaggeration, but his reliability is enhanced by the fact that when he later served time at other jails and prisons, he did not hesitate to commend humane conditions, treatment, and staff.
322
/
Sean McConville
The Fresno County Jail 1938. Overcrowded
in
and underfunded, American jails have long been characterized by brutality
and
squalor.
In truth, there has never
young and
idealistic
been
a "golden age" in America's prisons
nation there have been
some notable and
and jails. As
befits a
and
well-scripted experiments
even some successes in promoting humane and nonharmful conditions of confinement. But for
one generation
after another, the
overcrowding, underfunding, and brutality of the
have been an inescapable part of the American experience.
and scholarly life
priorities that a
a telling
comment on
jails
official
major responsibility of public administration and of national
should have received such disproportionately small attention.
The
forces of state legislation
and inspection and, since the 1970s,
federal courts to involve themselves in prison
and
showed
Hart's jail survey
that in small rural jails there
men from women, juveniles from adults,
a willingness of the
matters have undoubtedly brought
jail
about improvements in organization and conditions. As
of
It is
late as
was
little
1931, for example, Hastings provision for the separation
or the convicted from those awaiting
trial.
These
conditions have largely been corrected, although the continuing success of numerous suits alleging violation of federal law regarding overcrowding, treatment, security, physical
conditions,
and
essential services
eighth of American
jails
shows
substantial continuing problems. In
were under court order
1988 one-
to limit their populations or to
improve
conditions.
Another consequence of greater federal and
been
a
state intervention in jail administration
has
continuing trend in jail closures. This has also been encouraged by the movement of
population out of many rural counties and small towns as the U.S. economic and social structures change. In a
have met their
move
reminiscent of England in the nineteenth century,
jail responsibilities
maintaining their
own operations.
by contracting with In
a
many
localities
neighboring authority rather than
1970 there were 4,037 jails
in the United States.
Num-
Local Justice
bers
fell
(i.e.,
than
fell
prisoners
the officially determined population limits) of jails holding fewer
by 28 percent between 1978 and 1988 and by 45 percent between
1988 and 1993. Problems remain with these small their
economic
was
about
institutions, particularly questions
viability. Yet they continue to be the
predominant type of institution. Almost
70 percent of American jails in 1988 had average daily populations of less than this
3
3,316 in 1988 and to 3,304 in 1993. Small jails were particularly prone to closure.
to
The rated capacity fifty
32
/
fifty;
by 1993
true of only 57 percent.
and the Courts
Jails
Both Britain and the United States have experienced a considerable growth in prison and jail populations from the mid-1970s to the mid-1990s. Insufficient investment has meant over-
crowding and sponse
and basic
a deterioration of conditions
services. In Britain, the principal re-
problems has been administrative. Lobbyists,
to these
politicians,
have exerted pressures, and government has responded to the extent
and the mass media it
thinks
fit.
In the
absence of a written constitution, the courts play a very limited role in overseeing the actions of British government. But since the United
European Court
petition to the
Rights, several cases
at
Kingdom gave
its
citizens the right of individual
Strasbourg, under the European Convention
on prison conditions have been heard, decisions
government have been handed down, and changes
been
and
means
relatively straightforward
for
been very evoking
have successfully been brought to oblige federal,
state,
been prisons rather than jails
that
until
Civil Liberties
1983
that
its Jail
Union Prison
has
was
Project
set up.
It
comply with
institutional status of jails,
this legal
group
and philanthropic
in the
was established
would perhaps be
truly appalling conditions in
futile to
some
United States
in 1972,
but
it
it
has
attenis
the
was not
argue that the needs
of either the prisons or the jails should have precedence, but the sheer
conducted by the jails and the
a written consti-
protection, thousands of suits
local authorities to
litigation
Project. This
With
different.
its
low
have attracted most of
The most experienced and successful prison
tion.
jailing)
and
their constitutional obligations. Mirroring the curiously
American
have
great.
In the United States, the developments have tution
Human
in various aspects of administration
been made. The European Court's overall impact on imprisonment (including not, however,
on
of the British
critical
volume of business
make
of them
their cause as
pressing as that of the prisons.
Perhaps an element in the judgment of the that individuals
spend much
less
of unconstitutional conditions
is less.
This
mittals to jails (10 million in 1990, as
makes jail conditions jail,
a
prime
litigators
who must allocate
finite
resources
is
time in jails than in prisons and that therefore the damage
issue.
is
a questionable conclusion.
The number of com-
compared with about 320,000 committals
But there are other considerations.
or so disoriented through disorderly
and unsafe conditions
adequate defense, suffers lifelong consequences as surely as
if
that
A
to prison)
person attacked in
he cannot prepare an
he had spent several years in
prison.
Remedies possibly granted by the court
that finds a violation of constitutional rights
range from directions to correct a specific condition to a complete takeover of the jail or even
324
/
SeAn McConville
of an entire security,
jail
commonly touch on crowding,
system. Orders
and the physical
state of the jail.
been found, and the court
is
When
food, clothing, medical care,
multiple unconstitutional conditions have
convinced that administrators cannot or will not remedy them,
may be ordered. This is always intended to be a temporary solution (although such direct control may last for several months or even years), and when constitutional conditions
a takeover
have been established the court bows out. Court-appointed experts administer the jail during
and may subsequently monitor
the period of the takeover
for the court conditions
and
for
compliance with directions.
Sometimes jail administrators have been jail
problems have resulted from
the only
means of providing funds
administrators
—perhaps
acting
tacit
supporters of court intervention, since the
and the courts
political neglect or miscalculation
for
on
what
is
are seen as
an electorally unpopular cause. At other times
political instructions, overt or
obstruct or seek to evade court orders. At one large
city jail, a
imposed by the court, which subsequently discovered
—may
by nod and wink
population limitation cap was
that "surplus" inmates
in school buses outside the jail until the evening count
were being kept
was completed. The
results of this
childish but effective ruse were that the authorities were able surreptitiously to breach the
—but only
court order
for a time.
The courts cannot be equipped stances
a substitute for responsible executive
for administration. Legal action takes time,
government. They are not
problems are often urgent, circum-
may change rapidly, and the costs of litigation and of the appointment of experts are And sometimes, of course, the court will come to an ill-advised decision. It can
always high.
be
safely
said, nevertheless, that in
popular despair about crime, and
defend minimal jail standards in
decades during which the number of arrests,
political
and
retrenchment have increased, only the courts could
fiscal
many jurisdictions. There
are neither votes
nor party pref-
erence in providing decent conditions for prisoners or even in promising to meet the obligations
imposed by the U.S. Constitution (though apparently much
vows
to increase the incarceration rate),
political
and so the judiciary has had
advantage
lies in
be the civilized con-
to
science of the nation.
Of
the
683
largest jail jurisdictions in the
United States (those with an average daily
population of more than one hundred) in 1993, 135 were under court order to limit crowding. In the early
1990s Cook County Jail, the world's
overcrowded and under
many
federal court order, as
largest single-site jail,
was chronically
were many other large jails. Considering
that
of the smaller jurisdictions escape legal action because litigators prefer to direct their
efforts to places
where
protects the smaller
been found
to
a large
jails, it
number
of people are confined, or because rural remoteness
can be seen that a large and important number of U.S.
jails
have
be in violation of the constitution, or are in violation and have not yet become
the subject of litigation.
The Obtrusive and Indestructible
Who
goes to
jail
40,000 children
also remains a
worrisome
issue. In
1946
in America's jails. Federal legislation in
it
Jail
was found
that there
were some
1974 required most juveniles
completely separated from adults (the exception being those
who were
to
to
be
be tried as adults),
Local Justice
and
a
/
32
1980 amendment required the removal from jails of all juveniles who were not there
5
to
be tried as adults. Children remain in jails, therefore, and in significant numbers. The average daily population of juveniles in
American
jails for
the year ending in June
1990 was more
than 2,000.
The
jail
experience in the United States
is
much more widespread
appears to be growing. The average daily population of the American
under 158,000. By 1990 over in the
jails,
was estimated
it
however,
it
can be seen
than in Britain and
1978 was just
jails in
be more than 405,000. Given the
to
that jails
touch the
rate of turn-
lives of a very large
number
Americans. In 1989-90 there were approximately 10 million receptions into American
of
jails.
And although there is a stage army that winds its way through the jail year after year, there are many who go only once or twice to jail. Even allowing for a proportion of readmissions, this is a vast number. Add family members, whose lives are touched by the jailing of a relative or partner,
and one
realizes that the jail intrudes significantly into national
life.
A rough estima-
tion suggests that over a ten-year period perhaps one-fifth of the U.S. population directly
experiences jail, with a or family not to
much larger segment indirectly involved through the jailing of a friend
member. Indeed, with these
Jailing
and imprisonment on such
Generally speaking, Americans seem ing.
figures, in
some communities it is unusual
for
someone
have been in jail.
Perhaps because there
is
a
tendency to regard
must
necessarily affect national attitudes.
prepared than Europeans to forgive a jailall
politicians as rascals, a jailing
almost universally would in Europe. This
break political careers, as
it
quence of the more
American
fluid
a large scale
much more
but
social structure,
it
is
does not
possibly a conse-
do with the
surely also has to
prevalence of imprisonment and jailing. The 1993 U.S. jailing rate was 188 per 100,000, and the
imprisonment
rate
was 351 per 100,000, giving a combined incarceration
100,000. (The jailing rate jail is
is
lower because, despite the high jail committal
rate of
rate,
539 per
time spent in
only a fraction of that spent in prison; in consequence, on any given day, the prison
population
is
about twice that of the jails.) By contrast, England and Wales (which probably
have the highest incarceration rate in Europe), in the bined incarceration
rate of
latest figures available,
97 per 100,000. Another consideration
possibly that the institutional distinction between the jail rigidly
maintained than in
Britain.
Time
in jail
show
a
com-
United States
is
and the prison has been much more
may more
culpability than a spell of imprisonment. Because jails
in the
easily
be seen as indicating
less
and prisons have been amalgamated
in
England, such a judgment would not be possible there. Possibly as a result of this obtrusiveness, determined opponents of the jail have made many nobly motivated attempts to dispense with or greatly restrict its services. Jails have had offspring, supposedly more humane and scientific and intended to replace the anachronistic
and
atavistic parent. Alternatives
electronic handcuff
more tyranny and
and house
have proliferated, from reformatories to probation to the
arrest.
Some
of these ventures have been failures, producing
suffering than the jails they were intended to replace. Others have
been
reasonably successful, assisting both in rehabilitation and in keeping offenders out of custody. There have
been valid criticisms that these alternatives often dealt with those
who would
not in any case have been jailed. Yet without such innovations, historically high jail populations
would probably be
greater
still.
326
SeAn McConville
/
And
in
more than
all
More than
of this the paradox remains.
in Tzarist Russia or
in the United States
in ancient Greece or
Rome
or China,
Anglo-Saxon England or medieval England, the jail flourishes
and Great
As our economies produce abundance, wealth,
Britain today.
power, and convenience, the jail endures. As our culture refines and exalts
we
sensibilities, as
seek enlightenment as nations and individuals, rituals and relationships that were thought
by our ancestors
to
indispensable to the
be passing barbarism continue in our midst. More than ever, the
way we
live.
perfections, our unmalleability
We
fear
and
it,
it
shames
An
institutional talisman,
and unfitness
us, but
may we
for this,
it
jail is
forever reminds us of our im-
and perhaps any other, brave new world.
not also draw a curious encouragement from
its
persistence?
Bibliographic Note There are numerous histories of imprisonment, but not many deal exclusively with the exception, and an essential starting point for a study of the Anglo-American
Imprisonment Beatrice
in
Webb's
English Prisons under Local
late
York, Routledge, 1994), deals exclusively with jails. There
gaps:
period.
Two
and Kegan
is still
no
(New York:
J.
to
Death (London and
demimonde
fill
M. Dent, 1977) and
E.P. Dutton, 1930; reprint,
My own
Paul, 1981) spans the
two
New
satisfactory detailed history of
accounts of the Elizabethan
Gamini Salgado's The Elizabethan Underworld (London:
The Elizabethan Underworld
Webb and
eighteenth and the nineteenth centuries.
periods; the second volume, English Local Prisons 1860-1900: Next Only
modern
An
Government (London: Longmans, Green, 1922; reprint,
London: Cass, 1963) deals mainly with the
the early
jail.
Ralph Pugh's
Medieval England (London: Cambridge University Press, 1968). Sidney
History oj English Prison Administration (London: Routledge
jails in
jail, is
some
of the
A. V. Judge's
London: Routledge and Kegan
Paul, 1965).
Some eighteenth- and early-nineteenth-century jail surveys are available as reprints or through Preeminent among them is John Howard's The State of the Prisons in England and Wales, 3d
libraries.
ed. (Warrington: Privately published, 1784);
in 1792.
I
prefer this edition or the fourth edition, published
James Neild followed Howard's example
State of the Prisons in England, Scotland,
famous than either of these
the
is
a generation later,
and
in
1812 he produced The
and Wales (London: Privately published, 1812).
work
of Dr. William Smith,
who
Much
less
published State of the Gaols
in
London, Westminister, and Borough of Southwark (London: Privately published, 1776). It is
more
difficult to get
an overview of the history of the
proliferation of local authorities
and the sheer
size of
such
jail in
a project.
acclaimed books The Discovery of the Asylum: Social Order and Disorder Little,
Brown, 1971) and Conscience and Convenience: The Asylum and
America (Boston:
Little,
Brown, 1980) analyze American penal and
comparatively recent times. The focus institutions
through
and measures.
libraries
Two
is
beyond the
jail,
in the Its
New
much
Republic (Boston:
Alternatives in Progressive
social policy
from colonial
to
however, concentrating on reformatory
nineteenth-century studies that are
should provide useful starting points
America because of the David Rothman's
for
more
still
reasonably accessible
specialized reading.
The descrip-
tions of jails
and punishment in John Bach McMaster's History of the People of the United States, 8 vols.
(New York:
D. Appleton and Co., 1885-1937) have the advantage of having been collected from a
great variety of sources
and the drawback of being
largely unrelated to broader
developments
in
jurisprudence and public administration. Condensed versions of this monumental work are currently available. the Prisons
The survey conducted by Enoch
and Reformatories of the United
States
C Wines and Theodore W. Dwight, Report on
and Canada (Albany: Van Benthuysen, 1867), gives
Local Justice
an excellent sense of the hopes and illusions of the times, although the authors, over the shoulder of the
There
is
jail to its
first
Anchor Press, 1975),
is
system
bail
to the
contemporary American
jail.
scholars with an interest in the
is
(New
in
also a provocative read, for those
He wrote mainly about
is
American Society (Berkeley:
who seek an introduction
Hans W. Mattick was another member
jail.
The
York: Harper and Row, 1965) and
Managing the Underclass
also stimulating reading. John Irwin's The Jail:
University of California Press, 1985)
modem jails, Jails: The Ultimate
historical interest. Goldfarb's critique of the
provocatively entitled Ransom
is
Rothman, look
written with passion and to high standards.
two chapters bring together much material of
American
7
reformatory offspring.
a paucity of recent work. Ronald Goldfarb's account of
Ghetto (Garden City, N.Y.:
like
32
/
band of
of the small
Illinois jails
but drew broader
conclusions. His Selected Bibliography on the American Jail (Chicago: University of Chicago, Center for Studies in
Criminal Justice, 1972)
is
of course dated but remains an excellent starting point for
further studies. Peter J. Coleman's Debtors and Creditors in America: Insolvency, Imprisonment for Debt,
and Bankruptcy, 1607-1900 (Madison: State Historical Society of Wisconsin, 1974) introduction to the use of the
jail for civil
available at the national level are collected Statistics, in
When prisons,
prisoners in America. Such limited
a very helpful
is
as are
jail statistics
and published by the U.S. government's Bureau of Justice
Washington, D.C.
one turns from general surveys and accounts
titles
become more
prolific,
and
to the histories of particular jails
local history journals
and
produce something of interest. There have been too many such histories of English jails Fifty years ago,
and
societies will nearly always to
list
Margery Bassett published two excellent pioneering articles: "Newgate Prison
here. in the
Middle Ages," Speculum 18 (1943), and "The Fleet Prison in the Middle Ages," University ojToronto
Law Journal and very
5,
no. 2 (1944).
Henry Mayhew and John Binny compiled (but never completed)
well-illustrated account of the jails of
Scenes of London Life (1862; reprint, London: Frank Cass, 1968). "The Clink" gave
and its history is given in E.J. Burford's In the Clink (London:
for jails in general,
1977). The
jail
immortalized by Oscar Wilde
Prison (Reading: Osprey, 1975), is
the subject of Eric Stockdale's
Those
who would
like to
is
name
its
as slang
New English Library,
given a history in Peter Southerton's The Story of a
and the jail associated with another
A
a large
1850s London: The Criminal Prisons oj London and
literary figure
(John Bunyan)
Study of Bedford Prison, 1660-1877 (London: Phillimore, 1977).
pursue Dickens's connection with
jails
must
start
with Philip Collins's
Dickens and Crime (London: Macmillan, 1962).
Given the dearth of nationally published material, the most
American
jails are
probably
state, regional,
and
organizer and labor agitator Eugene Debs recollects thirty-year period in his
the sake of brevity
chapter
much
5.)
1927 Walls and Bars
and convenience,
I
likely sources
local history journals jail
and
and prison experiences over a turbulent
(reprint, Chicago: Charles H. Kerr
have
listed
on individual
societies. Socialist
English
jail
and Co., 1973). (For
and convict memoirs
at the
end of
Philadelphia, because of its place in the history of the American penitentiary, has received
attention.
Philadelphia,
Negley K. Teeters's The Cradle of
the Penitentiary:
The Walnut Street
1773-1835 (Philadelphia: Philadelphia Prison Society, 1955) contains
interesting about the
jail,
as well as about the penitentiary
penitentiary are dealt with in Penitentiary in
New
York,
W. David
1796-1848
Lewis's
it
much
Jail at
that
is
spawned. In the same manner, jail and
From Newgate
to
Dannemora: The
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1965).
Rise of the
CHAPTER ELEVEN
AYWARO 5ISTE The Prison for
Women
Lucia Zedner
Fear not!
but
pa^BV>
1
do not exact vengeance
for evil,
but compel you to be good.
My hand is stem,
my heart is kind.
__,„_____
hus read the motto over the entrance
to the first prison built for
women:
the
Spinhuis, opened in 1645 in Amsterdam, Holland. The Spinhuis (so called
because inmates were employed mainly in spinning for the Dutch dustry)
was
a
model
institution
sterdam specifically to only poor, "disrespectful"
women who
admired
visit this, "the
women and girls,
far
and wide. People
traveled to
biggest sight of the city." At
but within a few years
it
textile in-
had established
Amheld
first it
cells for
could not "be kept to their duties by parents or husbands" and separate dormi-
tories for prisoners,
drunks, prostitutes, and "for those whipped in public."
Across Europe, houses of correction were set up on the Dutch model of incessant labor
intended both to punish and to
instill
habits of discipline.
— prison community—
Women prisoners were
ployed not only in supplying productive labor
as spinners, weavers,
in providing services to the
as cooks, cleaners,
pily, in
England,
at least, the
their prison as a highly profitable brothel
Those
and beatings
The
who would
to join in this
to
be em-
—but
also
and laundresses. Unhap-
Protestant ethic of reformative, penal labor degenerated over the
course of the following centuries. The governors of the
services.
and sewers
London
Bridewell, for example, ran
by persuading women inmates
to provide sexual
not prostitute themselves "voluntarily" were coerced by threats
unorthodox form of prison employment.
order, the systematic labor,
against the dank, filthy disarray
and the segregation of the Dutch Spinhuis shone out
and corruption
that overtook
most early houses of correc-
tion. And as a separate prison for women, it remained virtually unique. Throughout Europe, women were generally housed within male prisons and often herded alongside men with little
concern for the
pletely to their
one
common
likely results.
They were poorly supervised by day and often
own devices at night.
herd
.
.
.,
by day and
left
com-
Similarly, in prerevolutionary America, city jails held "in
night, prisoners of
all
ages, colours,
and
sexes!"
Female prisoners 0} Brixton Prison work in silence on the narrow landing outside their cells.
From The
Criminal Prisons of
London and Scenes of Prison Life (1862) by Henry
Mayhew and
John Binny.
330
/
:aA-
Lucia Zedner
A
»
I^j mmpqgF*
The mass of The female penitentiary
—known —
as
the "factory"
at
Parramatta
New
in
South Wales. Watercolor by Augustus Earle, circa 1840.
petty offenders were held in local prisons.
physical punishment or death.
teenth century,
many were
From
More
transported to the colonies on "convict ships." Although
conditions on board these ships were appalling for both sexes,
because they were
game
commonly assumed
to
for the sexual attentions of sailors
convict ships remained
little
serious offenders faced
the mid-seventeenth century until well into the nine-
changed
women
particularly suffered
be prostitutes. As such, they were considered
and fellow convicts
until the 1820s,
tuted a major campaign to improve conditions
when
alike.
The
plight of
fair
women on
the reformer Elizabeth Fry insti-
on board. Important changes included out-
lawing the use of leg irons on women, allowing children under seven to accompany their mothers, and not transporting nursing mothers until their babies were weaned.
Many women
simply did not survive the journey;
colonies were hard. For example,
work
in a "factory" set
a sort of brothel
made
up
fortunate
to
little
sent to live and
no more than
to the factor)-
a brief conversation. If selected, the
and move
in with her
new
protection from the male
master. Even those
of the household. Pregnancy
iso-
meant
a disgraced return to the factory.
availability of
marry them. The hope
members
and
woman had
be assigned proper positions in domestic service fared badly. Often
immediate expulsion and Given the
women arriving in New South Wales were
to accept her "assignment"
had
did, conditions in the
and marriage mart by male convicts and settlers. Men came
enough
lated, they
who
Parramatta in 1821. But Parramatta quickly came to be used as
their choice, often after
no option but
to
at
for those
women on such terms, there was little incentive for male settlers women sent to the colonies would act as a moralizing influ-
that
ence over the rough masculine society of settlers and ex-convicts was quickly dispelled. As one disillusioned colonial official admitted, "The influence of female convicts
is
wholly valueless
Wayward
upon male
convicts;
women
of depraved character
made
it
all
do them no good whatsoever."
/
331
Officials
within the colonies, and the huge imbalance
failed to recognize that the very nature of life
of the sexes,
Sisters
but impossible for even well-intentioned
women
to retain their
"
character."
For as long as side
men
women
in local jails
were banished
the advent of separate prisons for first
to the harsh
What prompted
how
And how
prisons for
ways was the regime of the female prison
far
first
tions for will
developments in prisons
women
did they
fulfill
women compared
distinctive?
And
in
for
women
women? Who
to
de-
supposed aims? An
their
with those for men. In what
what ways did the character of inside? This chapter
life
through the emergence of
specialist institu-
toward the end of the nineteenth century and into the twentieth. And
conclude by observing the continuing impact of
women
along-
Only with
might actually lead
prisons for
the women, both warders and inmates, bring different qualities to will trace
for reform.
the United States in the
distinctive treatment that
the establishment of these
cided what form they should take?
important theme must be
hope
was there any prospect of protecting female offenders
from further corruption and of instituting their reform.
little
women, opened across Europe and
half of the nineteenth century,
dumped
of the colonies or
life
and houses of correction, there was
this historical legacy
on prisons
it
for
today.
Developments Leading to the Separate Women's Prisons
Women By the nineteenth century, the
in Local Prisons
vast majority of
women who committed
petty offenses were
sentenced to local prisons, mostly for only a few days, weeks, or months. Conditions inside varied enormously. Since these were run the generosity of local administrators
and financed
and
only a small minority of the prison population. In the Britain
at the local level,
much depended on
the honesty of individual jailers. first
Women
about 20 percent, in France 14-20 percent, and in the United States as
percent of prisoners were
for
little
as
4-19
women. They found themselves greatly outnumbered by male pris-
oners and often completely alone
commodation
formed
half of the nineteenth century, in
among
the
men. Even
in the best-run jails, providing ac-
women continued to be an afterthought, to be achieved with the least effort
and expense. Lack of concern, or worse, systematic exploitation meant that
much
poorer conditions than
were provided with individual Midwest, accommodating ence, often in
made
men
cells at a far earlier date
women
in prisons,
for miserable conditions.
one room with beds, so
far as
women
often endured
convicted of similar offenses. In the United States
whose
men
than women. Across the East and the
architects
At Albany Jail in
had not foreseen
New York,
their pres-
"Fifteen females
were
women
were
they had beds, on the floor." Even where
provided with segregated accommodation within the male prison, they were often locked up
men who had given evidence women were housed within the male prison, it was all communication. A governor of one English jail admitted, "I fre-
with supposedly vulnerable male prisoners, such as lunatics or against friends. In any case, wherever
but impossible to prevent
quently detect communication going on by notes and otherwise, between the male and
fe-
332
/
Lucia Zedner
male prisoners, and often hear obscene conversation between them."
Jail,
England, revealed:
fence],
which
I
"1
have
known even
If
supervision was lax,
The chaplain of Preston
prisoners were quick to exploit any possibility for getting together.
females to climb over the chevaux-de-frise
many girls
other sex." Prostitutes could continue to ply their busy trade inside the prison, but
and younger alike.
women
faced appalling sexual exploitation
Prison pregnancies were a recurrent scandal.
The impetus behind
setting
up prisons
therefore, in large part disciplinary.
;
women
for
by turnkeys and fellow prisoners
in the early nineteenth century was,
The opening of a detached building for women at Wakefield
"Women are found a great deal
Prison in England was hailed as a great success in this respect. easier to
[a
should have thought utterly impossible, in order to get into the ward of the
manage when removed
ness and bravado dies within
to a distance
from the men. The
them when they know
stubborn-
spirit of reckless
that they are out of sight, hearing,
and
notice of their fellows of the other sex." Apart from keeping order within the prison, segregation of the sexes also prevented the
Who
corruption.
women were as a class,
was corrupting
embarrassment of prison pregnancies, and
whom
was
moot
a
point, for
was not
it
it
minimized
at all clear that
The view
that "female [s] are,
even more morally degraded than men" meant that protecting
men from the corwomen from
necessarily always the victims of this association.
rupting influences of female prisoners was considered as important as saving sexual assault.
Descriptions of criminal
women by Victorian commentators
moral context in which women's prisons were
set
up and
their
are highly revealing of the
form and purpose established.
The well-known English journalist and social investigator Henry Mayhew summed up a com-
mon view of criminal women when he of
all
coarsest
the
and rudest moral
declared: "In
—
human weakness and
depravity
them one
a picture the
more
sees the
most hideous picture
striking because exhibiting the
features in connection with a being
whom we are
apt to regard as
most graceful and gentle form of humanity." This dualistic view of women had
and whore. The good
woman was
a
its
roots in Christian imagery of the female as
moral exemplar, but the bad
woman was
depraved than any criminal man. As the directors of one London prison saw sex, as a whole, are superior in virtue to the sterner sex; but
to possess a capacity almost
beyond man,
separating the sexes was the only possible
for
way
running into
when woman
all
that
is evil."
it,
madonna
even more
"The gentler
falls,
she seems
All agreed that
of creating an environment conducive to re-
form.
By the 1820s almost modation
for
all
French jails provided segregated daytime and nighttime accom-
men and women. A
law passed in 1828 in the United States required that
county prisons segregate male and female prisoners. In
Britain, Sir
all
Robert Peel's Gaol Act of
women be held separately from men, that they be supervised only by women, and that no man be allowed to visit the female part of the prison unless accompanied by a female officer. Implementation of this legislation was somewhat haphazard. A few local prisons were set up specifically for women in England: at Wyndmondham in Cambridge and 1823 required
at
that
Borough Comptor and
meant
little
Tothill Fields, both in
London. But,
for the
most
part, segregation
more than finding rooms or wards within the male prison to which women could
be assigned.
Wayward
The segregation
333
/
by sex was one of the major achievements of nineteenth-
of prisoners
century penal reform. More than any other single aspect of reform, the degradation
Sisters
and exploitation of eighteenth-century prison
it
women
rescued
from
life.
Elizabeth Fry and Prison Reform
new breed
Segregation was largely the result of energetic campaigning by a
women who,
in the early years of the nineteenth century,
One
the welfare of female prisoners.
prison
life
for
women on
of the earliest
came
and most
of middle-class
an intense interest in
to take
shaping
influential figures in
both sides of the Atlantic was Elizabeth Fry.
A
Quaker com-
strict
mitted to religious and philanthropic work, she tirelessly campaigned to expose the plight of
women
in prison
and
to
promote better conditions
for
them. Whereas prison reformers
fol-
lowing the ideas of Jeremy Bentham stressed impersonal, disciplinary techniques of reform,
Quakers such as Fry
was
interest
first
laid their trust in personal influence
aroused by the
Entering the notorious fighting,
London
visit jail at
visit
Newgate
for herself
was shocked by the conditions of were held. Gathering around her
religion.
London
to
Her
in 1813.
Newgate, they were horrified to find "blaspheming,
some months
visits
later.
"riot, licentiousness,
a
number
of other
reform of both prison conditions and
Combining missionary for
and the power of
American Quakers
dram-drinking, half-naked women." Their report of this encounter prompted Eliza-
beth Fry to
for the
of a group of
Like her American precursors, she
and
filth"
in
which
women
Quaker women, she began
women
to
prisoners
campaign
prisoners themselves.
with energetic publicity, Fry quickly gained a high profile
her work. Her pioneering Ladies Association for the Reformation of Female Prisoners in
Newgate was soon followed by the wider reaching British Ladies Society
for the
Reformation
of Female Prisoners. Promotional travels throughout the British Isles during the 1820s and
1830s by Fry and her followers led
to the formation of
numerous
ladies prison associations.
Together these organizations put considerable energy into improving standards of accommodation, establishing special regimes for Fry's
work
women, and promoting programs of moral treatment.
reform of women's prisons became internationally renowned. In 1837
for the
and 1838 she toured French prisons and was shocked by the exploitation of female inmates by male guards. The number of women who became pregnant while frequency with which
women,
in prison indicated the
willingly or not, submitted to the sexual attentions of their
captors. For example, at the central prison at Montpelier in 1829, several
come pregnant
after a year or
continuing presence of prisons where
Even
women
in
in
Arch .
tion."
.
French female prisons: "The Guards! This
had been prompted by
is
the plague of
that of American Quakers,
spread quickly back across the Atlantic. The
Street Prison. .
be-
are kept."
group of Quaker women in Philadelphia
year
women had
of captivity. Writing several years later, Fry deplored the
as Fry's interest in prisons
own work
of her
men
more
According
to
who began in 1823
first
to
to take
make
Fry's call
was
a
women
Dorothea Dix, "Every Monday afternoon throughout the
you may see them there seriously and perseveringly engaged
They read from the
up
regular visits to
news
in their merciful voca-
Scriptures, provided basic educational instruction,
prison conditions they discovered. Almost everywhere they
and sought
to
women were shocked by the found women at best ignored, at
extend their moral influence over individual inmates. American
334
Lucia Zedner
/
women prisoners were systematically who forced them into prostitution to provide sexual services for male guards. Like their British counterparts, middle-class American women sought to draw public attention to the plight of female prisoners and to campaign for better conditions. One particularly influential group of women reformers established the Female Department of the Prison Association of New York in a bid to draw attention to the plight of women in the city
worst abused. In the Indiana state prison, for example, exploited by corrupt officials
jails. ;
Their
United
work gave
States.
rise to a
strong tradition of prison reform by middle-class
Many were members of liberal sects, mainly Quakers or Unitarians. And many
were deeply involved in a variety of other purity, pacifism,
tion to
draw
women in the
and
social
campaigns, for example, temperance, social
antislavery. Their class, education,
women
attention to the welfare of
campaigning
and determina-
skills,
prisoners ensured that the state of the female
prison became a subject for public concern and debate.
Unlike hard-pressed prison
women had
these upper-middle-class
staff,
the leisure to
develop close, lasting relationships with individual inmates, relationships intended to sustain the prisoners throughout their sentences.
The women reformers used
excuse for intruding on the role of the prison warders. "Official achieve
much, but
attention to every
it is
member of a community
to
Visitors," set
them
.
.
.
needed
succeed in their mission of raising
won
to
many
diplomatic
their
duty and
win the confidence of persons made of ill-usage too." Their very
apart from the formal prison hierarchy. This
through the
was
vital if
medium
as expressed
of the
by one Lady Visitor,
that "confidence
sympathy of woman with woman."
Ideally, the
bonds they developed would continue even after release, allowing the ex-prisoner to
on
the advice
The
and patronage of the Lady
fact that the
Lady
name,
they were
women out of the spiritual mire of imprisonment. They
worked on a one-to-one basis in the belief, can only be
this as a
may do
not possible for them to give the individual sympathy and patient
suspicious and distrustful by years of guilt, and
"Lady
staff
fall
back
Visitor in times of need.
Visitors concentrated their efforts
on women
hardly surprising.
is
Upper-class ladies could scarcely have been expected to entertain the risks necessarily in-
volved in carrying out similar work with men. Also, their relationships with
were modeled,
to a large extent,
on
women inmates
the pastoral concern that the mistresses of larger house-
holds were supposed to foster for the moral welfare of their female servants. The receptivity
was predicated on the assumption that women were more impresWomen, it was believed, could be won over by a personal appeal to the heart in a way that men could not. In the longer term, women were thought more likely to develop an abiding trust in their of prisoners to their efforts
sionable than men.
benefactors and give enduring loyalty to the higher ideal of femininity exemplified by the
Lady
Visitor. This ideal set
sivity,
high moral standards, of which innocence, purity, modesty, pas-
and altruism were just a few of the
were seen
to
fall far
from
this ideal set
essential traits.
The
fact that
criminal
women
a hard task for those seeking to reform them. Lady
Visitors sought to establish a regime that
might successfully overcome "the seemingly
domitable obstinacy and perversity of the female character,
and only vileness and depravity remains." Such serious doubts over the role of the prison for
attitudes its
when
all
in-
the barriers are
down
women
raised
toward criminal
female inmates, and some suggested
Wayward
Sisters
/
335
Quaker reformer
I
ft
Elizabeth Fry reads
from
the Bible to fe-
male inmates during her 1813 tour oj Newgate Prison in
London.
Hi
*^^\
^v
Sfc
mtifc-t
*^ v ^f'
^f^
iCaPsc,
rfi*-*
J
dS"~
that "they
•
*
H
were beyond the reach of reformation." Yet such was the high optimism surround-
ing the prison in the
first
posed by
half of the nineteenth century that the challenge
only redoubled the determination of reformers and Lady Visitors to
women
those attributes
instill
thought essential to the female character. Quietly confident that they, as upper- and middleclass
women, could wield
Visitors held themselves
might
powerful influence over members of their
a
up
as
models of piety and
At
first
their
proliferation of
work
attracted considerable publicity, but sustaining
visiting
proved
Lady Visitors
all
gratitude, as the
Lady
greatly resented
by prison
At worst,
far harder.
The
Many
prisoners, far from falling at their feet in penitent
officials,
who saw
among more devious fool
time in prisons considered
their
good order jealousies
gave up.
—disrupting
among
some
as
were
no more than amateurish med-
inmates, they could prove a temptation to
women prisoners
a strong attraction, not least
Unsurprisingly, then, in
work
lip service
more worldly-wise prison warders. Indeed, those working
tence in order to attract praise or other rewards.
had
to their
had prompted the
Visitors expected, simply derided their efforts. Often their visits
and hypocrisy, which did not
visitors
commitment
early enthusiasm that
too often proved insufficient to sustain the difficult and often
thankless task of prison visiting.
full
own sex, the Lady women prisoners
which
aspire.
program of prison
dling.
respectability to
prisons, the
to
be particularly adept
The
because
Lady
time, interest, it
at
simulating peni-
and attention of outside
broke the monotony of daily
Visitors
came
to
life.
be seen as a hindrance to
the routine, unwittingly encouraging dishonesty,
and provoking
Unpaid and apparently unwanted, many Lady
Visitors simply
inmates.
336
Lucia Zedner
/
Despite the mixed record of Elizabeth Fry's prison visiting campaign, is
remembered
best
profound and
writings
is
for this that she
had
more
a
Perhaps the most important exposition of her ideas was Obser-
lasting impact.
vations on the Siting, Superintendence,
many
it
today. Arguably, her wide-ranging ideas for penal reform
on penal reform
and Government oj Female Prisoners (1825). Whereas
of this period were
advice, Fry gave detailed, concrete proposals for
full
how
of grand theories but
practical
little
prisons should be run. In line with
prevailing penal thought, Fry argued for continuous surveillance
and an unremitting regime
of labor, education, and daily religious observance. Especially important for
women, she
argued, were cleanliness, plain decent clothing, and warm, orderly surroundings. As a matter of
first
principle she insisted,
"It is
absolutely essential to the proper order
and regulation of
every prison, that the female prisoners should be placed under the superintendence of
offic-
own sex." Fry had secured this provision in Britain under Peel's Gaol Act of 1823, but it remained common for women to be guarded by men in many continental prisons. Quite apart from saving women from the exploitation that inevitably resulted if they were left ers of their
under male guards, Fry argued a "consistent
that "respectable" female warders
example of propriety and
Fry's vision of the prison for
being
set
up
women was
men. Whereas proposals
for
for
treated" with gentleness
and sympathy so
own
a positive role as
from that of the prisons
clearly very different
male prison reform emphasized uniform
ment, formal direction, and rigid adherence to
cooperate willingly in their
might play
virtue."
rules,
would submit
that they
women be
Fry advocated that
treat-
"tenderly
cheerfully to the rules
and
reform.
The End oj Transportation and the Establishment of Convict Prisons While
local jails
tury, the
continued to cater to the mass of offenders throughout the nineteenth cen-
problem of how
to deal with
more
serious offenders
—
important developments in Victorian penology prisons. Historically, serious offenders
prompted one of
had faced hanging or transportation. In the
the nineteenth century, however, growing discontent with capital
first
most
first
half of
punishment and the
in-
women, prompted
the
creasing reluctance of the colonies to admit convicts, particularly
building of the
the
the growth of state or central government
national penitentiaries. These central, state, or convict prisons, holding
serious offenders sentenced to longer terms, formed the second tier of imprisonment. In Britain, the ending of transportation provided the impetus for
ment
of convict prisons for
women. The
colonies
had always been
more rapid develop-
resistant to accepting
women convicts. Western Australia refused to take them from the start, and when New South Wales closed down
women
as a penal colony in 1840,
Van Diemen's Land was persuaded
only after vehement opposition. In 1852
it
too refused to admit any
to accept
more female
convicts, thus bringing an abrupt halt to the transportation of women. Joshua Jebb,
who was
then chairman of the Directors of Convict Prisons, calculated that one thousand prison places, in addition to those already at
Millbank Prison in London, would be needed to house
who would previously have been shipped abroad.
In
of correction at Brixton from the county of Surrey for thirteen thousand extra seven
hundred
to eight
hundred
places.
women
1852 the government bought the house
pounds
Under immense pressure
to
provide an
to take the
growing
Wayward
body of women who could no longer be and had
correction
it
open and ready
also in
London, were
to
337
/
sent abroad, the government converted the house of
for use in less
Under the Penal Servitude Act (1853) and Fulham,
Sisters
the
than a year.
new female convict prisons at Millbank, Brixton,
be governed by all the rules and regulations that already
applied in male convict prisons. But prison administrators were far from convinced that the
male model could simply be amplified
when both
lifted
wholesale and applied to
present
from
far
mode
clear.
One bewildered medical
of treating female convicts,
the
To provide
government
punishment
a
that
required differ-
seemed
admitted in 1856, "The
collecting of so large a
women,
sentences of penal servitude
set
officer at Brixton
and the
prisoners in a prison expressly prepared for country."
women
How convict prisons for women were to be orga-
entiated treatment appropriate to their sex.
nized was
women. Their worries were only
prison staff and outside lobbyists insisted that
in
at a
number
are circumstances altogether
some sense equivalent
of female
new in
this
to transportation,
minimum of five years. The implications
of holding prisoners for such long periods raised a series of problems not previously con-
fronted by the prison system.
The
New
separate state prison for
first
women in
the United States
York opened Mount Pleasant Female Prison. Established
crowding
in existing
New York
prisons,
it
was
Mount
Pleasant
sponsibility of inspectors at nearby Sing Sing, in practice, day-to-day
ing,
and hat-trimming, apart from
Eliza
Farnham,
under
a
monotonous regime
a brief period,
from 1844
a period of radical experimentation
Under Farnham's leadership
up
remained the only such prison
country until the 1870s. Although the management of
the prison's matrons. Prisoners labored
set
was
when
in 1835,
largely in response to overfor
was
women
in the
officially the re-
management was
left to
of sewing, button-mak-
1847, when, under matron
to
instituted.
the prisoners enjoyed better conditions than those found at
the male prison at Sing Sing. She instituted personal tuition, exhorted staff not to rely
on
punishment, and abolished the rule of silence. Such reforms provoked angry opposition from critics
ers in
who argued
that this milder
regime for
women sowed
discontent
neighboring Sing Sing. Farnham was obliged to resign, and
tion gave
way
population
to a longer decline characterized
Mount
at
was
state prison
prison-
period of innova-
by increasing overcrowding. In 1865 the
Pleasant reached nearly twice
its
capacity.
The
state refused to finance
Mount many ways an institution ahead of its time. It sat alone as the first and only for women, suggesting a model for women's imprisonment that found favor only
further expansion
Pleasant
among male
this brief
and instead closed the prison, dispersing inmates
to local prisons.
in
with the development of the women's reformatory movement in the
last
quarter of the
century.
A
major schism developed over two
rival
models on which prison regimes might be
organized: the "silent system" (in which prisoners were not allowed to talk to one another)
and the "separate system" contact between
them
English local prisons
(in
to a
at
which prisoners were
isolated in individual cells so as to
minimum). These two systems originated
two
Gloucester and Southwell. But the major controversy over their rival
merits centered around the silent regime developed at the separate system
keep
in experiments in
imposed
at the
Auburn
Penitentiary,
Western Penitentiary, Philadelphia.
New York, and
.
338
/
Lucia Zedner
Many
made
of the criticisms that were
women:
applied to
punishment posing the
that
it
would be
rates soaring as prison guards tried to
silent
system on
men were
of the silent system in relation to
virtually impossible to enforce
quash every
women was seen to involve
and
that
also
would send
it
im-
infraction. In addition,
special problems. Since
women were
thought to be naturally more sociable and more excitable than men, silence might be more
damaging silence
nervous system.
to their
among them would would
bly inmates
find
Women,
require even
ways around the
was
it
more
said, lacked self-control, so enforcing
careful supervision than
silent regime,
among men.
Inevita-
and here, again, worries were voiced
about the supposed impressionability of women. Lurid pictures were painted of innocent
becoming prey
first-time offenders
servants, [and] prostitutes."
If
whispered exploits of hardened
to the
silence
was
be effective
to
noted and punished. Yet continual reprimands would do
tween
staff
and inmates,
as the
little
matron of one English prison
system soon discovered. "Older criminals
.
.
.
"thieves, brothel-
every infringement had to be
at all,
to foster
good
relations be-
that tried to enforce the silent
upon being reported
for
breaches of silence.
.
almost invariably pour forth upon the Officers a torrent of obscene and blasphemous abuse." at Auburn Prison in New York, the supposed model of the silent system, women were crammed into a cramped and fetid attic room above the kitchen while men were locked in
Even
separate cells at night. Officially supervised by the head of the kitchen, the largely to their
own
who wrote
chaplain,
devices, with
to do. Their plight
little
"To be a male convict in
in 1833,
women were
left
was summed up by Auburn's
this prison
would be
quite tolerable;
but to be a female convict, for any protracted period, would be worse than death."
Due
to all these
separate system (in
drawbacks of the
silent system, in
which prisoners were
England a modified version of the
slept alone)
was widely advocated. Penal reformers thought
suitable for
women.
that
women who,
where they worked,
isolated in single cells
that separation
was
ate,
and
particularly
where separation was introduced, the chaplain claimed
In one prison
"under the old system, must have gone out corrupted and ruined by the
association with the
most depraved and basest of their sex" were now, under the new system,
"discharged from prison impressed with better principles, and possessed of a real desire to retrieve their characters
and
to
worried whether
men would
confined to their
cells entailed.
were said
to
useful
members
of society." Prison reformers
the hardship for
women
from the contributions made
that
it
was
for
at international
of Stockholm, one delegate argued, "The
men. That
man
cells all
day
view was widely held
is
woman is more docile, more if
resigned, she has
not better than,
more
at least as
well
to solitary confinement."
Curiously this sanguine approach to subjecting
shared in France. Here, in contrast,
it
was feared
to the demoralizing effects of isolation.
who would
women to solitary confinement was not women would not be able to stand up
that
Women were
said to be naturally sociable creatures
not have the inner resources to survive alone.
France as in Britain, the benefits of separation for
grounds
this
penological conferences. At the Congress
sedentary habits and as a consequence will reconcile herself, as a
had
women, who
But few of these concerns seemed to apply to
be passive, even "naturally sedentary." Accordingly, staying in their
would not be clear
become
be able to tolerate the inactivity and lack of exercise that being
that
"women contaminate each
women
other even
And
yet, despite these worries, in
were reluctantly accepted on the
more than men
do." Since
women were
Wayward
Sisters
/
339
thought to be more impressionable, they needed even greater protection from bad influences than did men. Total separation was a radical, but effective, means of removing the younger,
more innocent women from tion
became the dominant
all
By the mid-nineteenth century, the prison system
ries.
The
basic
at
both
Clearly, holding a prisoner for several years
In
what follows we
was
like to
and
generally
the convict or state penitentia-
looked roughly
Both had
alike.
cells,
in
flux of prisoners held perhaps for only a
few weeks or even days.
attempt to draw out these differences, to give some flavor of what
shall
woman
be a
men and women was
many other respects they differed markedly. made demands on the system quite unlike those
workrooms, chapel, school, and nursery. But
imposed by the continual
levels
Women's Prisons
both
for
the local prisons or jails,
tiers:
components of prisons
of Europe, separa-
imprisonment.
Life inside Nineteenth-Century
organized on two distinct
much
possible sources of corruption. In
characteristic of long-term
it
in a local or a convict prison.
Prison Structure
men and women, the nature of life in prison was determined by the constraints of the buildings. Unsurprisingly, many local authorities were unable or unwilling To a great extent,
to
for
both
meet the costs of constructing the individual
system.
Where
were
cells
built, their walls
Poor design and inadequate funding meant dark, cold,
and damp. Physical conditions
problems arose from the
men and
fact that
time
at a
separation was raising doubts about of allowing
much
women to associate,
for the
necessary to run prisons on the separate
that, in
many
communication.
to prevent
local prisons, cells
were small,
in convict prisons tended to be better, but other
female convicts were mostly housed in buildings built for
women.
only later adapted for
vidual cells for each inmate
cells
were often too thin
Women
convicts inherited prisons built with indi-
when growing evidence its
desirability.
yet equally
of the psychological
burden of
Worried about the contaminating
concerned that
total separation
"weaker sex" to bear, prison administrators allowed
women
effects
would prove too
to
spend time
to-
gether during the day. However, prison officials were heavily constrained by the existing architecture:
working
one mid-century engraving
silently
and
(see p.
in evident discomfort
328) shows the
women
at
on the narrow landings outside
Brixton Prison
their cells.
men tended to be dour, women to develop feelings of
Quite apart from their architectural constraints, prisons built for formal places that did not
well with the aim of encouraging
fit
femininity and a sense of domestic pride. In 1844 Eliza Farnham, Pleasant prison for
women
in
New
mitigate the grim character of the place. In London,
women,
on taking charge of Mount
York, introduced flowers and music in an attempt to
when
Brixton Prison was reopened for
they were "allowed" to whitewash the interior of the prison and encouraged to cul-
tivate small plots of flowers
mid-century
and plants
that
visitor, the social investigator
efforts a success,
were dotted around the exercise yards. One
and journalist Henry Mayhew, proclaimed such
declanng that the prison had "nothing of the ordinary prison character or
gloomy
look."
massive
compendium The
Contemporary sketches and engravings, however, even Criminal Prisons oj London and Scenes oj Prison
in
Life
Mayhew's own (1862), do
little
.
338
Lucia Zedner
/
Many
made
of the criticisms that were
women:
applied to
punishment
that
it
would be
rates soaring as prison
posing the silent system on
men were
of the silent system in relation to
virtually impossible to enforce
and
that
also
would send
it
guards tried to quash every infraction. In addition, im-
women was seen to involve special problems.
Since
women were
thought to be naturally more sociable and more excitable than men, silence might be more
damaging
nervous system.
to their
among them would
silence
bly inmates
would
find
Women,
require even
ways around the
was
it
more
said, lacked self-control, so enforcing
careful supervision than
silent regime,
among men.
Inevita-
and here, again, worries were voiced
about the supposed impressionability of women. Lurid pictures were painted of innocent first-time offenders
becoming prey
servants, [and] prostitutes."
If
whispered exploits of hardened
to the
silence
was
to be effective at
noted and punished. Yet continual reprimands would do
tween
staff
and inmates,
as the
system soon discovered. "Older criminals
.
.
.
to foster
little
matron of one English prison
"thieves, brothel-
every infringement had to be
all,
good
relations be-
that tried to enforce the silent
upon being reported
for
breaches of silence.
.
almost invariably pour forth upon the Officers a torrent of obscene and blasphemous abuse."
Even
at
Auburn Prison
crammed
into a
in
New York,
cramped and
room above
separate cells at night. Officially supervised largely to their
chaplain,
who
own
devices, with
women were men were locked in by the head of the kitchen, the women were left do. Their plight was summed up by Auburn's
supposed model of the
the
fetid attic
to
little
silent system,
the kitchen while
wrote in 1833, "To be a male convict in
this prison
would be
quite tolerable;
but to be a female convict, for any protracted period, would be worse than death."
Due
to all these
separate system (in
drawbacks of the
silent system, in
which prisoners were
England a modified version of the
slept alone)
was widely advocated. Penal reformers thought
suitable for
women.
that
women who,
where they worked,
isolated in single cells
that separation
was
ate,
and
particularly
was introduced, the chaplain claimed
In one prison where separation
"under the old system, must have gone out corrupted and ruined by the
association with the
most depraved and basest of their sex" were now, under the new system,
"discharged from prison impressed with better principles, and possessed of a real desire to retrieve their characters
and
to
worried whether
men would
confined to their
cells entailed.
were said
to be passive,
would not be clear
become
useful
members
of society." Prison reformers had
be able to tolerate the inactivity and lack of exercise that being
the hardship for
women
from the contributions made
that
it
was
for
at international
of Stockholm, one delegate argued, "The
men. That
man
day
view was widely held
is
woman is more docile, more resigned, she has more if
not better than,
at least as well
to solitary confinement."
Curiously this sanguine approach to subjecting
shared in France. Here, in contrast, to the
this
their cells all
penological conferences. At the Congress
sedentary habits and as a consequence will reconcile herself, as a
women, who
But few of these concerns seemed to apply to
even "naturally sedentary." Accordingly, staying in
it
was feared
demoralizing effects of isolation.
who would
women to solitary confinement was not women would not be able to stand up
that
Women were
said to be naturally sociable creatures
not have the inner resources to survive alone.
France as in Britain, the benefits of separation for
women
And
yet, despite these worries, in
were reluctantly accepted on the
grounds that "women contaminate each other even more than
men
do." Since
women
were
Wayward
Sisters
/
339
thought to be more impressionable, they needed even greater protection from bad influences than did men. Total separation was a radical, but effective, means of removing the younger,
more innocent women from tion
became
the
dominant
all
possible sources of corruption. In
Life inside Nineteenth-Century for
organized on two distinct
jails,
ries.
The
the local prisons or
components of prisons
basic
both
at
Clearly, holding a prisoner for several years
what follows we
In
was
woman
be a
like to
looked roughly
generally
state penitentia-
Both had
alike.
cells,
in
flux of prisoners held
shall attempt to
men and women was
and the convict or
many other respects they differed markedly. made demands on the system quite unlike those
workrooms, chapel, school, and nursery. But
imposed by the continual
levels
of Europe, separa-
Women's Prisons
both
By the mid-nineteenth century, the prison system tiers:
much
imprisonment.
characteristic of long-term
draw out
perhaps
only a few weeks or even days.
for
these differences, to give
some
flavor of
what
it
in a local or a convict prison.
Prison Structure
men and women, the nature of life in prison was determined by the constraints of the buildings. Unsurprisingly, many local authorities were unable or unwilling
To
to
a great extent, for
both
meet the costs of constructing the individual
system.
Where
were
cells
built, their walls
Poor design and inadequate funding meant
and damp. Physical conditions
dark, cold,
problems arose from the
men and
fact that
only later adapted for
vidual cells for each inmate
separation
was
of allowing
much
raising
women
for the
at a
necessary to run prisons on the separate
that, in
many
communication.
to prevent
local prisons, cells
were small,
in convict prisons tended to be better, but other
female convicts were mostly housed in buildings built for
women. time
doubts about
Women
convicts inherited prisons built with indi-
when growing evidence its
desirability.
to associate, yet equally
"weaker sex"
cells
were often too thin
of the psychological burden of
Worried about the contaminating
concerned that
to bear, prison administrators
total
separation
allowed
women
effects
would prove too
to
spend time
to-
gether during the day. However, prison officials were heavily constrained by the existing architecture:
working
one mid-century engraving (see
silently
and
in evident discomfort
p.
328) shows the
women
at
on the narrow landings outside
Brixton Prison
their cells.
men tended to be dour, women to develop feelings of
Quite apart from their architectural constraints, prisons built for formal places that did not
well with the aim of encouraging
fit
femininity and a sense of domestic pride. In 1844 Eliza Farnham, Pleasant prison for
women
in
New
mitigate the grim character of the place. In
women,
on taking charge
of
Mount
York, introduced flowers and music in an attempt to
London, when Brixton Prison was reopened
for
they were "allowed" to whitewash the interior of the prison and encouraged to cul-
tivate small plots of flowers
mid-century
and plants
that
visitor, the social investigator
efforts a success, declaring that the
gloomy
look."
massive
compendium The
were dotted around the exercise yards. One
and journalist Henry Mayhew, proclaimed such
prison had "nothing of the ordinary prison character or
Contemporary sketches and engravings, however, even
in
Mayhew's own
Criminal Prisons of London and Scenes of Prison Life (1862), do
little
340
/
Lucia Zedner
The exercise yard oj Brixton Prison. The small flower gardens that
Bnxton prisoners
were permitted
to
plant in the yard did
little to
relieve
the gloominess oj the
From The Criminal Prisons of London and
prison facade.
Scenes of Prison Life (1862) by Henry
Mayhcw and John Binny.
to
support such an optimistic impression. Prisons for
many
formidable places, not least because
former convents. The
St.
women
them were
Lazare House of Correction for
originally a convent, which,
character.
of
even when converted
in France
tended
be
to
less
established by religious orders in
Women in Paris,
for prison use, retained
for
example, was
much of its
former
Given the emphasis on the individual redemption and moral reform of female
prisoners, convents such as these provided a far
austere setting of
many former male
more conducive atmosphere than did
the
prisons.
Purposes of the Regime
We have
seen
how Victorians'
perceptions of criminal
women
differed
markedly from
views of criminal men. These differences were clearly reflected in the regimes in prison. Since,
by committing crime, women were seen
femininity to which
all
to
have
fallen
set
up
for
from the
their
women ideal of
women were supposed to aspire, the main aim was to provide inmates
with the opportunity and means to reform. Although the ideal of the "lady," by definition,
presumed
a social class
remote from the
most criminal
realities of the life
women
could never hope to attain and
they faced outside, this
fact
set
standards
did not deter reformers from
holding the ideal up as the ultimate goal. Short sentences in local prisons allowed
little
scope to achieve any lasting change in the
inmates. Over the course of the nineteenth century the proportion of very short sentences
increased as
more women came before
disorderly conduct, prostitution,
the courts for the most trivial offenses of drunkenness,
and petty
nationalized in Britain in 1877, of the
theft.
For example, by the time
women entering Tothill
Fields
local prisons
were
House of Correction
in
Wayward
London, over half were sentenced
to terms of less
Sisters
341
/
than fourteen days, three-quarters to
less
than one month, and well below one-tenth to more than six months. Such short terms led to attitudes very different to a
from those prevalent in convict prisons. Whereas convicts were
be demoralized by the prospect of years in prison and
woman
former
likely
from the outside world,
held for only a few days was unlikely to be very amenable to whatever influences
the prison brought to bear. She
outside
feel isolated
and knew life.
was probably
that she could
All these factors gave
still
with her family and friends
in contact
soon escape the pains of punishment and return
women
in local prisons
little
to her
reason to cooperate with the
prison authorities. Quite apart from the prisoners' attitudes, the huge turnover of inmates in local prisons created staff entirely.
an administrative burden that threatened to take up the energies of the
"The prison-vans bring them,
or sixty a day, from
fifty
all
the police-courts of
many came in every day: so many discharged, mostly to come again. What a work for the chaplains! What a work for the reformers!" In practice, of course, reform was a hopeless task when time was so short and the metropolis, as well as from the criminal courts
and
sessions.
So
resources were so heavily diverted by the burdens of administering the continual flood of
admissions.
Longer terms in
program intended acterized their
by a
state or convict prisons
to bring about lasting
militaristic discipline, in
number. Relations with
allowed greater scope for implementing a reform
change in inmates. Male convict prisons were char-
which inmates remained anonymous, known only by
staff were terse
and formal.
In
women's custodial
and punishments were very similar
the United States, routines
institutions in
to those of the
male prisons
with which they were associated. But in England, although regulations governing male prisoners were extended to cover female convict prisons, the emphasis here was on moral treat-
ment intended to restore criminal women to respectability and "womanliness." One anonymous writer
summed up
prison should
the purpose of the regime as follows, "A
feel that
however vicious her past
life
woman on
has been, she
is
entering a convict
come
to a place
where
she has a character to regain and support."
The female convict system mimicked that a series of classes their sentence
was
depending on
the "public works" stage, in ing, for
men
in
which convicts moved during the period
of
the "progressive stage system" set
established, through their behavior.
For men, the central feature of
up
this
for
system was
which they were employed in hard-labor quarrying, stone-break-
and building. There was no comparable work
women. As Joshua Jebb only
available or, at
any
rate,
deemed
suitable
too clearly recognized, "Females must of necessity be
em-
ployed chiefly indoors, and will have neither the varied work, nor the complete change
af-
forded to Male Convicts, by removal to the public works." Whereas chain gangs of men could leave the prison each day,
often petty
women
employment within
Jebb worried
at
faced a
monotonous
daily
round of highly contrived and
the prison walls.
length about confining
lieved that they did "not have the
women
long term, particularly because he be-
same physical and mental powers which enable them
to
bear up against the depressing influence of imprisonment." French penologists were similarly
alarmed by the signs of nervous decline and even madness manifest in
was put down
prisoners. Their inability to adapt to institutional
life
nature. Records of mental disorders
illness
and nervous
women
to their "defective"
among women
prisoners were
344
Lucia Zedner
/
long periods without serious harm to their development. Inmates' children showed utter terror
on meeting rare male visitors
the world.
to the prison,
and they lacked stimulus and experience of
The journalist Henry Mayhew found "one
cerated, that
on going out
of the prison
little
thing had been kept so long incar-
called a horse a cat." Officials worried also that
it
children raised in the dismal surroundings of the prison and under the influence of their criminal mothers were inevitably
doomed
to a life of
state prisons. Efforts sibility for
1866
were made
to
crime themselves.
demands Jo remove children from both
Unsurprisingly, there were continual
and
local
persuade a woman's parish or community to take respon-
her children. Partial success in this campaign was achieved in Britain under the
which provided
Industrial Schools Act,
for the children of
women who had been twice
previously convicted to be removed to industrial schools. In 1871, the Prevention of Crimes
women
Act extended the 1866 act to cover
came
liable to
their children
rivation of
with only a single previous conviction. Thereaf-
means of subsistence or proper guardianship be-
children under fourteen with no other
ter,
be sent to an industrial school. The feelings of mothers obliged to surrender
seem
women's
to
have attracted
discussion,
little
rights of custody over their
own
and opposition
to this concerted
dep-
children was soon overcome.
Female Prison Staff With
any access visits
women were staffed almost entirely men had been barred from
the notable exception of the chaplain, prisons for
by women. In
Britain, after the passing of Peel's
Even the chaplain had
to female prisoners.
around the prison, though whether
embarrassing accusations
is
Gaol Act in 1823,
this
was
to
be accompanied on his pastoral
to protect
unclear. In the United States,
it
inmates or to save him from
was argued: "A matron
essary for the special superintendence of the female prisoners, she
Auburn system is applied
the
system, while
The
men
it is
on
the female staff were almost unparalleled at a time
to enforce the massive
ons, discipline tended to be relaxed,
by
size.
And
to operate
body
and
in
on
of rules strictly its
They were expected
per,
and compassion,
to set themselves
traits that
and give
can understand and
up
as
and uniformly. In women's
watch on
their
staff
the trials
and
difficulties
demeanor whenever
staff,
and
instilling a sense of
should show "patience, a disposition
improvement, and a sympathy which even of the outcast." Arguably, such
who were,
therefore, required to
a
keep
in contact with prisoners. In stark contrast to the
practice at men's prisons, warders at female prisons
women
pris-
inmates might then seek to emulate. The directors of the
requirement imposed greater burdens on female a close
of staff in pris-
models of feminine decorum, good tem-
credit for, the least evidence of
feel for
made
place warders were expected to maintain order
Millbank convict prison, for example, insisted that to discover,
when
quasi-militaristic lines, officers there
setting a personal example, gaining the trust of the prisoners,
loyalty.
if
they were increased by the fact that the
of staff in female prisons were very different from those
men. Since male prisons tended
were required
nec-
women as well as men; she alone can enforce the order of this
ran most institutions of comparable
for
[is]
quite indispensable
nearly impossible for male keepers."
responsibilities placed
demands made ons
to
is
were encouraged
to get to
know
the
personally and to develop close relationships with them. Rules were bent or even
Wayward
/
345
ignored to allow discipline to be adapted to individual temperaments. In theory, at
least,
every effort was to be
made
Sisters
encourage moral reform by a process that combined an uneasy
to
mix of coercion, encouragement, and manipulation. In practice, long hours (female warders
poor staff-inmate
ratios
penitent to reform
was
they really do not
The
from
worked
a twelve- or
even fifteen-hour day) and
women
patiently encouraging the
that the ideal of zealous
rarely achieved.
"Towards the close of the day
and extremely cross with the prisoners, and
get irritable
ill."
meant
much
care
background scarcely
distinct
.
.
.
.
some
of the officers
other officers get so tired out,
was
a further hindrance.
demands made
of them. In the United
women, and many were widows
matrons were often older
Most were
from that of the prisoners themselves, and many
lacked the education, intelligence, or ability to meet the States, the
.
whether the prisoners about them conduct themselves well or
caliber of women recruited to the prison service
a social
.
obliged to take
up
prison posts out of force of circumstances. Elizabeth Fry deplored the "very poor Sort of
Matrons" employed on both sides of the Atlantic and even claimed, "Some of the [prisoners] are superior to themselves in point of Power
and Talent, so
that they
Women
have scarcely
any Influence over them." French prisons also experienced major difficulties in recruiting suitable
women staff. Yet
here the large population of Catholic nuns provided a readily available recruiting ground for
women whose
morals, religious
faith,
and commitment were unimpeachable. Entire
reli-
women's
pris-
gious orders, like the sisters of Marie-Joseph, dedicated themselves to staffing ons.
They acted
as
models of femininity and piety
that British prison administrators could
only envy. Not everyone in France was quite so uncritical of the work of these religious orders, however. Anticlerical republicans objected to the institutions.
Others objected to their
maisons de refuges set
activities
up and run by
employment
of
nuns by state-run
on more pragmatic grounds. For example, the
the sisters of Marie -Joseph for
women
finishing their
prison sentences were criticized: "The sisters think of the interests of their religious nity above
all else;
they choose the best subjects from the central prisons, those
commuwho are
capable of easily earning a living." Selectively, the nuns thus equipped themselves with groups of hard-working, manageable
women,
leaving the rest of those discharged from the central
prisons to face the outside world without help or shelter.
Formally, warders exercised control over inmates by applying a series of rules and regulations little
and consistently sanctioning any infringement, however minor.
of the internal
life
We know
prisons were in fact run along these lines. In female prisons, however, order tained by discipline alone but
by
a
complex
mates. Officially, the rulebook forbade
assumption that
relatively
of the male prison in the nineteenth century, of whether or not male
women
undue
set of relationships
familiarity
were more susceptible
greater level of intimacy than
with inmates. In practice, the
to personal influence
was ever countenanced
was not main-
between warders and
in
male prisons.
than It
in-
common
men justified
was generally
a
ac-
cepted that the female warder could exert good moral influence by showing a personal interest in
and giving advice
to individual
The dividing line between establish.
women.
legitimate interest
and undue intimacy was not always easy
"Tampering" was the coy and conveniently euphemistic term used
to
to describe cases
346
Lucia Zedner
/
of lesbianism
by female
staff.
Cases of tampering with prisoners are recorded with surprising
frequency in the discipline books of female prisons. In male prisons, homosexuality was
abhorred and heavily punished. In female prisons, the reaction of the prison authorities was
much
less predictable
to the
warder concerned. Part of the problem was that the
by Victorian
and, surprisingly, often resulted in no more than a simple reprimand
women to
those of sexual intimacy. to a
common use
of sentimental terms
one another blurred the distinction between emotional relations and
What should one make of {he effusive letters sent by one subwarder W. Fletcher? One letter began: "my dear darling baby if I
— —
former female prisoner, Susan
—
may still call you so, and I think you will let me, for indeed you are very dear to me, you don't know how miserable and unhappy I feel, now you are gone. It is not like the same place. It was very bad, but now it is much worse. As I am passing that old cell, I look in. It is empty no one there. Then I don't know what to do with myself. Oh, do forgive me! I ought not to remind you of this dreadful place, but I do miss you so much!" The warder who wrote this letter was found out and was, in fact, dismissed. Her letter reveals much of the miserable life of the female prison warder. Because women were obliged to resign when they married, those who remained tended to be even more cut off from the outside world than
—
male counterparts and
their
more dependent on
the
all
the
life
of the prison for emotional
sustenance.
Other relationships were rather more straightforwardly subversive. The records of one
London
between warders and
prison, Tothill Fields, reveal a variety of illegal arrangements
prisoners. These ranged from the simple bartering of services privileges to sophisticated systems for trafficking
by inmates
in return for petty
goods into the prison. In September 1860,
four female prisoners at Tothill Fields "confessed they had done both plain and embroidery
work
for these Officers in return for
cake." Given the
meager and monotonous rations of the prison
luxuries indeed. Access to a warder basis
which they received bread,
must have done much to mitigate
—formed
the rigors of prison
Charlotte
by one
Howe, posed
illegalities
as a potential trafficker
to a
Emma Steiner,
number
Organized trafficking
economy within
illicit
good screw
the prison. In prison
and the penalties imposed so minor,
that
one
and was offered ten
shillings
and
a gold
told the authorities that
watch
At the same
warder Ann Bailey was trafficking
when
much
a
week
to bring parcels into
a prisoner gets her sentence they say
them:
it
is
never mind she has a
inside."
Obviously
it
was
largely
up
sort with the inmates. But to
relationship that strayed
illegalities.
—where
goods such as
of her peers, though, significantly, not to Steiner herself. She said, "The
talked about outside, and
any
life.
to take in highly
were very common. At Tothill Fields Prison one warder,
prisoners say subwarder Bailey receives so
Any
must have seemed
woman to take in "some Grub, Meat, and a little Wine" to a relative inside.
prison, an inmate,
goods
warder
the basis of an illegal
records, reports of trafficking are so frequent,
can only assume that such
diet, these
and
who was prepared to bring in food and drink on a regular
a prisoner's friends outside the prison paid a
meat or even alcohol
butter, cheese, tea, fruit,
to prison
warders to develop covert,
choose to do
beyond
The warder then placed
so tipped the balance of
that strictly allowed
herself at the
illegal relationships
of
power between them.
immediately involved a series of
mercy of the prisoners,
for she risked
being
Wayward
up contraventions of the
reported by them. Prisoners stored as
rules
Sisters
347
/
and regulations by warders
ammunition when threatened with punishment themselves. Reading between the
lines of prison
daybooks and punishment records suggests
order inside the female prison was precariously maintained by a
ments, and even blackmail. Although female prison tionships with prisoners in the
was
was
closer,
of favors,
were encouraged
illicit
to build
into a relationship of
strictly hierarchical
rela-
result
mutual dependency.
more claustrophobic, and possibly more open
which operated in the more regimented,
that
agree-
up
hope of exercising personal influence over them, the
and inmates were pushed together
that staff
Inevitably this
staff
web
abuse than that
to
world of the male prison.
Inmates
The
lives of
prisons are
female prisoners and their relationships with one another in nineteenth-century
all
but hidden from us today. For the most part their experiences remained unre-
corded. Building
up any
picture of
what
their
misbehavior was so blatant as to
own
accounts are so rare that
memoirs by Months
in
Fletcher
a female
their lives
were
like relies
on those occasions when
attract the attention of the prison authorities. Inmates'
we can only
how
question
One
typical they were.
of the few
inmate of a local prison in Britain was Susan Willis Fletcher's Twelve
an English Prison (1884). Fletcher's story
is
eloquently written and informative. But
was an upper-class American who operated
as a spiritualist
obtaining jewels and clothing "of great value" by false pretenses
and was convicted of
—hardly
a typical
inmate of
a local prison.
In France there
between to
women
is
form of
a far richer source in the
"biftons," or notes
and
letters,
sent
inmates, seized by the authorities, and published by prison commentators
expose the underlife of women's prisons. These
letters
provide an important counter to the
views of those in authority. Yet they too are a somewhat suspect source. Questions about their authenticity, their typicality, raise
and the very purposes
for
which they were published
doubts about their validity. The largest published collection of these
was edited by Arnauld Galopin; according largely for "their prurient appeal."
covering what
life
was
Official records
to a recent study, these letters
As such, even they constitute
really like in
women's
into the lives of female prisoners. But
they are heavily colored by the writers' personal beliefs about criminal
on the
were published
a questionable basis for dis-
prisons.
and writings give some glimpses
rary commentaries often dwell
all
letters, Les Enracinees,
plight of relatively innocent
women. Contempo-
women
imprisoned
for
petty offenses only to find themselves subjected to "the foul language of the stews, the un-
checked blasphemy and ribaldry of the lowest prostitutes, and the outpourings of thieves." Criminal
women
were also thought
known prison chaplain, resist
what
is
for their
declared:
good
more about contemporary ons. Although chaplains
more
far
well
difficult, as
attitudes than about
what
actually
and prison administrators alike
better
Reverend Walter Clay, a well-
known that women are
far
worse to manage, and
more vehemently than men." Such statements probably tell us
disciplinary problems, actual
much worse nor much
be more
to
"It is
went on within women's
punishment records suggest
behaved than men.
pris-
women caused them far that women were neither
insisted that
348
Lucia Zedner
/
To assuage
the loneliness of prison
many women developed highly charged relation-
life,
ships with one another. Prison authorities were deeply worried by the prevalence of "unnatu-
male prisons and stamped them out by severely punishing those involved.
ral practices" in
Perhaps through lack of imagination,
were
strictly affectionate
and refused
many British
officials insisted that
to accept that they
women prisoners were much freer to develop
female relationships
had any sexual content. As a
result,
intense though often short-lived relationships,
known in the prison argot as "palling-in." Rows between lovers were common, and the swapping of allegiances often sparked off tempestuous jealousies upsetting to the order of the prison. In convict prisons,
such attachments tended
to
where
women
were cut
off
from
many
their families for
be longer-lasting. Based on affection and
fidelity,
years,
they were an
important source of friendship.
Homosexuality among women prisoners was more openly recognized by French prison
The concierge
officials.
nearly
bling dormitories for
one Parisian prison
at
for prostitutes, the Petite Force, insisted that
the inmates there practiced "commerce contre nature."
all
and shared
cells at St.
Lazare prison for
And
women
the overcrowded,
in Paris
crum-
were condemned
encouraging blatant promiscuity. Generally French penal reformers claimed that women's
much as men's, were "schools for vice." how far women's relationships formed the basis of counterculture
prisons, quite as
Just
remains unclear. Certainly prison isted
among
women and was
the
tion, abortion,
and even
officials in Britain
used
infanticide.
within the prison
believed that a secret "sisterhood" ex-
to pass information
about such practices as prostitu-
The snatches of conversation on which these
beliefs
were based give only the barest indication of the "subculture" of the women's prison and of
which
the degree to
A
core of
it
women
operated to undermine persistently refused to
official
ideology.
comply with
the
demands made
of them. La-
beled "incorrigible" by desperate prison authorities, they flouted the prison rules and created disturbances
at
every opportunity. In the British convict system these
in the "penal class" at Millbank
scribed
them
as "the very worst
and
later at Parkhurst.
women
in existence."
The
women were
journalist
He added,
"I
confined
Henry Mayhew de-
don't fancy their equal
could be found anywhere." Their behavior prompted one prison director to declare: "The language of the penal class
women is fouler than anyone who had not heard it could possibly
imagine. Nothing but the gag can restrain the abominations they utter." Similarly, in America a report
on
the
Ohio penitentiary
more troublesome than curse, swear
and
yell,
and
to bring
with a horsewhip." Whether these
about tered, all
in the
the prison's five
1840s claimed that
hundred men: "The
them
to order a
women
really
its
nine female inmates were
women
fight, scratch, pull hair,
keeper has frequently to go
among them
were so bad, or whether prevailing ideas
how women ought to behave created false expectations that could only be rudely shatis unclear. Certainly the description of one woman convict as showing a "deadness to
feminine decency" would seem to suggest the
latter explanation.
There was, however, a phenomenon that was peculiar to the female convict prison and that
was unparalleled in male prisons. "Breaking-out" was a form of riotous behavior by women
"amounting almost
to a frenzy,
smashing
their
windows, tearing up
their clothes, destroying
every useful article within their reach, generally yelling, shouting or singing as
if
they were
Wayward
Sisters
/
349
Formerly a convent, the St. Lazare
House of
Correction in Paris
was less austere and more comfortable than most male prisons. Drawing by Dessin de Morant, circa 1890.
maniacs." For example, in
New York in
when overcrowding reached a peak at Mount Pleasant Female
1843, the
Prison
women responded by almost continuous riot. The prison report for
that year recorded, "Violent battles are frequent and knives have been known to be drawn among them." Overcrowding continued, and the management problems it provoked proved so insuperable that eventually Mount Pleasant was shut down in 1865.
Similarly, after the
ending of transportation in England, the
first
women
devastated to find themselves facing years in prison instead of a "new
Uncertain about their ultimate
fate,
the
many others. Throughout
the 1850s
monotonous prison regime continued
tion.
convicts were
in the colonies.
they "broke-out" with terrifying frequency. Overcrowd-
ing in Millbank Prison created a catalyst by which the violence of one frenzy in
life"
woman sparked similar
and 1860s, women's extreme
frustration with
to lead to dramatic outbursts of anger
and destruc-
Generally these outbursts were of such violence and intensity that they came at once to
the attention of prison authorities alone. Evidence
from France
is
—
in a single year
154 such cases were recorded
more sketchy, but
prisoners rioting in protest against harsh regimes. Their protests similar
form to those
in Britain.
For example,
cently transferred from Paris reportedly
the Catholic
at
went on
in Millbank
there are recorded instances of
seem
to
women
have taken a very
Bon-Pasteur Prison in Limoges, a rampage, breaking furniture
women
re-
and attacking
nuns who guarded them.
In this particularly intense form, such outbreaks
seem
to
have been confined to women's
prisons and were always considered to be a peculiarly female response to long-term incarceration. Explanations of "breaking-out" rested
controlling their
more
violent passions
and
so,
on the
belief that
women
were incapable of
under the intense pressure of imprisonment,
350
Lucia Zedner
/
way
gave
such outbreaks were, nonetheless,
to hysteria. Dismissively labeled as irrational,
windows and
a terrifying spectacle as
furniture were
smashed and clothing was torn
to
shreds.
Punishing such behavior was problematic, not
women,
because
least
many
of the sanctions im-
men
simply could not be applied to women. Notions of women, even criminal
as the
"weaker sex" meant that corporal punishments, such as whipping, were ruled
posed on
United
out. In the
States,
Mount Pleasant Female
even the "shower bath" in an attempt the use of physical restraints
Prison resorted to straitjackets, the gag, and
subdue the more
recalcitrant inmates. But in Britain
was thought inappropriate, and they were
such sanctions were not available
As one prison governor, G.
to
for
women was
That
rarely applied.
by some prison warders.
clearly regretted
Chesterton, noted in Revelations of Prison Life (1856), "The
L.
female attendants, in the extremity of their disgust and horror, used to exclaim what a blessing it
would be,
if
we could employ some stout-armed woman to give them the rod!"'
warders had to rely on a range of
which seemed unequal
lesser sanctions, all of
—short-term confinement —was simply derided by women who, knowing was
The most common form of punishment "the dark"
in a solitary cell
there
punishment, took the opportunity to behave even more badly. As Dr. observed:
"If
they are put into a dark
cell,
that there are prisoners not very far off
they shout and sing and
them who can hear
little
Instead,
to the task.
known as
prospect of further
Guy of Millbank Prison
make merry. They know
their noise,
and they
like to
go on
in that strange way."
women seem to have been a greater disciplinary problem than men. women should behave, plainly riotous behavior by some, and the available all combined to create the impression that women were worse
Curiously then,
High expectations of how limited sanctions
behaved. The deputy-governor of Millbank, Arthur established fact in prison logistics" that the
"When given to misconduct they are violent, less
amenable
far
women
more
far
it
was
"a well-
worse than the men. He noted,
persistent in their evil ways,
to reason or reproof." Little
more outrageously
why women were
thought was given to
imposed regime. Instead female convict prisons were subject
fiercely resistant to the
continuing round of reorganization, which had reflected a
Griffiths, asserted that
were
profound sense of
little
so
to a
administrative justification but rather
dissatisfaction with attempts to subject
women
to long-term
imprisonment.
One
final
aspect of the
tury imprisonment
is
ways
in
which women subverted
especially curious.
Women
in desperate straits of destitution or sick-
ness saw the local prison as a place of asylum. Brought
dependent, Sick
women looked to
women, and
it
up
in times of need.
as a sort of hospital
women
asylum or lying-in hospital," where they were "properly cared
during their confinement, or while nursing their to secure
little
ones."
A window
admission so that they would be housed,
through pregnancy and childbirth.
gems during periods
on the prison
a reasonable standard of free medical care. Similarly, pregnant
"as a comfortable
smashed was enough
to consider themselves naturally
somewhat unlikely benefactor
especially diseased prostitutes, looked
where they could expect
saw
the prison as a
the purpose of nineteenth-cen-
No doubt
fed,
and looked
after
men would also resort to such strataBut among women this phenomenon seems
destitute
of illness or harsh weather.
for
pane deliberately
Wayward
to
Sisters
/
351
have been remarkably common. Indeed, the governors of the Tothill Fields prison
for
women in London were horrified to discover that their prison enjoyed "an undesirable popularity
amongst Prisoners
generally."
Release from Prison Quite apart from the
many limitations on
the ability of the prison to reform, attitudes toward
women were a major stumbling block for women prisoners seeking to start life anew. In America, the leader of the Female Department of the Prison Association of New York, Abby Hopper Gibbons, recognized that the powerful stigma attached to women when convicted meant that women also faced greater difficulties when released. In 1845, after conducting a public campaign for funds, she opened the Isaac Hopper Home (named after her father) as a refuge for women ex-prisoners who would promise to forsake smoking, drinking, criminal
and cursing
in favor of domestic labor
and
religious study.
From 1845
to 1864, the
home
provided shelter for 2,961 women, found posts for 1,083 of them, and condemned only 480 as
"unworthy or without hope of being reclaimed." In Britain, innumerable voluntary bodies set
almost exclusively to
Aid
Societies.
Protestant lic
women, under
The government too
women,
women. The
up
similar refuges
and
shelters, catering
the umbrella organization of the Discharged Prisoners'
set
up
three state refuges: the Carlisle Memorial Refuge for
the Winchester Memorial Refuge,
proliferation of refuges during the
and the Eagle House Refuge
1860s and 1870s led to
Catho-
for
a state-run
scheme
whereby women "whose conduct and character" justified "the hope of complete amendment" were released on license nine months before the end of a voluntary or a state refuge. If feited her license, she
by
their sentence into the care of either
persistent misbehavior or trying to escape a
was immediately returned
to prison,
woman
where she would remain
for-
until the
end of her term. In France too, Catholic sisters ers recognized similar
who interested themselves in the plight of women prisonwomen discharged into society without friends to
problems facing
help them. The sisters of Marie -Joseph, for example, established maisons de refuge, to which
women with no families of their own might turn for help when released. Finding respectable employment was all but impossible for women who bore the label of convict. From a "refuge,"
was hoped, they had some chance of making
it
a fresh start.
Innovation and Developments into the Twentieth Century The last quarter of the nineteenth century was a period of considerable innovation for women's prisons
on both
sides of the Atlantic.
Developments
in Britain
and the United
States
were
very different in their origin, perspective, and purpose. In America, the impetus to reform
came mainly from
a powerful
body of women who, much influenced by reformatories
al-
ready established for juvenile delinquents, campaigned to set up similar institutions for adult
women. Many
of these reformers
had been
active in "child saving,"
and others had gained
experience in a range of social, educational, and welfare reform movements. of their philosophy
was
that
women
A central
tenet
required separate treatment appropriate to their sex.
352
/
Lucia Zedner
Women's involvement activity that
in prison
years of the nineteenth century
They were,
role.
reform had begun with voluntary prison visiting
had always been regarded by prison
—an
authorities as marginal, at best. In the latter
and into the twentieth, women occupied a much more central
example, influential in founding the American Prison Association in
for
1870, a body dedicated to reviving debate about penal methods and promoting penal reform. In this the
and other
similar organizations,
"social feminism," arguing that they, as fruitfully
sex.
women
philanthropists developed
new
ideas about
government and, indeed, the purpose of female prisons. Many espoused a new creed of
women, had unique feminine
virtues that could be
applied in developing institutions better able to respond to the special needs of their
The new female reformatories were
a direct
outcome of
their endeavors.
On the other side of the Atlantic in Europe, the development of medical science, particularly psychiatry,
promoted
must
a
was the primary
new way
of thinking.
treat criminals as sick,
vengeance and
According to
from the dangers
"One
spirit of
their presence brings."
punishment of those who were inadequate or sick was scarcely justi-
containment in benign conditions was acceptable only in proportion to
the danger an individual posed to society. At the Social
Dally, explained,
having with regard to neither hate nor anger nor the
limit oneself to preserving society
this view,
fiable. Instead,
force in penal reform. This "medicalization" of deviance
As one French doctor, Dr. Eugene
same time, the growing influence of
women
Darwinism focused attention on the potential of criminal
to
produce future
generations of "neurotic, vicious children." As one Scottish physician, Dr. Clouston, dramatically
are
warned, "When
enormously
illegitimate children are
born by such young women, the chances
in favour of their turning out to be either imbeciles, degenerates, or crimi-
nals." Incapacitation
took priority over punishment as the primary purpose of female
custody.
Despite these very different sources of penal thinking in Europe and America, a of similarities suggest themselves. Significantly,
policy for
on both
sides of the Atlantic,
it
number
was penal
women that attracted the most innovation in this period. Whether this was because
the smaller scale of female imprisonment allowed flexibility for experimentation in a
men's prisons did not, or whether
ment of women, remains
it
way that
reflected a deeper unease about the appropriate treat-
unclear, however.
As we
shall see, the
emergent view in America of
female offenders as "wayward" or errant and the growing recognition in Europe of medical
women both, in their different ways, tended to raise questions about who could not be held fully responsible for their crimes. It led many women from custodial prisons on the grounds that conventional
reasons for offending by
the utility of punishing those to the
removal of
punishment was inappropriate. They were sentenced instead ostensible purpose was not to punish but to cure or redeem.
decriminalization of
women was
to
And
in fact to extend control over
new
reformatories
women by
replacing short
sentences for petty offenses in local prisons with indeterminate terms in these
Women
institutions.
were
liable to
whose
yet the effect of this tacit
new specialist
be held until they were considered to be reformed or
cured. Those
who proved recalcitrant or incurable, as in the case of mentally deficient women,
were
liable to
be confined
fore,
it
indefinitely. If the
mainstream prison population decreased, there-
was more than replaced by the growth in numbers of those held long term in specialist
institutions
and reformatories.
Wayward
Sisters
353
/
Prisoners during a recreation period at the
Massachusetts Refor-
matory Prison for
«^
Women
in
1920. The
prison's rural setting,
far from the corrupting influences of the city,
was considered a crucial
element in the in-
mates' rehabilitation.
.r*2'
The American Reformatory Movement Whereas France had established prisons Britain
by the 1850s,
in
pendently of those for
America demands
men and
1870. In that year, the state of
that prisons for
be run solely by
women
did not bear significant
Michigan opened a "house of shelter"
inmates were to "receive intellectual, years later, in 1874, Indiana
women as early as the 1820s and women be set up completely inde-
specifically for
moral, domestic, and
opened the Indiana Reformatory
for
women,
fruit until
in
which
industrial training." Just a
few
Institution, the first completely
women in America. Massachusetts Reformatory Prison for Women opened only three years later in 1877, New York House of Refuge for
independent and physically separate prison
Women that
in 1887,
New
tory,
were
Western House of Refuge
for
Albion in 1893, and Bedford Hills Reforma-
at
York, in 1907. Together these institutions pioneered structures and techniques
to
become
movement.
central to the reformatory
Highly instrumental in achieving the establishment of these cial feminists
first
reformatories were so-
who campaigned for institutions oriented toward the special characteristics and
needs of female prisoners. That the institutions
set
up took
the form of reformatories rather
than straightforward prisons was largely due to changing conceptions of the female offender
Whereas women had previously been thought more
in late-nineteenth-century America.
depraved and more thoroughly corrupt than men, increasingly they were seen as "wayward girls"
who had been led astray and who could,
behavior: "childlike, domestic, that
many
and
therefore, be led
asexual." This view
was
back
greatly
to the paths of "proper"
encouraged by the
who had only "recently begun lives of crime" over those who had "spent years in almshouses" and had In
fact
reformatories refused to take experienced, hardened offenders, preferring those
some
"lost
ambition for better
respects the twenty reformatories set
1935 echoed the ethos and organization of the
prisons and
lives."
up
first
for
women in the period from 1870 to women established in Britain
prisons for
354
Lucia Zedner
/
around the middle of the century.
Mount Joy Female Convict
visited
a separate institution governed
new American
Significantly,
and run
entirely
reformatories differed markedly.
heavily constrained
by
many
influential
American reformers had
Prison in Dublin and were impressed by the advantages of
by women. In many
respects, however, the
Whereas prisons
women in
their architectural setting,
for
American reformatories
Britain
were
started afresh in
buildings that mirrored the ideals they sought to inculcate in their inmates. Most were set in
on
rural areas, often
vast plots.
House
thirty acres, the
The Massachusetts Reformatory Prison Hudson,
of Refuge at
em House of Refuge opened on a one-hundred-acre campus.
Women occupied
Ellen
Cheny Johnson encapsu-
supposed value of this rural location: "To rouse an interest in country life and pursuits
lated the is
for
New York, was set on forty acres, and the West-
likely to
make
the
woman more
contented
when
she
is
placed in a quiet
home away from
the city."
Following the model established by the House of Refuge
were generally built as a
Hudson, the reformatories
at
each housing "families" of twenty or more inmates,
series of cottages,
grouped around a central administrative building. The philosophy behind
this organization
was clear: "Each cottage should be a real home, with an intelligent, sympathetic woman at the head
to act as mother."
At Indiana Reformatory, for example, in an attempt to create a truly
domestic atmosphere, the cloths
women dressed in gingham
and decorated with
and
frocks
flowers. This domestic setting allowed
inmates in the housewifely
skills of
cooking, cleaning, and serving.
subsequently paroled to positions as domestic servants, but factorily, parole
ate at tables set
was revoked and they were returned
if
with table-
ample opportunity
to train
Many of the women were
they did not perform
to the reformatory to
satis-
complete their
sentence.
Unlike ordinary custodial prisons, reformatories also provided extensive educational cilities.
Many of the early reformatories were well equipped with workshops,
gymnasiums.
Women spent
and health
writing,
care.
several hours a
Remunerative
day in
skills
fa-
classrooms, and
class learning the basic skills of reading,
were also considered an
essential part of the
reformatory program. At Indiana, the industrial laundry employed about half the prisoners,
and experts were brought
in to teach the
similar skills. Outside of classes
women
and domestic
the secrets of starching, ironing,
duties,
and other
women were kept busy with an array of
recreational pursuits including outdoor sports, singing, picnics,
and nature walks.
women should direct men retained top positions as prison managers and doctors. However,
Central to the development of these reformatories was the aim that
and
staff
them. At
women struggled by other
women.
first,
to realize their thesis that female prisoners
were best managed and treated
In 1877, for example, Indiana Reformatory threw out
its
male board of
managers. And throughout the 1880s and 1890s female doctors were appointed
and
New York
reformatories.
By the turn of the century,
women had
over the administration of reformatories. At Massachusetts ficer,
for
from the head to the lowest matron,
any
official
personalities Eliza
Mosher
business whatever."
Many
is
a female,
of those
it
was proudly noted, "Every
in charge
were
and pronounced views on the management of female at
Framington Reformatory and Sarah Smith
marked impact on
the character
and
life
Indiana
largely gained control
and no man goes
now
at
at
of-
into the institution
women
prisoners.
with strong
Women
like
Indiana Reformatory had a
of the institutions they governed. But even for
— Wayward
these most determined
Sisters
/
355
women, finding competent female staff willing to undertake the work of the prison matron proved an almost insuperable bar-
poorly paid and burdensome
As
rier.
a result, they
were
too often forced to revert to traditional
all
methods of managing
their prisons.
In time,
many ways,
and
life
in these reformatories
was
far less
severe than in male prisons at that
yet in important respects the reformatory represented a greater infringement
women's freedom. Although sentencing practices varied from state to indeterminate three-year sentence. This meant that
mum
if
they failed to
tories for
show
long terms only
lesser offenses,
maximum
men
whereas
committed
to reforma-
could be sentenced for such
they had committed felonies. Judicial authority for differential sentencing
if
was provided by the 1919 Kansas decision given
on
norm was an
women could be held for up to this maxi-
signs of reform. Moreover, they could be
misdemeanors or even
state, the
State
v.
women to be men served shorter terms in that women were sent to reformatories Heitman, which allowed
indeterminate sentences in reformatories while
local jails. This differential
was justified on the
basis
not to be punished in proportion to the seriousness of their offense but to be reformed and retrained, a process that,
women
for
it
was argued, required
growing Eugenics Movement, which sought from
time. Increasingly, the pressure to hold
such long periods came not only from would-be reformers but also from the
many
social circulation for as
to
have "genetically inferior"
women removed
of their childbearing years as possible.
Innovations in Britain If
reformatories in the United States were used as a covert
means
of incapacitating
women in
order to prevent them from reproducing, in Britain these eugenic purposes were overt. Special institutions
were developed specifically
to present a risk to the future health of the race.
who
ers,"
defied
all
to incarcerate those
far
more
women who seemed
Many of these women were
"habitual offend-
reformatory efforts and returned to the prison time and again. They pre-
sented a major problem for penal discipline, raising serious doubts about the feasibility of the
moral reform program that had once been seen as the main purpose of the female prison. The
atmosphere of moral regeneration and religious awakening that had prevailed under the rectorship of Sir Joshua Jebb (director of prisons militaristic order.
to innovation
basis were
now
from 1865
disappeared under the regime of Sir
to 1898), a strict disciplinarian
The nationalization of local prisons
and individual treatment.
subsumed by
in
who favored,
1877 sounded
Earlier efforts to
respond to
the obsessive concern for uniformity that
di-
Edmund Du Cane instead, a highly
a further death knell
women on
a personal
had long characterized
male prisons.
With
their reformatory
dumping grounds there
was
purpose largely abandoned, prisons were increasingly seen as
for the socially inadequate. Prison officials
a sizable core of criminal
women who seemed
to
were disturbed to find that
be almost
immune
to the pains of
women formed less than one-fifth of all prisoners in Britain, they actually outnumbered men in the class of those who had ten or more previous convictions the "hardened habituals." For much of the second half of the nineteenth century, women made up well over two-thirds of those who had been imprisoned more than ten times. Du imprisonment. Although
Cane argued
that the repeated
appearance of the same core of offenders actually signified a
356
Lucia Zedner
/
measure of success
in that
it
"new
indicated that
number
the prison system. Certainly, the
of
recruits"
were being deterred from entering
women committed
to penal servitude in Britain
declined steadily from an annual high of 1,050 in 1860 to a mere 95 in 1890. Similarly, in
France the number of women committed to central prisons was halved in the
final
quarter of
the century, with the result that seven of the country's eleven central prisons were closed by
1885. Whether this decline represented, as
an agent of deterrence or whether
and
a
it
Du Cane
maintained, the success of the prison as
merely signified growing disillusionment with the prison
consequent reluctance to impose long custodial sentences remains unclear.
who remained
Those
agency, the
Howard Association,
its
declared,
annual report for 1880 a leading penal reform
"It is
known that the least hopeful subjects of
well
moral influence are habitual criminals, and most of
many
of the worst
ers, social
most hardened offenders,
in the central prisons represented the
apparently impervious to moral reform. In
female recidivists
all,
criminal and debased
were not dangerous criminals so
much
women." Yet
as petty offend-
inadequates, and outcasts incapable of surviving in outside society. Repeatedly
sentenced to short terms of a few days or so for petty
women
and mentally
deficient
commit them
to prison time
and again was
the chaplain of Brixton Prison pointed out,
clearly "It
as their presence
upon those around them, and
and public-order offenses, drunken to the prison regime.
To
both inappropriate and unproductive. As
women of this class
does seem important that
should be treated in a special manner and in a
under medical treatment,
theft
were a serious source of disruption
and
special place,
among other
that they
should be placed
prisoners operates most injuriously
constitutes one of the chief difficulties in carrying out the
discipline of this prison."
The case
for
women
removing such
much
from prisons became overwhelming. After
public pressure and parliamentary debate, the Inebriates Act passed in 1898 removed alco-
from the prison system by setting up a two-tier system of
holics
reformatories. These were to hold
two main groups
committed serious crimes while drunk the legislation to indicate that the act
mon view
that female alcoholism
the places. By 1904,
—
for
up
—
to three years.
was directed primarily
was the
women made up
greater social
women
in America.
at
much on
For the most part they were
set
up
way
of
life
backs on the
filth
com-
women
filled
that
to one.
in remote, often idyllic, rural loca-
of their days pursuing a traditional vision of the rural
women would
in practice the
of reformatories established for
much
their
women,
men by two model
the
Modeled on the cottage system, they formed
most of the
state
Although there was nothing in
problem ensured
tions.
Turning
and
and those who had
91 percent of admissions to the local reformatories;
even in the state-run institutions they outnumbered Inebriate reformatories were run
local "certified"
habitual drunkards
their inmates into "families" life
that
was
fast
who
and demoralization of the growing urban slums
one day return, the reformatories attempted
spent
disappearing. to
which
to re-create a rural
apparently free from the temptations of alcoholism and crime.
Another group
to attract the attention of turn-of-the-century reformers consisted of those
prison habitues whose offenses seemed to
owe more
to
mental inadequacy than malice. Penal
women prisoners, as a class, were of weaker inteltheir emotions than men. Consequently, women were seen
administrators had always maintained that lect
and were
not only as
less able to control
less
reformable but also as less able to comply with the strictures of the penal
Wayward
regime. "They are a source of great trouble to those
who
Sisters
/
357
have to deal with them, as they are
not amenable to ordinary prison discipline and need to be treated differently from other
Such assumptions about women's weaker mental health both necessitated and
prisoners."
development of more
justified the
of women
flexible
regimes in women's prisons. Even then a minority
were so mentally inadequate that they were incapable of complying with prison
As such, they posed problems of management out of
rules.
The attempt
and
to classify
all
proportion to their numbers.
deemed "feeble-minded," and
to separate those
develop
to
appropriate institutions for them, was one of the main areas of innovation in penal policy for
women in the early twentieth century. The aim was to create easier conditions for these women but also to allow a tougher regime to be imposed on the remaining inmates. Segregation within the prison was only a partial solution. There was growing pressure for feeble-minded
women
be removed completely from the rigors of the penal regime. In 1907, Aylesbury
to
Convict Prison for Women became the
first
prison in Britain to segregate
its
feeble-minded in
an entirely separate wing ("D" Hall), where they were supervised by specially selected
and
"treated in
all
respects with exceptional leniency."
specialist provision for the
of
feeble-minded in local prisons was found increasingly intolerable.
The prison commissioners, in the case of
officers
By contrast the continuing lack
in their report for 1909, declared that
women," constituted "one
of the saddest
such prisoners, "especially
and most unprofitable
features of
prison administration."
The Demise of the Reformatory Movement The
early twentieth century
was
a period of disillusionment with late-nineteenth-century
innovations on both sides of the Atlantic. Faith in a cure for chronic alcoholism in Britain and early this
optimism about the potential
was due
to
prostitution during
America.
Little
World War
way
I
reforming
women
sent thousands of
made
attempt was
served simply as a In
for
in
America both declined. In part
changes in the female prison population. Programs to control the growth of
to
women
to prison in
both Britain and
reform these "fallen women"; rather, their sentences
of protecting servicemen from the spread of venereal disease.
America the imprisonment of prostitutes during the war and of increasing numbers of
and drug addicts
alcoholics
Sympathy
population.
in the following
for the vulnerable,
decade continued to transform the reformatory
young women who had populated
the early refor-
matories was less forthcoming for their "hardened" successors. Similarly, the growing
num-
bers of black female prisoners attracted less compassion and understanding than their
predominantly white precursors. These trends were exacerbated by funding cutbacks, which prevented the expansion of buildings to house the growing
number
matories. For example, serious overcrowding at Bedford Hills
Women forced inmates to share broke
down
relations.
of this "mingling of the
The discovery two
overcrowding was such in
any
that,
to reforfor
sleep in corridors. Classification of inmates
many inmates
that "most undesirable sex relations"
had
races" led to a series of urgent investigations into
discipline within Bedford Hills. Despite attempts to classify
no longer
women sent
York Reformatory
while tensions rose and were exacerbated by the discovery that
were forming homosexual
grown out
rooms and even
of
New
by the 1920s, the
real sense serving its original
institution
and separate inmates, growing
was forced
reformatory purpose.
to recognize that
it
was
358
Inmates labor
/
Lucia Zedner
in the
sewing room oj
Holloway Prison, England's largest prison for
women,
in
1947.
By the mid- 1930s the reformatory movement had ries
had proved highly expensive
By the onset of the Great Depression, most model, and
many were even
fallen into general decline.
states
driven to shutting
had stopped building on the reformatory
down
existing custodial prisons.
numbers
those reformatories already built were obliged to take increasing offenders, to relinquish
matory aims, and historian Nicole
many
to provide
Hahn
more
secure,
stitutions,
in
more
strictly
penitentiaries.
policymakers seemingly bereft of
new
opened
The
ideas about
In Britain a similar pattern of disillusionment
closed down. The vast
that
to
inmates from the refor-
had
fired the
states
failure of the
how
to deal
of
women convicted
of
arguing, "If
some proper method were devised
the greater part of this prison could be closed."
reformatory experiment
women
seen.
prisoners.
By the 1920s,
drunk and disorderly behavior were
for dealing
with
women was
Often highly disruptive, they could not be
fitted into
for
once
this unfortunate class
The report of the Committee on
Most female drunks were sentenced
all
twenty years before had been
Persistent
Offenders in 1932 recorded that drunkenness accounted for just short of half the sent to prison.
in-
continued to be held
with
and decline can be
for female alcoholics only fifteen or
numbers
women
again sent to prison, so that by 1926 the governor of Holloway Prison for
more
reformatory
have died. Former reformatories became conventional custodial
and across many of the southern and western
the reformatories
serious
punitive accommodation. As the
Whatever benefits had accrued
accommodations adjoining male
left
a result,
commented: ''Gone were the days of nature hikes
matory movement dwindled and disappeared." The impetus to
As
more
Women now had less freedom within the institution, and
hills.
security measures were intensified.
movement appeared
of
of their distinctive features and, indeed, their idealistic refor-
Rafter has gracefully
over the reformatories' rolling
Reformato-
maintain alongside regular custodial prisons for women.
to
women
only a few weeks to local prisons.
any program of training or reform. For
Wayward
weary prison
officials,
Sisters
359
/
simply keeping order took precedence over any other higher aim. The
demise of reformatory movements on both sides of the Atlantic
energy or enthusi-
left little
asm for innovation in women's prisons. Undoubtedly the most important change tieth
fallen to
women had
been imprisoned
it
was
also triggered
pressures to policy, the
women the
in 1913;
11,000, and by the 1960s, to less than 2,000. In part this
as contemporaries maintained, to "the
and
women's prisons
in the
first
half of the twen-
century was the staggering decline in their populations. In Britain, for example, more
than 33,000 convicted
But
in
improvement
by declining
prisoners were
at
imprisonment and by concurrent
institutions.
Across Britain, as a matter of
were closed down. For example,
in
1921
removed from Ipswich, Oxford, Plymouth, Shrewsbury, Swansea,
Carlisle; the following year the
women's wings
local prisons
and social behaviour."
in social conditions
faith in the value of
move women into other, more suitable
wards and wings of many
by 1921, this number had may have been attributable,
women's wing
at Bristol closed,
and by the end of 1925,
Newcastle, Leeds, Maidstone, and Norwich had
all
been shut down.
Their inmates were sent instead to a few chosen institutions, like Holloway Prison in London,
which soon became the
largest
and most important prison
for
Yet even here, innovations in the interwar period were few there were related mainly to
women
as a
means
Impetus in penal reform in
ment
this
in physical conditions
young from old and
all,
suspended sentences,
for
both
fines,
women's prisons on
Britain in the interwar years. Nonetheless, virtually
eastern or north central states,
and no more than
a result of
women's units attached
from reformable.
compensation, and
women and men.
States did not witness closure of
were opened not as
in the classification of
recalcitrant
the introduction of probation orders in large measure replaced the
round of short sentences
The United
and
no new
a handful
the
institutions
opened
same
opened
prison
move them
at
Raleigh in North Carolina until 1933, to old prison buildings
on the
less
female offenders employed on farms and plantations were housed in separate
women
own
eventually
became prisons
women by
either route was, then, largely pragmatic.
for
had inspired
Only in the 1960s did
earlier
in their
right. It
The development
bore
little
interest in
a reappraisal of
and, as a result, a growing body of empirical research on in prison. Second, crime rates
a faster rate than for
men, prompting
nal." Unsurprisingly,
unwelcome
a veritable
women's prisons
trend. Finally, the
lack
by chance:
camps
that
of prisons for
resemblance to the vision
women's prisons become once more
modern feminism encouraged
life
when
developments.
and innovation. The conjunction of a number of factors explains
studies of their
when
outskirts of the
town. In some southern states, prisons for women came into existence more or
the rise of
Even these
in the South.
male penitentiaries became intolerably overcrowded. For example,
to
of space obliged the authorities to
that
scale as did
in the north-
reforming zeal but as a simple matter of expediency
women were held next to the male
and drive
as
period was located firmly outside the prison, in the develop-
of alternatives to custody. Discharges,
most innovative of futile
improvements
of better segregating
women in England and Wales.
and unexciting. Such changes
attracted
this
women's
a topic of research
renewed
interest. First,
role in society in general
women as offenders and sociological
among women began
to rise, apparently at
"moral panic" about the "new female crimi-
new
attention as a
means
of combating this
view that female offenders require differentiated treatment
360
/
Lucia Zedner
appropriate to the perceived attributes of their sex led, at
women. The most important prison
prisons for
signed in the
some form that
it
late
1960s on the assumption that
as "basically a secure hospital to act as the
system." According to the plan,
and normal custodial
ment." In
fact,
its
medical and psychiatric
would form
was
hub
rebuilt
on the
basis
of the female prison
would be
facilities
rede-
custody require
girls in
central
"its
"a relatively small part of the establishlike a "conventional" prison
women
as mentally
than
its
or inadequate.
ill
that a proportion of the female prison population
was mentally inadequate
seems to have spread to envelop the female prison population as a whole. Today psycho-
tropic drugs are dispensed in far larger quantities in prisons for
ostensibly in response to
mutilate has at times
women
women than in those for men,
among male
in female prisons, but there
prisoners.
The
women often as men
dence of women's greater psychiatric disturbance. As a result of all these
is
to self-
to
be no
pun-
also cited as evi-
factors, the expectation
be in some way mentally inadequate or
likely to
seems
in prison are
fact that
ished for infringements of prison discipline nearly twice as
women in prison are
The tendency
prisoners' greater mental problems.
become almost endemic
self-destructive equivalent
that
mainstream
—Holloway—was
special facilities for mentally disturbed prisoners are testament to
the continuing view of criminal
The view
its
facilities
Holloway has developed much more
originators intended. Yet
now
to changes in
of medical, psychiatric or remedial treatment." Holloway
would operate
feature,"
last,
women in Britain "most women and
for
ill
is
now common
among penal policymakers. Though the demands of differential treatment for criminal women have historically tended to mitigate the
harshness and uniformity of the regime in female prisons,
ous to assume that these
women
it
would be danger-
were, therefore, treated more leniently. The pressure to protect
more "vulnerable" prisoners from corruption and
femininity tended to create regimes that were in
to restore
them
many senses more
to prevailing ideals of
claustrophobic and more
oppressive than those found in male prisons. Moreover, in a bid to maintain ideal standards of feminine conduct, demeanor, their
male counterparts. Above
women were more closely surveilled than diagnoses of women prisoners as errant, sick, or mentally
and conversation,
all,
deficient have justified indeterminate sentencing trast to the
more
are, in fact,
more prone
strictly
and even permanent
proportional sentences imposed on men.
to
mental
illness or
incarceration, in con-
Whether women prisoners
inadequacy remains unresolved. Yet the historical
women who offend, and the women to be held far from home, may together go some way to explaining why women appear to have a harder time than men legacy of poorer prison conditions, the greater stigma applied to
amalgamation of female prisons, which has caused many
in
coming
to
terms with imprisonment.
Bibliographic Note This chapter draws on
my own work on the history of women's prisons: Women, Crime, and Custody
in Victorian
England (1991; reprint, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1994) and
Responses:
A
Historical
Account" in Crime and Justice:
Tonry (Chicago: University of Chicago in Britain are Russell P.
Dobash,
R.
Press, 1991).
A
"Women, Crime and Penal
Review of Research, vol. 14, ed. Michael
Important accounts of the prison
for
women
Emerson Dobash, and Sue Gutteridge, The Imprisonment
of
Wayward
Women (Oxford: in the
United
B.
Blackwell, 1986),
States, Estelle B.
Prisons, andSocial Control,
/
361
and Ann Smith, Women in Prison (London: Stevens, 1962), and
Freedman, Their
Sisters' Keepers:
Women's Prison Reform
1830-1 930 (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press, 1981), and Nicole
Women,
Sisters
2d ed. (New Brunswick,
France, Patricia O'Brien, The Promise of Punishment: Prisons
N.J. in
in
America,
Hahn Rafter, Partial Justice:
Transaction Publishers, 1990). For
:
Nineteenth-Century France (Princeton:
Princeton University Press, 1982), contains good material on women's prisons.
On the history of women's transportation to the colonies, see Robert Hughes, A
History of the Transportation of Convicts to Australia,
and Anne Summers, Damned Whores and God's (Victoria:
Penguin Books, 1975).
Frances Finnegan, Poverty and
Cambridge University and
Class,
the State
and
their
England and
The Fatal Shore:
787-1868 (London: Collins The Colonization of
Police:
Harvill, 1987),
Women
Press, 1979), Judith
Walkowitz,
Prostitution
and Victorian
Society:
in the
Nineteenth Century (London: Routledge, 1990).
Women,
On women murder-
punishments, see Peter C. Hoffer and N.E.H. Hull, Murdering Mothers:
New
in Australia
On responses to women prostitutes in the nineteenth century, see Prostitution: A Study of Victorian Prostitutes in York (Cambridge:
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1980), and Linda Mahood, The
Magdalenes: Prostitution esses
1
England, 1558-1803
Hartman, Victorian Murderesses:
A
(New
York:
New
York University
Infanticide in
Press, 1981),
True History of Thirteen Respectable French and English
Mary
S.
Women
Accused of Unspeakable Crimes, 2d ed. (London: Robson Books, 1985), and Ruth Harris, Murders and
Madness: Medicine, Law, and Society
in the
Fin de Siecle (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1989).
Important nineteenth-century books on the imprisonment of women quoted in the text include the following: Elizabeth Fry, Observations on Visiting, Superintending, and Government of Female Prisons
(London: John and Arthur Arch, 1827); George Laval Chesterton, Revelations of Prison
2d
(London: Hurst and Blackett, 1856); Henry
ed.
of London
and Scenes of Prison
Life
(London:
Mayhew and John
Griffin, 1862);
Life,
Binny, The Criminal Prisons
Mary Carpenter, Our
Convicts (London:
Longman, 1864); Susan Willis Fletcher, Twelve Months in an English Prison (London: Lee and Shepard, 1884); and Mary Gordon, Penal Discipline (London: Routledge, 1922).
To situate the prison for women within the wider history of the prison, see the following: Michel Foucault, Discipline and Punish: The Birth of the Prison, trans. Alan Sheridan (Harmondsworth,
England: Peregrine, 1975); Michael Revolution,
Ireland,
Ignatieff,
A Just Measure of Pain:
The Penitentiary
1750-1850 (London: Macmillan, 1978); Christopher Harding,
and
Philip Rawlings, Imprisonment in England and Wales:
Helm, 1985); William James Forsythe, The Reform
of Prisoners,
Bill
in the Industrial
Hines, Richard
A Concise History (London: Croom
1830-1900 (London: Croom Helm,
1987); and Leon Radzinowicz and Roger Hood, The Emergence of Penal Policy in Victorian and
Edwardian England (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1990).
CHAPTER TWELVE
.linquent Child REN The Juvenile Reform School
Steven Schlossman
Of
the
many and valuable institutions sustained we may safely say, that none is of more
treasury,
in whole, or in part,
from the public
importance, or holds a more intimate
connection with the future prosperity and moral integrity of the community, than one
which promises perverse
to take neglected,
minds and corrupted
wayward, wandering,
idle
and vicious boys, with
and cleanse and purify and reform them, and thus
hearts,
send them forth in the erectness of manhood and in the beauty of prepared
to
be industrious, useful and virtuous
—Massachusetts Governor George
Briggs, address at
Industrial School for Boys, Massachusetts,
The child must be placed where he
virtue,
educated and
citizens.
opening of the Lyman
1848
will gradually
be restored to the true position of
childhood ... he must in short be placed in a family. Love must lead the way; obedience will follow.
.
.
.
This
is
faith
and
the fundamental principle of all true reformatory action
with the young.
—English
child advocate
hat
is
Mary Carpenter, Athenaeum, March
19,
1853
What is a "juvenile delinquent"? What is "rehabil-
a "reform school"?
itation"?
These terms, familiar though they may be, occasion as much puzzle-
ment
any in the lexicon of criminal
as
since the early 1800s, field of
when
dreams on which
justice. Definitions
the reform school
to plan
grand schemes
was
first
have changed
envisioned as a
for salvaging errant youth.
Today, with the brutality rather than the innocence of youth trumpeted in the media and the rehabilitative ideal all but
abandoned
as a goal of corrections policy, the very notion of a
juvenile reform school seems like an oxymoron.
—not even
nineteenth century
the prison
—have
Few
other criminal justice legacies of the
so thoroughly lost their credibility as an
instrument of sound public policy.
The path by which
the reform school evolved from a popular child-saving venture in the
A young cell at
inmate
a juvenile detention center in Austin,
early nineteenth century to
an unwanted orphan of the corrections and educational systems
in his
Gardner House,
Texas, in 1972.
364
Steven Schlossman
/
in the late twentieth century has never
deal with the reform school in passing,
been if
Perhaps
no Panopticon, no Auburn, no Elmira, no
rather quiet:
The reform school produced few
doubts.
fully explored.
at all.
The
this is
classic texts in
because
its
criminology
history has been
Attica to inspire high
hopes or dread
highlights of the kind likely to secure
its
place in
correctional lore.
Yet the reform school was a full-fledged partner in the burst of institution building that
saw the invention of such new approaches tal
hospitals,
to transforming
human behavior as prisons, men-
and public schools in the nineteenth-century Western world. Like these other
institutions, the
many famous
reform schools of the United States attracted
(such as Charles Dickens, Alexis de Tocqueville, and Gustave de Beaumont),
them
as
models
for
worldwide emulation. This chapter
American experience situate the
will
foreign visitors
who
portrayed
pay particular attention
in tracing the history of the reform school. At the
same
time,
reform school in a context of international experimentation that marked
to the
will
it
as
it
an
invention shared by the Western world rather than one of American origin alone.
Juvenile Delinquency and the Invention of Reform Schools in the Nineteenth Century Although
is
it
possible to identify a few institutional precedents to the reform school in six-
teenth-, seventeenth-,
and eighteenth-century Europe,
families, not institutions,
it is
clear that until the early 1800s,
were the principal instrument through which communities
disci-
plined children. The laws regulating children's behavior and upholding parental prerogatives
were quite
rigid
and comprehensive, and the penalties
for juvenile offenders
that
specified the death penalty for children over age sixteen parents). Yet, in reality, the likely to
more
who
cursed or refused to obey their
stringent laws were rarely enforced. Magistrates were
more
order parents and guardians to administer punishment within the household to
incorrigible
and law-breaking children than
tions or to have that
were authorized as appropriate
were often severe (most notably, the Massachusetts law of 1646, which
them publicly subjected
would be commonly dispensed
to confine the children in adult penal institu-
to the corporal
punishments
(especially
whipping)
to adult offenders.
At the same time, judges and juries retained considerable discretion in enforcing the statutes that authorized harsh it
was
local
may
relatively
and
common
state jails
well have
juries often
punishments
and prisons
expanded
for juvenile offenders. In the eighteenth century,
for magistrates to sentence preteen as well as teenage children to for relatively
minor
offenses. This practice continued
and
also clear that judges
and
in the early nineteenth century. Yet
it is
determined that neither the interests of justice nor
served by committing
him
or her to an adult penal facility
a child's well-being
would be
would be
better to
and
that
it
exonerate and release than to incarcerate the child. This practice of absolving children from
punishment, however clear-cut their crime and criminal
intent, stimulated grave social
cern and fed the early-nineteenth-century interest in establishing separate penal
con-
facilities for
juveniles.
The term
"juvenile delinquency"
underwent an important transformation
in the early
nineteenth century. Vague public concern about tendencies toward misbehavior
among
the
Delinquent Children
young
in general (such as
being disorderly in church or attaching
lit
365
/
candles to paper kites)
gave way to a newly heightened and focused concern about misbehavior among urban lowerclass children. "Juvenile
delinquency" was increasingly used to single out the suspicious ac-
of groups of lower-class (often immigrant) children
tivities
the bowels of the nation's growing cities
pawns
supervision or serving as
free of adult
who
occupied a netherworld in
and who were perceived
be either living entirely
to
of depraved parents. Well before Dickens set the
archetype to fiction, dire portraits of youthful urban predators were quite
commentators who popularized the new image of dangerous
social
street
common among
urchins and cam-
paigned for special institutions to house and rehabilitate them.
Houses of Refuge Although the
New
acknowledged
York House of Refuge (which opened on January
be the
to
1,
1825)
cantly shaped the ideas of the founders of the
philanthropist John Griscom, a longtime
New
York
facility.
member of the New York Society for the
1788
by the work of the London Philanthropic
"for the Prevention of Crimes,
and
for a
of Vice
begun
and Infamy." By the time Griscom
to accept juvenile offenders as well as
and
industrial program,
children were snatched as ~
pects of respectable
fire
ideas
and designs,
especially
it
Griscom was
Among the
up
Poor; by training
visited the society in 1818,
to
are in the Paths
its
institution
had
impoverished and abandoned children, ignoring
he concluded:
"It
was cheering to
find that so
society's
edu-
many wretched
brands' from criminality and ruin, and restored to the pros-
and honourable
American invention. Rather,
Prevention
which had been founded
between vagrants and criminals. Particularly impressed by the
the distinction cational
Reform
Society,
and Criminals, and such who
Virtue and Industry the Children of Vagrants
signifi-
The Quaker teacher and
of Pauperism, brought their experience to the attention of American reformers.
in
somewhat
England and Europe. Indeed, these predecessors
similar character already existed in
especially influenced
generally
is
of the early reform schools, several institutions of
first
life."
The reform school was thus not
exclusively an
represented a transatlantic cross-fertilization of philanthropic
among Quakers.
The founders of reform schools assumed
that their clientele
serious offenders but a motley group of lower-class children
would not be
exclusively
—some who had already been
convicted of criminal acts, others whose incorrigible behavior predicted future confrontations with the law,
and
bad example
would be an act
that
it
still
others
whose
life
chances were so circumscribed by poverty and
of charity (in the founders' view) to incarcerate
them and
prevent a lifetime of poverty and crime. The term "delinquency" was used rather elastically to legitimate the incarceration of
school's
any youngster who, in the judgment of a court or of
managing directors, might
benefit
instruction. True, formal legislation enabling a reform school to
criminal children institution
was sometimes
politically controversial
were made
reform
house criminal with non-
and often did not appear
was already long in operation. Moreover, outside of the United
in England, diligent efforts
a
from a highly structured regime of discipline and
to distinguish institutions for
until the
States, particularly
young criminals from
those housing merely incorrigible or neglected children. Nonetheless, most early reform schools
brought
all
these groups together.
the differences
among them.
The founders emphasized
the commonalities rather than
366
/
Steven Schlossman
Legal Foundations oj the Reform School
The
principal legal justification for reform schools in the United States in the 1820s (as for
was
juvenile courts three-quarters of a century later) eval English doctrine of nebulous origin
the right of the
Crown
threatened. As part of
legal inheritance
its
girl
House
of Refuge. to
Under an expansive commitment do
was
state in the nine-
right to stand as guardian, or superparent, of all minors.
legal decision incorporating parens patriae into
American juvenile law was
in 1838.
who, on the complaint of her mother, had been committed
was permitted
medi-
a child's welfare
from England, every American
Ex parte Crouse, delivered by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
young
A
patriae originally sanctioned
whenever
to intervene in natural family relations its
teenth century affirmed
The seminal
the doctrine of parens patriae.
and meaning, parens
officially
what
it
The case involved
a
to the Philadelphia
law, the Pennsylvania juvenile institution
had always been doing
in practice, namely, incarcerat-
ing incorrigible as well as criminal children, sometimes on complaints from parents and with little
concern
and
filed a
for formal criminal procedure.
Mr. Crouse did not approve of his wife's actions
habeas corpus petition to obtain his daughter's release.
Amendment
denied, he hired a lawyer to press suit on Sixth daughter's incarceration without a jury
When
his petition
was
grounds, charging that his
was unconstitutional. The Supreme Court de-
trial
nied Mr. Crouse's allegations and in so doing established the reform school's practice on a solid legal foundation.
The court's argument was in two parts.
First,
affirmed the binding nature of the English
it
common law tradition in general and of the parens patriae doctrine in particular. Asserting the government's power to incarcerate noncriminal as well as criminal children on the grounds that their families
May not
were incapable of raising them properly, the court asked
the natural parents,
superseded by the parens
when unequal
patriae, or
to the task of education, or
common
rhetorically:
unworthy of it, be
guardian of the community?
It is
to
be
remembered that the public has a paramount interest in the virtue and knowledge of its members, and that, of strict right, the business of education belongs to it. That parents are ordinarily entrusted with
it, is
because
it
they are incompetent and corrupt, what
can seldom be put into better hands; but where is
there to prevent the public from withdrawing
their faculties, held as they obviously are, at its sufferance?
Mr. Crouse's daughter, the court concluded, "had been snatched from a course which must
have ended in confirmed depravity: and not only
is
the restraint of her person lawful, but
would have been an act of extreme cruelty to release her from
it."
it
Thus, the court clearly
established the legal right of a reform school to try to reform an inmate, whether or not the child
had
In
its
officially
been convicted (or accused,
was indeed
a school; the Philadelphia
stood as an expansion of the to the is
for that matter) of a crime.
second argument, the court was equally vigorous in affirming that
House of Refuge,
city's fledgling
for legal purposes,
a
reform school
was
system of public schools, not of
its
best underprisons. "As
abridgement of indefeasible rights by confinement of the person," the court
no more than what
is
borne, to a greater or less extent, in every school; and
natural right to exemption from restraints
which conduce
to
an
insisted,
"it
we know of no
infant's welfare." In
sum, a
reform school was a residential public school for confirmed and incipient delinquents. The
government had every
right,
if
not a moral duty, to create reform schools without serious
Delinquent Children
concern
up
for
whether children qua children held indefeasible
rights other than to be
properly. Except for one maverick appellate court decision in Illinois in
/
brought
1870 (People
Turner), the legal standing of reform schools underwent no significant challenge for years. (Turner itself
issued
its
famous
was overruled
In re
several years later.)
Not
until the U.S.
367
v.
many
Supreme Court
Gault decision in 1967 would the logic of the Ex parte Crouse decision
be seriously challenged.
Reform Schools Triumphant too easy to view the spread of reform schools in the nineteenth century as inevitable,
It is all
as
conforming
to a self-evident
institutions in the
growth pattern whereby the example
1820s stimulated
a flurry of imitative activity
set
by the pioneer urban
throughout the United States
and the Western world. Yet the urgency of establishing reform schools was not generally evident until mid-century. Outside of a few major industrial phia, Bristol,
Hamburg, and
Paris, the
cities,
reform school did not
such as Boston, Philadel-
wide appeal
initially carry
in the
United States or in Europe (where the sponsorship of reform schools was overwhelmingly private rather than public). Additionally, in the United States the issue of reform schools
lacked the degree of consensus that had helped build widespread support for prisons, mental
asylums, and public schools in the 1830s and 1840s. rent
by
From
the start, the reform schools were
internal discord over proper architectural design, disciplinary
and educational
methods, and religious
strategies for rehabilitating juvenile delinquents.
A true reform school movement did emerge, however, after mid-century in both the United States
and Western Europe. In Europe, reform schools generally emerged under private
auspices and private efforts of Johann
management but
often with
more
or less public funding.
The pioneer
Wichern and the Rauhe Haus in Germany in the 1830s and of Frederic Demetz
and the Colonie Agricole
in France in the 1840s,
both of whom looked
normal schools
to
produce trained cadres of reform school personnel, spawned dozens of imitators in their spective countries as well as in Switzerland, Belgium, Holland,
to
re-
and Denmark. Mary Carpenter 's
renowned work with delinquents at the Kingswood and Red Lodge reform schools in the 1850s not only helped popularize the Wichern and Demetz models in England but also facilitated the passage of England's ers Act of 1854,
first
and the
comprehensive juvenile justice
legislation, the
Youthful Offend-
Industrial Schools Act of 1866.
Reform schools were
also popular after
mid-century in the United
States,
where they
were generally created under public rather than private authority. However, joint public and private financing
was not uncommon, and the
schools' internal affairs were often supervised
by local private boards. The number of reform schools in America grew from only three mid- 1840s
to
twenty in 1860, ten of them sponsored by
in Massachusetts in 1847), seven
substantial public funding.
by
municipalities,
states (the first
and three by
The number of reform schools grew
was
at
in the
Westborough
private sponsors but with to over fifty in the
mid-
18705. By the end of the nineteenth century, reform schools were ubiquitous in every region
except the South, which generally lagged behind the other regions in tional
all
phases of institu-
development.
The most provocative Rothman, who contends
interpretation of reform schools in the United States
in The Discovery of the
Asylum (1971)
is
by David
that the reform schools, like
— 368
/
Steven Schlossman
With
its
em-
official
blem, the Philadelphia
House of Refuge heralded
its
„llllll
confidence in
power to transform young delinquents into its
respectable children.
^X&AW®^ the prisons, mental hospitals, poorhouses,
and orphan asylums founded around
the
same
time, served important symbolic as well as functional purposes for nineteenth-century Ameri-
can society. This entire class of custodial institutions, he argues, was invented in response to
widespread tions
would
fears
—
real
and imagined
isolate "deviant"
—
of social and family disintegration.
from law-abiding
The new
institu-
citizens to prevent "contamination," teach
inmates the necessity of highly disciplined behavior in a rapidly evolving social order, and
Rothman's most far-reaching hypothesis
—
create exemplars of order for the citizenry at large.
For parents, the well-ordered reform school would model the virtues of demanding unquestioned obedience from children in order to prepare tered
by accelerated and unregulated
them
to
cope with the uncertainties
fos-
social change.
Deference to authority was the organizing principle of most reform schools. Adherence to elaborate prescribed rules of
conduct was both an end
inmates and their keepers would learn to
manded, and
officials
were quite ready
live
in itself
and the means by which
harmoniously. Absolute obedience was de-
to quell insubordination
with physical thrashings.
Corporal punishment was the norm; inmates were whipped or placed in solitary confine-
ment
for failing to
There were
conform
to the daily regimen.
many ways
of instilling deference
most highly by reform school
officials
scheduling every minute of every inmate's day, the
and keep children from mischief but poseful living.
also to
New York House
self-discipline,
officials
but the one prized
startling.
of Refuge in 1835:
fixed routines.
hoped not only
imbue them with
The degree of regimentation was
reported by the
and
was the imposition of elaborate
By
to maintain order
the ethic of orderly
and pur-
Consider the following typical day
Delinquent Children
At sunrise, the children are warned, by the ringing of a child
makes
own
his
Wash Room. Thence
undergo an examination as to
their dress
7 o'clock.
A short intermission
is
They then proceed,
they are marched to parade in the yard, and
and cleanliness; after which, they attend morning
The morning school then commences, where they
prayer.
from their beds. Each
bell, to rise
bed, and steps forth, on a signal, into the Hall.
in perfect order, to the
allowed,
when
are occupied in
summer,
from work, and one hour allowed them
commence work, and continue
one, they again
labor of the day terminates. Half an hour
and
at half-past five,
is
at
when
it
is
until five in the afternoon,
they
when
room where they continue
performed by the Superintendent;
which they
At
the
after
their
which,
up
for
The foregoing is
the
and
enter,
perfect silence reigns throughout the establishment.
history of a single day,
when
their dinner.
allowed for washing and eating their supper,
the children are conducted to their dormitories, the night,
washing and eating
for
they are conducted to the school
studies until 8 o'clock. Evening Prayer
until
the bell rings for breakfast; after which,
they proceed to their respective workshops, where they labor until 12 o'clock, are called
369
/
are locked
and will answer for every day in the year, except Sundays, with slight
variation during stormy weather,
and the short days
in winter.
Although the work and school routines of reform schools varied somewhat, the basic patterns it
were everywhere evident. Schooling received more attention than in adult prisons, but
was subordinated
to
work. Even
when inmates received several hours of instruction,
it
was
scheduled so as not to conflict with work schedules. As the century progressed, formal schooling
was accorded more time, sometimes up
beyond the elementary
level,
to half a day.
The
instruction, however, rarely
and the teachers usually lacked
The work required of reform school inmates was generally prescribed for adult prisoners; similarly, there was
went
qualifications for the task. less
demanding than
that
somewhat less pressure on reform schools
than on prisons to defray costs by selling the products of inmates' labor. At institutions with farms,
many inmates spent the summer months tending crops, usually for internal consump-
tion but
sometimes
Even the few
sale.
to
meet the needs of other philanthropic
institutions with thriving farms
had
to
institutions
employ
and occasionally
for
the inmates in other pur-
nonsummer months, however, so that farming never became as central to the many reform school officials would have preferred. The employments for delinquents were chosen as much for alleged character-building
suits
during the
routine as
quality as for potential
was not
stated goal
habits that
market value or any productive
to prepare inmates for particular
would prepare them
but in farm families. By the
to
become apprentices
skills that
inmates might learn. The
employment but
—
to instill industrial
not, ideally, in their old city haunts
latter part of the century, the ability of
reform schools to secure
apprenticeships for their inmates declined precipitously, and delinquent children were simply released outright to shift for themselves residences). fact
and
live
Although the practice of unsupervised
where they might (usually
release
was
not inconsistent with the policy orientation of reform schools. Institution
investigated the
homes
to
their original
certainly of concern,
it
was
in
officials rarely
which they apprenticed inmates, nor did they pay much attention
to the difficulties delinquents faced in readjusting to conventional society.
Making
nails
and cheap shoes and caning wicker chairs were probably the most com-
mon employments lied
on
to provide
at
reform schools. As in adult prisons, contract labor was sometimes
machines and materials, but the
re-
financial incentives for contractors to
370
/
Steven Schlossman
employ children were understandably
less
than for adults, as was the degree to which the
contractors might exploit inmates or punish those
who
did not meet production quotas.
War
Contract labor in reform schools did become more exploitative in the post-Civil cades.
The reform schools had
greater budgetary needs because inflation
with newer types of charitable institutions reduced their public subsidies. To run the tions with less
money, superintendents were ready
to delegate
more authority
in order to attract better contracts, increase inmate production,
de-
and competition institu-
to contractors
and thereby meet operating
costs.
One
of the
more heated debates
in juvenile corrections during the
second half of the
nineteenth century occurred between the advocates of the "congregate" and "cottage" systems.
The congregate system used large, heterogeneous group living and work arrangements,
whereas the cottages gathered
one to three dozen inmates
(ideally)
to live
and work
in small
"homes" under the supervision of full-time surrogate parents. At issue were not only broad questions of penal philosophy and design but also the appropriation, by both sides in the debate, of the
same domestic language
"love," "nurture."
in Bristol
that incarcerated
and practices:
it
the
of Refuge or
a substitute family or
truly
The most curious aspect
of the debate
inherent limitations of custodial
facilities to
was
"family," "home,"
young children against
—whether be New York House — be considered
several years' duration
Kingswood
to describe their goals
Could any institution
home? was
that neither side
their will for
Mary Carpenter's
willing to concede the
serve as family surrogates. Advocates of the cot-
tage system confidently claimed that reform schools based
on congregate organization could
never aspire to be more than junior prisons but that cottage reform schools could rehabilitate their charges
provided the surrogate parents were chosen with great
care.
The defenders of
congregate institutions rejected this contention. As insistently as the advocates of the cottage system, they invoked family metaphors to describe their intent and their actual programs.
mode of discipline was possible
affectional
cottages of thirty or in dormitories
regardless of whether inmates slept
An
and worked in
and workplaces of several hundred. Sentiment, not
archi-
tectural design, held the key.
That neither cottage nor congregate reform schools provided substitute "homes"
is
readily
demonstrable and not surprising. Domestic metaphors provided both Europeans and Americans with a tal
new rhetoric
for describing
patterns of social thought
harsh
realities of daily
common
reform schools in terms consonant with the sentimenin the Victorian era, but the
metaphors obscured the
regimens and the impossibility of bending children's wills entirely
the wishes of their keepers,
to
however benign.
Female Delinquency and Gender-Segregated Reform Schools The
first
group of delinquent children delivered
in
1825
to the
New York House
consisted of six girls and three boys. Although girls thereafter never formed
of Refuge
more than a small
fraction of the refuge's inmates, the founders always intended to include girls, albeit in entirely
separate residential quarters
isolation, the girls
were
still
and under the supervision of
could not participate in most of the
activities
a matron. Because of their
planned
for boys,
but they
expected to contribute, through their cooking, sewing, and washing, to the
institution's
domestic maintenance. As with boys, the hope was that the industrial habits
— Delinquent Children
/
371
The workroom oj the Lancaster Industrial School for Girls, circa
1926. Although the institution offered in-
mates some formal schooling, the girls' daily regime focused
on preparing them for indenture as house servants after their release.
much
acquired in the institution, quite as girls to
as
any particular
their original, corrupting
From
the
first,
pregnant while incarcerated. With
more
little
boy and
to
ing and Bible chats, the female inmates often sensibilities to a
girl
occupy
delinquents entirely separated that a girl
had become
their time than endless
housekeep-
became obstreperous and offended Victorian
reform schools founded after mid-century excluded (if
after the turn of the
girls,
the
common practice was to house
possible, in separate buildings) at the
By 1880 there were only eleven separate
girls'
reform schools in the United
century did a true reform school
Of the two female reform schools
its
the
removed from
degree that their overseers could not tolerate. Although several American
each sex in separate departments
century
far
homes and communities.
the difficulties of keeping
were recognized, occasionally through the embarrassing discovery
Girls in
would enable
skills learned,
acquire apprentice positions as domestic servants in rural families
movement
for girls
same
institution.
States.
Not
until
emerge.
to achieve international reputations in the nineteenth
—Mary Carpenter's Red Lodge Massachusetts— the Lancaster
in
England and the Lancaster Industrial School
facility is
for
of more abiding historical interest because of
innovations in cottage design. The founders would have preferred family-like cottages for
ten or fewer girls rather than the residences that were actually built, boarding-school type
homes with space the
first to
house
is
to
for thirty or forty,
embark on
a
but the difference did not dull their enthusiasm for being
new reform
school tradition in America.
be a family, under the sole direction and control of the matron,
mother of the family. The government and discipline are to teach
them, industry,
qualified to
become
self-reliance, morality
useful
and
more sure and
The nineteenth-century reform schools
religion,
who
and prepare them All this
is
effective restraining
for girls
be a home. Each is
strictly parental. ... It is to
and respectable members of society.
stone walls, bars or bolts, but by the love."
"It is to
had
their
to
to
to
be the
educate,
go forth
be done, without
power
the cords oj
own regimen, which was not
372
/
Steven Schlossman
as relentlessly grinding, production-oriented, or harsh as in male reform schools.
schooling and religious observances were more central to the routines of the
Housekeeping, though, was the principal means of
well.
them
for
The
filling
the
girls'
girls'
Formal
schools as
time and preparing
indenture after release. rather idyllic early years of the cottage reform school for girls in Lancaster were not
long sustained. Reflecting broader
shifts in
Massachusetts child welfare policy, younger
were gradually eliminated from the institution and placed
directly in farm families; they
girls
were
more confirmed patterns of sexual misconduct (including prostitution)
replaced by girls with
and petty criminal behavior. Furthermore, the growing appeal
in the late nineteenth century
of hereditarian explanations of female delinquency (which culminated in the belief that sexual
experimentation by
girls
indicated "feeblemindedness") helped to undermine faith that "the
cords of love" could rehabilitate female delinquents. This experience was not, of course, unique to the the cottage reform schools for boys in such states as to classify
girls' institutions. It
occurred also in
Ohio and Wisconsin. The reputed
ability
inmates according to different degrees of "badness" became the principal advan-
tage that the
new
cottage design gave to superintendents. Rather than a
tense, affection-driven personal interaction
between
staff
means toward
in-
and inmates, the cottage system
became mainly a tool by which management isolated younger delinquents from older, smaller ones from
larger,
and malcontents from everyone
else.
Assessing the Nineteenth- Century Heritage
By the end of the nineteenth century,
in
both Europe and the United
States, the
reform school
could count on only a handful of strong proponents, in penological or educational articulate its ideals for salvaging errant youth.
versity educationist
David Snedden,
One such proponent was
the
who believed that reform schools were
circles, to
Columbia Uni-
pedagogical pio-
neers in developing new methods to educate lower-class youth, especially in vocational training.
Equally positive assessments of steady progress and of better times ahead came from corrections professionals, particularly after the establishment of a States, the National
new interest group
in the
United
Conference on the Education of Truant, Backward, Dependent, and
Delinquent Children.
A much more
negative judgment
was rendered by Homer Folks,
a
well-known
social
worker and secretary of the Children's Aid Society of Pennsylvania. His review of the history of reform schools led
These
institutions,
him
to discount
both their claims of success and their future
utility.
he argued, offered temptations to parents to shirk their child-rearing
sponsibilities, subjected younger, relatively innocent
re-
inmates to the educational influences
and sexual advances of older, more confirmed delinquents, imparted an ineradicable stigma that
hampered inmates'
individually,
an
and by
institution.
postrelease adjustment, treated individuals en masse rather than
their very nature,
By the 1880s similar
were incapable of preparing children
criticisms
began
to
for life outside
be heard in Europe, even with
refer-
ence to such one-time institutional exemplars as the Colonie Agricole. Folks's viewpoint
was becoming the prevailing wisdom of child welfare reformers throughout the Western world.
Delinquent Children
(or so
Having separated juvenile from adult offenders and thereby sparing the former
was claimed) from
it
the dangers of sexual exploitation
and education
overwhelming majority of reform school administrators were unable into
373
was an altogether unadventurous
In retrospect, the nineteenth-century reform school institution.
/
something more than a mini-prison
ment laws sent
a relatively
young and
extent that doubts about design
for children
—
in crime, the
to turn the institution
commit-
despite the fact that liberal
criminally inexperienced cohort to the schools.
To
the
and purpose emerged, they centered more on form than
substance, particularly on the alleged benefits of a cottage plan that encouraged a rhetoric of
domesticity that bordered on the
The
silly.
cottage ideal
became
a substitute for, rather than
a spur to, original thinking about rehabilitating juvenile delinquents.
Reform Schools
in
the First Half of the Twentieth Century
At the turn of the twentieth century, the number of reform schools in the United States was still
less
than one hundred. They were located mainly in the North Atlantic and North Cen-
tral states.
Although boys' institutions were generally
greatly in size, with
some housing
form schools tended
to
as
many
as
much
larger than
girls',
they varied
one thousand delinquents. The American
re-
be substantially larger than their European counterparts, in part be-
cause the American institutions were built
anew whereas
European reform schools were
the
often located in preexisting buildings.
Boys composed around 80 percent of the American reform school population. At com-
mitment they were on average fourteen years institutions accepted children as
under two
young
old, the girls
as age ten.
Most inmates had immigrant parents
years.
majority did). African-American youth
Generally speaking,
girls
were
were somewhat older, and some
The average length of (in
some
composed around 15 percent
less likely to
stay
was
a
little
overwhelming
states the
of the inmates.
be charged with a specific criminal offense
than boys. However, few boys in reform schools were serious criminals either. The majority
belonged
wayward,
"to the
incorrigible, or vagrant class,
commitment" was usually "but an incident activity."
Whereas
the
girls'
if
more or
and the
special offence alleged in
extended career of anti-social
less
offenses were mainly linked to early sexual exploration or to
victimization (the distinction between the boys' offenses,
in a
two was not often observed
they involved a property crime at
all,
were limited
—
vice
was
vice), the
to petty larceny
and only
rarely involved a personal injury offense.
The number of American reform schools grew slowly but twentieth century; the bulk of the increase facilities for girls.
came
in the
steadily in the
first
half of the
South and in the creation of separate
Although the great majority of inmates were white, progressively fewer
among them had immigrant
parents (a product of the reduced immigration from Europe),
and progressively more were African-American (following the ern blacks to northern
cities).
large-scale migration of south-
By the 1930s, nearly 25 percent of reform school inmates were
African -American.
— from almost two
At the same time, the average length of stay declined nearly in half years to one
—and
the
median age
at
commitment increased from fourteen
to sixteen.
The
374
/
Steven Schlossman
former trend probably reflected an unstated policy of paroling inmates early to compensate for the failure of states to build
growth. The
reform schools
pace commensurate with population
at a
trend probably reflected the impact of juvenile court-sponsored probation
latter
and minor property offenders from reform schools.
in siphoning off status offenders
Theme
Variations on a Nineteenth-Century
The
story of the twentieth-century reform school
is
scaled-down
largely the perpetuation of
prisons for juveniles. Innovations were modest in design and even
more modest
in imple-
mentation, no more than a variation on adult prison routines. Several features, however, distinguished twentieth-century reform schools from their antecedents: they were
prone to epidemic
illness;
they relied somewhat less
on
much
less
severe corporal punishments; they
placed greater emphasis on academic education; they used rudimentary behavioral science
methods
to diagnose
and
and
classify inmates;
—
to a limited degree
—they paid more
atten-
tion to monitoring the postrelease experiences of inmates. These changes notwithstanding, to
enter most reform schools in America to a
remnant of the Dickensian
Most reform schools were
and Europe
in the mid-twentieth century
was to return
era.
virtually
impervious to change. Even
when
serious efforts to
transform correctional philosophy, design, and practice were contemplated and planned, the
implementation was usually so faulty as to abort the experiment. These ally as
failures
were gener-
evident in the cottage as in the congregate institutions.
Consider, for example, the typically disappointing experience of the Ohio Boys' Industrial
School (BIS)
—
originally
known as the Ohio Farm
School
—which
in the late nineteenth
century was the best-known American imitator (for males) of the Colonie Agricole. According to
its
founders, the
predecessors. First,
usable vocational
it
Ohio Farm School had two main advantages over its "house of refuge" relied
munication between the
The fame
of the
soon experienced
mainly on agricultural labor
Second,
skills.
staff
its
to teach inmates self-reliance
cottage design facilitated close personal contact
and
and com-
and inmates.
Ohio Farm School spread
difficulties in
maintaining
in the post-Civil
its
War era,
but the institution
agricultural work. Periodic crop failures
and
other mishaps undermined the institution's boast of maintaining self-sufficiency. Superin-
tendent George
Howe began
to introduce various industries to service the institution
legislative
was
support eroded.
far less
institution
committed
Howe was
fired,
and he was replaced by
to the school's original philosophy.
was changed
to the
Ohio Boys'
tation to factory-like work. Apart
from
its
early
a superintendent
who
Then, in 1884, the name of the
Industrial School to incorporate a rural location, the BIS
indistinguishable from such traditional reform schools as the
During the
last
growing orien-
was becoming increasingly
New York House
of Refuge.
decades of the century, administrative turmoil and harsh discipline char-
acterized the institution.
Even
its
cottage design
was no longer a distinguishing
feature as the
inmate population soared to over eight hundred without a commensurate expansion in dences. As
it
and
much of its
defray costs. As government expenses to maintain the institution mounted,
became
clear that the legislature
would turn
resi-
a deaf ear toward complaints about
overcrowding, the superintendents resorted to early release (parole) to regulate population size.
Delinquent Children
375
/
A
vocational training
class in
an Indiana
juvenile reformatory, circa 1910.
In the early 1900s, the BIS introduced three major innovations to try to bring in line with the "individual treatment" gists
methods
that
and educators. Influenced by such authors
as
its
program
were becoming popular among penoloWilliam Healy, Edward Thorndike, and
Lewis Terman, this orientation emphasized inmate classification, vocational education,
and upgraded academic
instruction. Potential benefits
from a more sophisticated
tion of inmates received the greatest attention, especially after the
classifica-
Ohio Bureau of Juvenile
Research, founded in 1913, began to screen inmates with psychological and psychiatric
tests.
Yet aside from administering a battery of examinations to identify "feebleminded" boys for exclusion, the superintendents did not have available educational
much
to allow
institutional
much use
and
living quarters
proceeded according
little.
to traditional criteria
such as
offense.
classification, the introduction of new
routines very
The
refinement in selection procedures. In practice, the assignment of boys to
programs or
age, race, religion,
As with
for the psychological information.
and vocational programs were simply not advanced or diverse enough
The
forms of vocational training changed work
state legislature's professed
enthusiasm
for vocational
programs was
mainly rhetorical; the limited funding available usually purchased equipment that was obsolete
from the
start
and prone
between required work
perfectly satisfied with her
reading
skill
These
lation.
The
training.
was
breakdown. Other problems emerged in the poor match
and inmate
abilities.
The typing
equipment but soon found
necessary to train
difficulties in
alities. First
to regular
skills
them
instructor, for example,
was
that few inmates possessed the level of
for possible future
employment
as "type-writers."
implementing vocational programs paled before two more basic
the limited
number of vocational offerings available to
vast majority of inmates did not have access to even a
the
re-
huge inmate popu-
modicum
of vocational
For African-American inmates the prospects of gaining entry into a vocational pro-
gram were even poorer,
since they were shunted into specific service jobs, such as tending
376
Steven Schlossman
/
and dining
the kitchen
facilities,
to use the great
bulk of inmate labor
were
institution as large as the BIS
their postrelease
to
job prospects were alleged to be
in light of inadequate legislative appropriations,
maintain the institution. Maintenance needs
literally endless.
their stay at the BIS. This
in prior
was
especially the case
if
at
the bulk of
the boys were older or lacked skills devel-
employments.
On the surface, more impressive
changes occurred in academic programs than in either
—
vocational training or inmate classification. Schooling occupied an increasing segment
—of most inmates' days. Serious
ten half
instruction available to inmates
and
clearly attempted, the BIS educators
to
efforts
were made
to
upgrade the
improve the teaching
staff.
level
and
ers
was
of-
variety of
Though innovation was
tended to exaggerate their achievements. Such a basic
reform as grading, for example, was often undermined by the inmates' major reading ciencies.
an
So-called force work, such as tending the
mending and sewing, and painting walls, occupied most inmates during
garden,
oped
where
Second was the undeniable need,
brighter.
defi-
Moreover, reforms could rarely be sustained. Attracting or holding onto good teach-
a never-ending problem, for obvious reasons. In reality, pedagogical flexibility never
displaced the highly didactic instructional style that was
common in
the nineteenth-century
houses of refuge. Furthermore, despite the strong rhetorical emphasis placed on formal schooling, there
was never a doubt
remained
common
for
harvest crops or to be
work requirements took precedence. Hence,
removed from day classes
and attend
tion quotas
that institutional
inmates to be removed from school for several weeks
to pressing
entirely
at a
it
time to
they were needed to meet produc-
if
maintenance needs.
Far more easily integrated into institutional routines than "individual treatment" was the military
regimen
European
tury
—
in fact, military routines
institutions. Like
were already
another version of a merit-demerit system and privileges,
its
—
to regulate
in
many
nineteenth-cen-
relied primarily
on one or
—
attendant series of punishments
assignment to the "correctional cottage"
confinement
common
most reform schools, the BIS had
punishment, and
for corporal
loss of
solitary
inmate behavior and schedule release times. Although the super-
intendents were forever engaged in refining the merit system, the principal addition to the institution's disciplinary
corporal punishments
apparatus after 1900
—was
— coinciding with
a heavy reliance on military
drill.
the declining legitimacy of
This was supplemented by
extensive use of inmate monitors (not unlike prison trustees) to provide surveillance and to
secure obedience.
Under from
inmates were placed in regiments and divided into ranks ranging
this routine,
officers to cadets; inspections
were held every Sunday, followed by a dress parade. The
inmates drilled for forty-five minutes daily and were even taken away from work assignments to drill
more. Supenntendents at the BIS believed that military training offered multiple physical
and disciplinary benefits
to the
inmates of a reform school. The military program also served
an important public relations function. Through weekly parades, annual
field days,
and oc-
casional excursions off the grounds, the inmates demonstrated to the public at large the institution's capacity to
mold
delinquents' behavior.
By the 1930s, the highly structured and formalized relationships tary outpost
from every
had penetrated every aspect of staff-inmate
activity in total silence.
relations.
"The general impression
.
.
.
characteristic of a mili-
The boys marched
was
that the
whole
to
and
spirit at
Delinquent Children
established during the long years of existence, with only such staff
somewhat
teamwork
comes from
as
militaristic organization."
Central to the military organization was the monitor system, which promoted to supervisory positions over their fellow inmates. In the shops, fields,
and
some boys
cottages, the
monitors kept inmates under constant surveillance. They could pull inmates out of inform
staff
of any misbehavior;
among the
ability to build trust cial
when staff were
The BIS administrators were aware
in charge.
constraints
and
its
—
to
basis,"
left
system tended to undermine their facility's finan-
acknowledged one superintendent
to serious abuse.
some monitors were "authorized
make
that this
boys. Nonetheless, they argued that, given the
"We've got to handle them on a mass
in the school,"
and
line
absent for any reason, the monitors were
perpetual overcrowding, they had no other option to maintain order.
The monitor system was, of course, subject
inmates
377
was rather that of an old-fashioned institution running on institutional precedents
this school
a
/
flunkies of the
to beat
weaker boys,
in the 1940s.
"Manned by the toughest bullies
up or otherwise
discipline their fellow
to extort bribes, to inflict sadistic
punish-
ments, and even force homosexual relationships."
Between the 1920s and the 1940s, the BIS administrators
still
boasted of the institution's
cottage organization. However, severe overcrowding "precluded the possibility of any real
family atmosphere."
along semi-military
One superintendent lines."
of forty boys."
is
operated
Consistent with this view was another superintendent's descrip-
tion of the inmates' living arrangements:
made up
unhesitatingly admitted, "The school
"We have
nine
drill families.
The family company
is
The superintendent's mixed metaphors nicely synthesized both the
institution's origins as a cottage
reform school and
its
transformation into a military outpost.
Experimental Reform Schools: The George Junior Republic
and the Whittier State Reform School The evolutionary path traced by
ment in the
first
the BIS reflected broader patterns of reform school develop-
half of the twentieth century in both
Europe and America. In the
early 1900s,
however, a number of fascinating experiments in juvenile corrections were launched in the United States and soon acquired an international reputation. These experiments, under both public and private auspices, were few in less,
number and without
extensive influence. Nonethe-
they helped sustain the quasi-utopian tradition that such institutions as the Rauhe Haus
and the Colonie Agricole had brought
to juvenile corrections in the nineteenth century.
Two
examples were the George Junior Republic and the Whittier State Reform School. Probably the best-known innovator in juvenile corrections in the early twentieth century
was William "Daddy" George. George's unique blend of modern educational ideas and conservative
economic principles
following
among child
in his Junior Republic in Freeville,
New York, won him a large
welfare workers in the United States and, eventually, throughout the
Western world. The organizational centerpiece of the Junior Republic was inmate ernment. The inmates' day-to-day
life
was regulated mainly by
to the institution's offices of president, senator, representative,
their peers,
and so
self-gov-
who were elected
forth. In addition to re-
creating the basic political structure of the United States, the Junior Republic established
such community institutions as banks, of which were run
by the inmates.
stores, police,
and
a judiciary to resolve conflicts,
In addition, the Junior Republic issued
its
all
own money and
378
Steven Schlossman
/
William "Daddy"
George
(center) poses
with some of his
-
charges at the George
Junior Republic Freeville,
New
circa 1896.
tempt
An
in
York, at-
to re-create the '
reform school as a community, the Republic was policed and
JEW* ifl nd.
governed by inmates.
il j
HHV
ifeiJfc
Je Lu dg
H
HL
B
HI
*S* ^
*t
*
v expected every inmate to earn his keep, including the costs of food and lodging. Though
George established the ground rules and occasionally intervened
in the process, the inmates
of the Junior Republic controlled their fate to a remarkable degree.
George was clearly trying
community (including
to re-create in a
girls as
reform school the aura of a normal embryonic
well as boys) of the kind envisioned by the most famous
progressive educator, John Dewey. This functioning community, George believed, prepared
inmates for effective citizenship
far better
than the pious lectures and ineffective civics
les-
sons that were standard in most reform schools (or American public schools, for that matter).
Undergirding the
legal
framework of the Junior Republic was the moral principle of "nothing
without labor." George had fewer qualms than of laissez-faire capitalism.
come not only to pay
He
for basic
style
welfare workers about the virtues
food and lodging but to accumulate savings and even to
a degree of luxury (at the "Hotel
distinctions arose from effort
many child
offered inmates regular opportunities to earn a sufficient in-
Waldorf
rather than at the "Beanery").
and achievement, George had no desire
on inmates simply because they
all
resided
at
the
same
As long
to enforce the
live in
as social
same
life-
institution.
Just as George offered material incentives for extraordinary effort
and achievement, he
did not hesitate to punish sloth and improvidence. The "nothing without labor" principle did
not lead to starvation or exposure for uncooperative, lazy, or economically imprudent inmates.
It
did mean, however, that they would be sentenced to the Junior Republic's
jail,
followed by a symbolic "repayment" for upkeep by being forced to crush stones.
Although the Junior Republic was known mainly
ment and vocational
the "nothing without labor" principle, the
and academic
were mainly two:
first,
tasks, just as at
self-govern-
centered on diverse
many less innovative reform schools. The differences
creatively than did directors of other correctional institu-
and second, George embedded
habilitative credo.
on inmate life
George implemented the vocational programs more comprehensively
and the academic programs more tions;
for its reliance
rhythm of daily
his instructional
programs within a much broader
re-
Delinquent Children
Most children
at the
labor" principle
a reputation as a
model vocational
most reform schools but rather on
at
well-conceived projects that combined theory and practice. Moreover ture
from other reform schools' policies
—George kept
men and
thereby facilitated the employment of nearly
least this
was
true of the boys;
it
school.
was not expended on the kinds of make -work or insti-
maintenance chores that occupied inmates
tutional
379
Junior Republic divided their days equally between vocational and
academic pursuits. The institution early gained
The "nothing without
/
is less
certain
—
in a radical depar-
in close contact with local business-
all
of his charges after their release. (At
what became of the
girls after release.)
At the beginning, George was skeptical that academic instruction had a place in his workcentered, earn-your-own-way institution. But he soon devised a ics into the
Junior Republic so that
it
means
to integrate
was congruent with and reinforced
academ-
his correctional
philosophy. Rather than offer conventional instruction to children who, in the main, had failed at prior schooling,
George opened instead
a "Publishing
House." Like their work as-
signments, the inmates' academic assignments were completed through a contract with the
foremen-teachers
demic
who
efforts at a rate
Bits
ran the "Publishing House"; inmates were remunerated for their aca-
comparable
to that paid for other tasks at the institution.
and pieces of William George's correctional ideas penetrated
private reform schools in the United States tury, especially the self-government superficial, isolated not
inevitably,
and Europe
in the
first
into
many
public and
half of the twentieth cen-
scheme. Nonetheless, the penetration was almost always
only from George's comprehensive educational philosophy but also,
from the unique context in which the institution had evolved in upstate
New
York.
The second example Reform School. As noted did
little
more
of a unique experiment in juvenile reform earlier,
was the Whittier
most twentieth-century reform schools
in the
State
United States
to integrate individual treatment into their operations than subject their in-
mates to a battery of mental diagnoses found
it
tests.
Those reform schools
difficult to translate
new knowledge
that did attempt to
into
new modes
make use
of their
of treatment, either
because their grounding in psychology was superficial or because the urgency of maintaining secure custody overrode individual treatment considerations. But a few correctional institutions did try
more
diligently
and comprehensively than others
treatment ideal, probably none
more
to
implement the individual
so than Whittier, California's principal public correc-
tional institution for delinquent boys.
In 1912, the reform-minded governor of California,
Angeles businessman, Fred Nelles, as superintendent gate design, Whittier niles.
Determined
to
was reputed
to
push California
Hiram Johnson, appointed
at Whittier. Built earlier
a
Los
on the congre-
be nothing more than a scaled-down prison for juve-
to the
vanguard of correctional
practice, Nelles cultivated
substantial personal support from legislators during the next fifteen years
and fundamentally
overhauled the structure and operations of the institution. The extent of his efforts demonstrated
To
what
it
took to make individual treatment more than empty rhetoric.
realize his goals, Nelles felt that
ment. This meant, congregate design.
first, It
it
was
essential to control his
immediate environ-
restructuring the facility according to the cottage rather than the
took over ten years for Nelles to rebuild the institution so that the great
majority of inmates lived in cottages, but
when the
process was complete he had no doubt of
380
/
Steven Schlossman
the superiority of this approach. Nelles's plan of individual treatment also presumed, as at private reform schools in both the United States
and Europe, considerable control over ad-
young population on
whom to translate theory into practice. He
missions and
a select, fairly
quickly gained the authority to exclude boys over the age of sixteen and to transfer refractory
who
inmates, and by the early 1920s, he was able to rid the institution of inmates exceptionally low
on
scored
intelligence tests.
Unlike William George, Nelles
made
clinical diagnosis of inmates'
centerpiece of his treatment plans.
With
the active participation of the psychology depart-
ments
at
behavior problems a
UCLA and Stanford University, Nelles developed his own research department (later
called the California
Bureau of Juvenile Research) to provide extensive psychological testing
and, to a lesser extent, psychiatric counseling of inmates. The bureau's prime objects were to
formulate individual treatment plans that took into account inmates' special needs and to
pursue
causes and cures for delinquency. The bureau also recom-
scientific research into the
mended specific placements in cottage, ioral sciences, in Nelles's view,
work assignment, and recreation. The behav-
school,
held the key to individualizing treatment.
Although the cottage system, a
and
goals
establish specific
articulation of goals or
Though he
programs
programs
to
were minimal
development
restraints
had
was more
on uniforms, so the boys wore
for personal possessions.
—and one
rarely
privilege cottage.
in the execution than in the
from most public reform schools.
was quite
tradi-
primary goal of a reform school. Accord-
their
to prevent escapes. Whittier did
own clothing. They even had individual lockers
Corporal punishment was prohibited. The most severe punish-
used
—was assignment
However, even when
and were regularly interviewed Nelles's
as the
and
clinical evaluation
to specify rehabilitative
on inmates' movements within the institution. They rarely
not
tivities.
It
and there were no fences or guards
in formation,
ment
them.
that Whittier differed
marched insist
fulfill
still
often spoke the language of the behavioral sciences, Nelles
tional in portraying character ingly, there
and
selective admissions process,
assignment provided a framework for innovation, Nelles
to
to
isolated,
one of four quarantine rooms in the
lost-
inmates received normal food provisions
determine whether they were ready to resume regular ac-
scheme of punishment was
less
harsh than the one in place
at the
George
Junior Republic.
Academic schooling, vocational other recreational activities were the
training,
and experience
in
teamwork
via athletic
main vehicles through which Nelles sought
and
to transform
inmates' character. During the early part of his administration, Nelles gave primary attention to building
up formal vocational
training at Whittier.
By the 1920s, though not denigrating
vocational preparation, he placed increasing emphasis the "feebleminded" boys fourteen,
five
and one-half hours every day.
an individualized contract-learning plan level.
The
flexibility of this
believed, because the arrival
All
was often the case
to structure
now
that
boys under
Nelles, like George, introduced
academic instruction above the sixth
plan was particularly well suited to a reform school, Nelles
and departure of inmates throughout the year was
because the contracts of boys (as
particularly
and those over fourteen who had not completed fourth grade, attended academic
school for approximately
grade
on academics,
and those over the age of sixteen had been reduced.
who were
failing
in public schools).
irregular
and
could be altered without embarrassing them
Delinquent Children
/
381
The Whittier State Re-
form School baseball team in 1914. Teaching boys to use their
free time constructively
and wholesome/}' was integral to Whittier's
correctional program.
Whereas
Nelles's pedagogical innovations
were most apparent
placed great faith in his elaborate vocational training programs.
inmates continued working on the outside trained them.
Though Whittier taught
the line separating training
fairly
spur to emotional maturation.
gym class for everyone,
central to Nelles's plans.
erally delinquent
Responding
to the
carefully limited to
it
development.
was no
less
organized
widely shared view that children were gen-
during their leisure hours, Nelles considered
he often read stories and books aloud it
and
it
essential to teach
boys the
of free time. For example, he equipped each cottage with a loudspeaker
which he played radio programs designed
because
was
athletic
program empha-
as in vocational training, character
Recreation was not considered as therapeutic as athletics, but
wholesome use
trades,
performing well in school and who exhibited acceptable behavior. The prime
aim of the program was not victory but,
and
some dozen
to draw. This was not a
the sports
sized cottage-based, competitive intramural contests. Participation
who were
which Whittier had
program were the formally organized
less vital to Nelles's correctional
recreational activities. In addition to daily
boys
academic arena, he
who saw vocational training principally as a form of character devel-
to Nelles,
opment and
No
for
up-to-date equipment)
from institutional maintenance was hard
major concern a
same occupations
at the
(with
in the
He claimed that many former
to
improve inmates' musical
can institutions in the 1920s
—
the Whittier State
on
and on which
—and very important
addition
at night. In
substituted for the military trappings that
tastes
to Nelles
marked most European and many AmeriReform School sponsored
a thriving
Boy
Scouts program. Scout executives in the city of Whittier were heavily involved in the program's administration,
and when inmates were paroled,
a local Scout unit.
special efforts
were made
to enroll
them
in
— 382
/
In in
Steven Schlossman
sum, the Whittier
Reform School embodied several
State
features that differentiated
it
both design and implementation from most public reform schools: small cottages staffed by
surrogate parents; no walls; selective admissions; no corporal punishment and a mild disciplinary apparatus; clinical diagnosis as a routine service; on-site experimentation
by
ation monitored
and vocational
a research unit with strong academic links; a balance
instruction, with strong
programs
in both; highly
developed
athletic
reational programs; regular exposure of inmates to outsiders through athletics
events; in the
and private-sector subsidy of institutional activities.
vanguard of juvenile corrections
in the
first
and
rec-
and recreational
All these elements placed Whittier
half of the twentieth century.
Reform Schools: Domesticating Sexual Misconduct
Girls'
In the decades preceding
and following World War
increasing attention as a separate
and pressing
social
between 1850 and 1920 an average of fewer than
opened per decade, twenty-three such Equally important, a
and evalu-
between academic
number
five
United
in the
new reform
States.
Whereas
schools for females were
began operation between 1910 and 1920.
facilities
of states took over
female delinquency began attracting
I,
problem
girls'
reform schools that had been founded
under private auspices.
Many American employed
reform schools for
girls
resembled traditional prisons and regularly
flogging, solitary confinement, cold-water baths, nausea-inducing drugs, severely
and head-shaving
restricted diets,
as disciplinary measures. But a
number
of institutions
such as Sleighton Farms in Pennsylvania, El Retiro in Los Angeles, Sauk Center the State School for Girls in Connecticut,
and Clinton Farms
in
New Jersey
tions for educational innovation that equaled or surpassed those attained
public and the Whittier State Reform School. to female juvenile corrections
The best-known
summer camp, toral college
girls
El Retiro.
country day school, a working farm,
a
publicists for
a
new approaches
As described by them, the modern
shared the characteristics of a psychological
campus, and
reputa-
by the Junior Re-
were Martha Falconer, the superintendent of Sleighton Farms,
and Miriam Van Waters, the superintendent of reform school for
in Minnesota,
—earned
a
clinic, a
home economics
sanatorium, a
department, a pas-
George Junior Republic.
Unfortunately, empirical investigation of twentieth-century American reform schools for girls lags
tions
is
behind even
that of reform schools for
more meager still).
be certain whether
new
It is
boys (the scholarship on European
ideas were fully translated into daily programs. Nonetheless, one
characteristic of the experimental girls' institutions
is
clear: like their
nineteenth-century pre-
decessors, they defined female delinquency in gender-specific terms. This attitude less characteristic of El Retiro
and Sleighton Farms than of dozens of other
functioned solely as holding tanks until the
Unlike boys,
girls
out-of-wedlock sexual
and a biological
institu-
not yet possible to describe their characteristics in detail or to
girls
was no
institutions that
reached their eighteenth birthdays.
continued to be branded delinquent and incarcerated primarily activity. Illicit
for
sex by female youth was presented as both a medical
On the one hand, the "sex delinquent" was alleged to be a On the other, the "sex delinquent," by giving birth to children
threat to society.
key carrier of venereal disease.
alleged to be mentally or biologically inferior,
was
identified as a
major threat
to the genetic
purity of the population. Indeed, female "sex delinquents" were a prime object of the eugeni-
Delinquent Children
cists'
most prominent policy instrument,
sterilization. Girls'
in identifying inmates for the sexual surgery, usually
school and having them placed
/
383
reform schools played a key role
by discharging them from the reform
at special state hospitals for
"feebleminded" and/or recalci-
trant "sex delinquents."
Conclusion For
all
the enthusiasm that innovative
programs created, neither
in the
United States nor in
Europe did the models provided by the George Junior Republic, the Whittier
Reform
State
School, El Retiro, and Sleighton Farms transform the institutional treatment of juvenile delinquents.
The
quiet deterioration of the nineteenth-century status quo, rather than
departures, characterized the history of reform schools during the century. Indeed, the
and,
most notable change during
international
model
this
period
of the Colonie Agricole in 1937.
finally, the abolition
first
may have been
With
new
half of the twentieth
the decline of
demise, there was no
its
predominant view of the reform school
to serve as a counterforce to the
as a mini-prison for children.
Some
child welfare reformers
on both
sides of the Atlantic did achieve a
modicum
of
success in challenging prevailing opinion and practice. In England, for example, the passage of the Children's
and Young Person's Act of 1933 created
schools" for juvenile delinquents and stirred
than
at
more
a
new
generation of "approved
serious discussion about reform schools
any other time since Mary Carpenter's campaigns in the 1850s and 1860s. Yet the
"approved schools" constituted only a modest alteration of the status quo. In collapsing the nineteenth-century industrial school and reformatory to form a single school," England mainly followed the well-established institutions
whose
be noted that
had never been
clientele
Britain's
century, the Borstal,
at
to
penology in the
young men between
some ways,
first
should
half of the twentieth
the ages of sixteen
rather than the customary reform school cohort of fifteen In
of "approved
in consolidating
clearly differentiated in the first place. (It
most famous contribution
was aimed
new type
American example
and twenty-one
and under.)
the publicity received by the quasi-utopian
American reform schools may
have created or perpetuated an illusion of more genuine interest in change than actually existed
among
corrections practitioners or the larger public. Nonetheless, the experimental
American reform schools introduced three-quarters of a century
a breath of fresh air into
an institution that
for nearly
had undergone only cosmetic change. One need not claim strong
external influence for these experiments to acknowledge
wonder how other delinquent youth might have
fared
if
how
inventive they were
these examples
and
to
had been more widely
imitated.
The Last Hurrah and Beyond: The Reform School and Deinstitutionalization Several major changes in the characteristics of
emerged
after
substantially.
World War
II.
First, the total
American reform schools and
number
their
inmates
of juveniles in reform schools increased
Between 1950 and 1970, the population under confinement jumped by over
75 percent, from 35,000 to 62,000 inmates. The
rate of juvenile incarceration increased as
384
/
well,
from 127
Steven Schlossman
156 per 100,000 juveniles. Second, the number of publicly operated
to
form schools grew
to nearly
two hundred
—and
this figure
camps, group homes, and private institutions that might schools. Third, the share of reform school inmates
re-
excluded several hundred more
fairly
who were
be regarded as mini-reform
female declined from
its
mid-
century high of approximately 33 percent to approximately 20 percent (the same as in the late
nineteenth century). Fourth, while the share of immigrant youth in reform schools de-
clined dramatically, the share of African-American youth grew rapidly, reaching
by 1970.
Finally,
although the average age
average length of stay continued
its
at
commitment remained steady
century-long decline, so that by 1970
it
40 percent
at sixteen, the
was under one
year.
The
early
corrections.
1970s were an especially discordant period in the history of American juvenile
As
a result,
two of the trends
youth incarcerated and the ever, there
is
good reason
just outlined
were reversed: both the number of
rate of juvenile incarceration declined
about the
for skepticism
real
during
this
import of this change.
Howmay be that
decade. It
many juveniles who once would have been incarcerated in reform schools were sent to smaller group homes and private custodial tion
was soon on the
rise
institutions. In
any event, the
rate of juvenile incarcera-
again and by the mid-1980s reached an all-time high of over 200
per 100,000 juveniles. By the early 1980s, the total reform school population was also ex-
panding, fueled by the growing share of African-American youth,
who now composed more
than 50 percent of the inmates.
The early-twentieth-century search resounding end welfare
ment
for
new
strategies in juvenile corrections
in the third quarter of the twentieth century.
and law enforcement had already
for delinquent youth.
But the
lost faith in the
new commitment
cism into
total despair
first,
was
on
like schools
and com-
different presumptions.
a transformation of earlier discouragement
—reform schools could function more
bilitative ideal
built
and, second, an utter denial of the traditional claims that
theoretical level
to a
in child
reform school as a desirable place-
to the deinstitutionalization
munity treatment movements of the 1960s and 1970s was These movements represented,
came
Most professionals
and
skepti-
—even on
a
than prisons. The reha-
virtually denied, for children as well as adults, as a legitimate or feasible
purpose of corrections.
The Last Hurrah: The Youth Correction Authority Curiously, the deinstitutionalization and
aftermath of one
final
community treatment movements emerged
in the
attempt, in the 1940s and 1950s, to revive confidence in reform schools
as potentially effective environments in
which
to deliver individual treatment to delinquent
much on new
youth. This renewed confidence centered as
ideas about the administration of
reform schools as on any original therapeutic approaches to correcting delinquent behavior. Starting in the 1930s, several prominent
and law advanced the view youth would be
for
each
These new agencies,
it
in the fields of corrections
state to create a
"Youth Authority" or "Youth Correction Authority."
was believed, would remove the commitment decision from
tered, unregulated judiciary
would
American advocates
that the next great step forward in the treatment of delinquent
and
centralize
it
in a single
body whose placement
a scat-
decisions
derive impartially, indeed scientifically, from elaborate psychiatric, psychological,
Delinquent Children
385
/
medical, and social casework assessments conducted by experts. By centralizing control over
placement and assigning behavioral evaluations to experts, each
state
would maximize
its
chances of rehabilitating delinquent youth and would provide an effective match between individual need
Of
program.
rehabilitative
many
institutional classification
to offer treatment.
The tendency among advocates was youth would
virtually disappear
ized under expert control. Characteristic were the
Harry Elmer Barnes and Negley Teeters: "There is
that
had been proposed over
the existence of both a scientific
diagnose problem behaviors in youth and the ready availability of specialized pro-
in rehabilitating delinquent
vation
schemes
Youth Correction Authority idea assumed
the years, the ability to
grams
and
course, like
to
comments
is little
assume
that prior difficulties
once placements were rational-
doubt
of the well-known penologists that this
Youth Authority inno-
the most important advance in correctional thought since the 1870's."
This emerging concept took concrete form in a model "Youth Correction Authority Act"
formulated in 1940. Five states (California, Minnesota, Wisconsin, Massachusetts, and Texas) created one or another version of a Youth Correction Authority during the next decade. California
Youth Authority (CYA) was created
sibility for the state's
in
reform schools in 1942. Essentially updating and expanding the 1920s
individual treatment philosophy of the Whittier State Reform School, the
emphasized the
The
1941 and was given administrative respon-
role to
be played by
"diagnostic centers," to
CYA
particularly
which all delinquent youth would
be sent before placement in a particular institution. The diagnostic center would identify the distinctive
problems and needs of each youth with the expectation
ment already
that
an appropriate
treat-
existed or could be devised to solve his or her individual problems.
Throughout the 1950s, the
CYA
used
considerable political clout to gain legislative
its
support for a monumental building program to expand and diversify the
The confidence of many corrections
leaders in the state
diagnostic technologies were developed under
grew
CYA auspices.
state's
reform schools.
as increasingly sophisticated
These culminated in the inven-
tion of the "Interpersonal Maturity Level," or "I-Level," screening device to define inmate
personality types for purposes of classification
and assignment
to specific treatment
programs.
In addition to building several large reform schools, often organized internally tages, the
in the
CYA
popularized a
new model
of
what might be termed
form of correctional "camps." Originated
Los Angeles County, the camps were pression-era transient youth with a
initially
means
in the
1930s by the juvenile probation
cot-
staff in
created to serve as vehicles for providing de-
of earning train fare to return
by the CYA, the camps usually housed between
by
a mini-reform school,
fifty
home. As sponsored
and seventy boys who had been carefully
screened for admission. They usually kept the boys incarcerated for not more than six months, after
on
which
(as in the state's other
reform schools) the boys were returned to the community
parole. In addition to intensive individual counseling, other
programs centered on park
development, road construction, conservation, and farming. The California model of a minireform school became
Ohio, Minnesota,
fairly
Illinois,
The renewed confidence in
popular in the 1950s in such states as Michigan, Wisconsin,
and Washington. in reform schools as potential diagnostic
and treatment centers
mid-century America exerted considerable influence in several European juvenile correc-
tional systems.
The publications of the CYA,
as
Gordon Hawkins and Franklin Zimring have
386
/
Steven Schlossman
observed, were widely read in Europe, and American theories provided a conceptual basis for a
new approach
to corrections.
The Reform School Scorned: Deinstitutionalization and Community Treatment Although
orchestrated a boom in reform-school building, the CYA intended from the start new community-based approaches to delinquency prevention and treatment. The
it
to explore
would be
idea that delinquents
best served
by noninstitutional treatment had
more immediate stimulus
the mid-nineteenth century; in the 1950s, the interest in
community-based programs was
number
a
its
origins in
growing
for the
of well-known social experiments,
notably the Chicago Area Project, the Cambridge-Somerville project, and the Highfields project. In 1961 the
CYA
—building upon
assisting delinquents in their
—launched
the
(CTP) in several sections of Sacramento and Stockton. As ation of the
treatment
CTP
its own creative work in Community Treatment Project
upon
these models as well as
neighborhoods
much as any single
event, the cre-
inaugurated the commitment to deinstitutionalization and to community
movements
in
American juvenile corrections.
The CTP was a carefully planned social experiment that,
at least in its ideal
form, grouped
delinquents scientifically by I-Level, assigned them randomly to reform schools or nity treatment (oftentimes to their tional versus
own
commu-
homes), and compared the effectiveness of
institu-
community programs. A select group of CYA parole agents was trained in I-Level
diagnosis and treatment strategies to provide intensive supervision and counseling to youth in the experimental group. Caseloads
and additional resources (such
as
money
and transportation) were provided
ment
were unusually small, around eight youth per agent, to
purchase foster care, tutors, expert consultants,
to enlarge the agents' range of
community-based
treat-
options.
The preliminary They were
results
from the
CTP were
very positive and received wide publicity.
alleged to demonstrate clearly the superiority of community -based treatment over
reform school placement as a means of treating juvenile delinquents, superiority not just in rehabilitative effectiveness but in financial savings as well.
used
to challenge the jurisdiction of
offenders.
The
initial
reform schools over
findings from the
two national policy-making bodies
CTP were
in the
United
Evidence from the all
CTP was widely
but the most hardened juvenile
rapidly integrated into the deliberations of States, the President's
Commission on Law
Enforcement and the Administration of Justice (1967) and the National Commission on the Causes and Prevention of Violence (1969). Both reports concluded that incarceration had failed either to deter
crime or to cure criminals.
Despite evidence suggesting that the social scientific foundations for the evaluations of the
CTP were shallow and
misleading (as presented in Paul
ing 1975 critique of the CTP, Community Treatment and Social Control),
initial
glowing
Lerman's devastat-
momentum
in favor
of community-based treatment grew dramatically in the late 1960s and early 1970s. Reflect-
ing in various ways the impact of the children's rights movement, the
and the growing distrust of law enforcement ity of all
as
components of the juvenile justice system
under withering review by the
civil rights
movement,
an agent of coercive paternalism, the credibil-
courts, legislatures,
—but
— came
especially of reform schools
and a growing army of academicians. Within
7
Delinquent Children
a
remarkably short period of time,
new
were inaugurated in most
policies
juveniles from placement in reform schools unless they
had committed
states to protect
persistently serious
criminal offenses and to house less serious offenders in small community-based
not to divert them
The CTP,
387
/
facilities, if
altogether from formal contact with any part of the juvenile justice system.
in short, heralded
an anti-institutional
philosophy as radical as that which had led to the early nineteenth century.
For many vocal
American juvenile correctional
shift in
initial
critics in the
creation of reform schools in the
1970s, the state had a moral obligation
not to subject the innocence of youth to the cruelty of the reform school.
No doubt
most
the
dramatic exemplification of this viewpoint was the 1972 decision by Jerome Miller, the commissioner of the Massachusetts Department of Youth Services, to close
and
to substitute a
its
several reform schools
network of small, generally nonsecure group homes. Though Miller was
generally viewed as unique for his political daring and dial institutions for juveniles reflected the consensus,
skill,
his closing of traditional custo-
emerging during the 1970s and early
1980s, that the reform school could not redeem errant youth
—
a consensus reflected in the
rapid expansion of a dizzying array of government-subsidized, privately sponsored,
commu-
nity-based treatment alternatives. In both rhetoric
and law,
came
Miller's sentiments
to a rather
remarkable culmination in
1974 with the passage of the Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention Act, which gave the imprimatur of Congress to deinstitutionalization as a correctional ideal. After 1974,
unlikely that the American reform school
on which to plan grand schemes
would continue accepted. But
mission to
to exist,
would ever again be portrayed
for rehabilitating juvenile delinquents.
as a field of
it
was
dreams
That the reform school
most corrections leaders on both sides of the Atlantic grudgingly
no longer would there be even
a pretense that
it
had
a heroic child-saving
fulfill.
Bibliographic Note This chapter draws in part on
my own
work, especially the following: Love and
Delinquent: The Theory and Practice oj "Progressive" Juvenile Justice, of Chicago Press, 1977); "The
Crime of Precocious
Sexuality:
the
American
1825-1920 (Chicago: University
Female Juvenile Delinquency in the
48 (February 1978) [with Stephanie Wallach]; "Identifying and Treating Serious Juvenile Offenders: The View from California and New York in the
Progressive Era," Harvard Educational Review
1920s," in Intervention Strategies for Chronic Juvenile Offenders:
Greenwood (Westport, Conn.: Greenwood California Experience in
Criminal
American Juvenile Justice: Some
Statistics, California State
Several overviews able insight
on
Press,
and
Pisciotta];
and The Bureau of
Department of Justice, 1989).
critical interpretations of the
Mary Odem, Delinquent
Sexuality in the UnitedStates, 1885-1
Schneider, In the
Web
Perspectives, ed. Peter
Historical Perspectives (Sacramento:
juvenile justice system provide consider-
the development of reform schools. Recent
include the following:
Some New
1986) [with Alexander
works dealing with the United
States
Daughters: Protecting and Policing Adolescent Female
920 (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1996). Eric
of Class: Delinquents and Reformers in Boston, 1810s-1930s
(New
York:
New
York University Press, 1992); Peter Halloran, Boston's Wayward Children: Social Services for Homeless Children,
1830-1930 (Rutherford,
N.J.: Fairleigh
Stubborn Children: Controlling Delinquency California Press,
1
in the
Dickinson University Press, 1989); John Sutton, United States, 1640-1981 (Berkeley: University of
988) ;LeRoyAshby, Saving the Waifs: Reformers and Dependent Children, 1 890-1 91
388
Steven Schlossman
/
(Philadelphia:
Temple University
Portrait of the First
and David
J.
Rothman, Conscience and Convenience: The Asylum and Us
America (Boston:
Little,
Earlier, very useful
Brown and
(New
Alternatives in Progressive
monographic and synthetic studies dealing primarily with the United States in
Urban
Society: juvenile Delinquency in Nineteenth-
York: Oxford University Press, 1971); Robert Mennel, Thorns and
Juvenile Delinquents in the United States,
Thistles:
1825-1940 (Hanover, N.H.: University Press of
England, 1973); Robert Pickett, House of Refuge: Origins ofJuvenile Reform
in
New
York
1857 (Syracuse, N.Y.: Syracuse University Press, 1969); Jack Holl, Juvenile Reform Era: William R. George and the Junior Republic
Movement
David J Rothman, The Discovery of the Asylum:
Social
.
Little,
Social
Co., 1980).
include the following: Joseph Hawes, Children
Century America
A
Press, 1984); Barbara Brenzel, Daughters of the State:
Reform Schoolfor Girls in North America, 1 856-1 905 (Cambridge: MITPress, 1983);
State,
in the
New
1815-
Progressive
(Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1971);
Order and Disorder in the New Republic (Boston;
Brown and Co., 1971); Anthony Piatt, The Child Savers: The Invention of Delinquency (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1969); and Michael Katz, The Irony of Early School Reform: Educational Innovation in Mid-Nineteenth Century Massachusetts (Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1968).
Also invaluable are Wiley Sanders, ed., Juvenile Offenders for a Thousand Years: Selected Readings from
Anglo-Saxon Times
Bremner
to
et al., eds.,
1900 (Chapel
Hill:
University of North Carolina Press, 1970), and Robert
Children and Youth in America, 3 vols. (Cambridge: Harvard University Press,
1970-1974).
On the Ohio Boys' Industrial School, see the following: Robert Mennel, "The Family System of Common Farmers: The Origins of Ohio's Reform Farm, 1840-1858," Ohio History (Spring 1980), and "The Family System of Common Farmers: The Early Years of Ohio's Reform Farm, 1858-1884," Ohio History (Summer 1980); Joseph Stewart, "A Comparative History of Juvenile Correctional Institutions in
Ohio" (Ph.D.
Cottage to Military
Drill:
A
diss.,
Ohio
State University, 1980);
and Jared Day, "From Family
Study of Changing Policies and Programs
at the
Ohio Boys'
Industrial
School, 1858-1940" (Internship Paper, Department of History, Carnegie Mellon University,
December 1990). For
additional information
on
the
New York House
of Refuge
and nineteenth-
century reform schools, see Alexander Pisciotta, "Race, Sex, and Rehabilitation: Differential
A
Study of
Treatment in the Juvenile Reformatory, 1825-1900," Crime and Delinquency (April
1983), and "Saving the Children: The Promise and Practice of Parens Patriae, 1838-1898," Crime
and Delinquency (July 1982).
Reform
in
On
Massachusetts, see John Wirkkala, "Juvenile Delinquency and
Nineteenth-Century Massachusetts: The Formative Years in State Care, 1846-1879"
(Ph.D. diss., Clark University, 1973).
On the Youth Authority concept, particularly in California, see Edwin Lemert, Social Action and Legal Change (Chicago: Aldine Publishing Co. 1970), Paul Lerman, ,
Community Treatment and Social
Control: A Critical Analysis ofJuvenile Correctional Policy (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1975),
and Jane Bolen, "The California Youth Authority, 1941-1971: Structure, (Ph.D. diss., School of Social
Work, University
Policies,
of Southern California, 1972).
and
Practices"
The new cynicism
regarding institutional treatment in the 1970s was captured best by Robert Martinson, "What
Works? Questions and Answers about Prison Reform," Public Interest (Spring 1974). On the origins and results of the deinstitutionalization movement in juvenile corrections, especially in Massachusetts, see
Jerome
(Columbus: Ohio
Miller,
Over
the Wall:
The Massachusetts Experiment
State University Press, 1991),
in Closing
and Robert Coates, Alden
Miller,
Diversity in a Youth Correctional System: Handling Delinquents in Massachusetts
Ballinger Publishing Co., 1978).
Edmund
On recent
developments
McGarrell, Juvenile Correctional Reform:
(Albany: State University of
New York
in juvenile justice in
Two Decades
Press, 1988).
of Policy
Reform Schools
and Lloyd Ohlin,
(Cambridge, Mass.:
New York State, see
and Procedural Change
Delinquent Children
The most comprehensive recent outside of the United States
is
/
389
history examining twentieth-century juvenile justice policies
Victor Bailey, Delinquency and Citizenship: Reclaiming the Young
Press, 1987), which deals with England. A Mary Carpenter and the Children of the Streets (London: Heinemann Educational Books, 1976), contains much important information on English reform schools in the nineteenth century. Still useful on England is David Owen, English Philanthropy, 1660-1960
Offender,
1914-1948 (New York: Oxford University
biographical study byjo Manton,
(Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1966). the 1920stothe 1950s, see Roger
1965), and
On the Borstal system and its broader influence from
Hood, Borstal Reassessed (London: Heinemann Educational Books,
Gordon Hawkins and Franklin Zimring, "Cycles
Story of Borstal," in Greenwood, Intervention Strategies. schools, see John Ramsland, "The Agricultural to the Institutionalization of
of
On
Reform
in
Youth Corrections: The
nineteenth-century French reform
Colony at Mettray:
A Nineteenth
Delinquent Boys," in Melbourne Studies
Stockley (Bundoora, Victoria: La Trobe University Press, 1989).
in
Century Approach
Education, 1987-1988, ed. D.
On Australian child welfare in the
nineteenth century, see John Ramsland, Children of the Back Lanes: Destitute and Neglected Children in Colonial
New
South Wales (Kensington:
New
South Wales University Press, 1986).
On
recent
Gordon Hawkins and Franklin Zimring, "Western European Perspectives on the Treatment of Young Offenders," in Greenwood, Intervention European approaches
Strategies.
to juvenile justice policy, see
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
FINING DlSSEN' The
Political Prison
Aryeh Neier
n January 1638, English dissenter and leader of the
Chamber
raigned in the Star
and charged with distributing ideas.
Star
It
was
said he
"Levelers"
a half century earlier,
that
had been decreed by the
on June 23, 1585. Under
tem, books could not be published or distributed in England unless they had cleared by,
among
they did not contain anything that might
Even
as
make
others, the bishop of the appropriate diocese, so as to
was convicted and sentenced
to
pay
impugn
a fine
and
either the
to
monarch or
be whipped,
this sys-
first
been
certain that
the state. Lilburne
pilloried,
and imprisoned.
he was being punished, however, Lilburne continued to speak out, using the
lory as a platform until
ar-
and scandalous" books promoting Puritan
"factious
had violated the licensing system
Chamber more than
John Lilbume was
before the archbishop of Canterbury and other judges
pil-
Archbishop William Laud had him gagged.
Public outrage over the punishment meted out against Lilburne helped to bring about
Chamber
the abolition of the Star initiative of Protector
insistence
on challenging
things, being the
those
first
and he was freed from prison
authority,
who promulgated
the laws.
On
He was imprisoned one occasion,
sent
him
first
imprisonment, "freedom John"
Tower
and he was soon
—
in difficulty again
to call publicly for a written constitution that
pression of dissenting views. to the
a few years later,
at the
Oliver Cromwell. Lilburne's ordeal apparently had not suppressed his
of
it
three
for,
as
he became
other
more times
for his peaceful ex-
was Oliver Cromwell's government
London; though Cromwell had secured Lilburne's
—
among
would be binding on
known
—had gone on
release
that
from his
to call for his erst-
while benefactor's impeachment for treason.
Over the years many
political prisoners
have been imprisoned not only for the peaceful
expression of their views but for the expression of those views in order to champion individual rights. In that respect, as in
many others,
including his stubborn refusal to bend under
pressure, the seventeenth-century English dissenter
John Lilburne may be regarded
as the
prototype of the political prisoner.
Though Lilburne was
treated harshly for standing
up
for his beliefs, the fact that his
punishment was not even more severe than imprisonment represented an advance.
A century
A in
before Lilburne's case, Sir
Thomas More,
chancellor of England, had been imprisoned in the
resistance
march jor
the "disappeared,
Buenos Aires
tember 1983.
"
held
in Sep-
392
/
Tower
Aryeh Neier
London
of
for refusing to recognize
the Eighth after Henry's divorce from his
not only
supremacy over the Church of England. After of confinement were eased by his servant,
Anne
Boleyn's marriage to King
months
fifteen
in the
Tower (where
By comparison,
The Tower of London had been used fore
was not so harsh, since
Lilburne's treatment
to incarcerate
King Henry the Eighth, two of whose queens were executed
start
was used
it
who
as a prison for those
who
it
challenged
spared his
life.
important political figures long bethere.
The main
part of the
Norman
building had been constructed in the eleventh century, shortly after the
and from the
1535, he was
7,
executed. Before the seventeenth century, this was the likely fate of anyone the monarch.
the rigors
who was confined with him), More was brought to
but maintained his loyalty to the authority of the pope, and on July
trial
Henry
queen, Catherine of Aragon, but also Henry's
first
conquest,
mattered. (Lowlier prisoners, from
the fourteenth century on, were confined at the Marshalsea, a prison that also remained in
use for several hundred years and eventually became the setting for Charles Dickens's great
novel
Little Dorritt.)
Unlike Lilbume or More, most of those
were imprisoned not merely because they expressed views
monarch;
rather, they
were
power, even claimants to the throne, or they were sus-
rivals for
The
pects in palace intrigues.
who were confined in the Tower
that challenged the policies of the
British religious
and
political dissenters of the sixteenth
and
seventeenth centuries, on the other hand, were not themselves aspirants for the office and perquisites of the
monarch, nor were they courtiers out of
millions worldwide
opinions,
who would become
their beliefs, their
political prisoners in
favor. In
more
common
recent times,
with it
many
was
their
manner of expression or worship, or their associations that led to
their incarceration.
Implicit in the designation of such nonviolent dissenters as forerunners of contemporary political prisoners is a definition of the term.
nized, however. In
much
It is
not a definition that
of the world, the term "political prisoner"
universally recog-
is
applied to anyone
is
confined for a politically motivated offense, violent or nonviolent. In Latin America, for ex-
ample, the term preso
even
politico
has been widely applied to imprisoned guerrilla combatants or
to political assassins, as well as to those confined for expressing their
In the United States restrictively.
We
and
Britain,
do not regard Sirhan Sirhan, Robert
the murderer of the Reverend Martin Luther King,
The confusion over International, has
definitions
Amnesty
also
clude those
them
its
is
F.
Jr.,
Kennedy's
killer,
or James Earl Ray,
as political prisoners.
one reason that a prominent organization, Amnesty
employed another term: "prisoner of conscience," someone imprisoned
his or her views or associations
nization limits
views peacefully.
on the other hand, the term has generally been used more
and who has neither used nor advocated
efforts to secure releases to those
it
works on behalf of political prisoners
who used or advocated violence
—
violence.
for
The orga-
considers to be prisoners of conscience.
—defining
the term
more broadly
to see that they obtain fair trials
and
to in-
to protect
against torture.
To
civil libertarians
dence, this approach
been concerned
imbued with
may appear
for several
tually use or incite violence
Smith Act
—
the
the thinking reflected in U.S. constitutional jurispru-
too restrictive. American
civil liberties
proponents have
decades to see that the law distinguishes between those
and those who advocate violence. For example,
1940 law that made
it
in
who
ac-
opposing the
a crime to advocate the forcible overthrow of the United
Confining Dissent
States
—American
ally, in
civil libertarians
Court to accept this view, effectively
and
in the 1960s, they
making
United
someone who
States:
who
those
that
which would be used by
civil
broader than that used by Amnesty In-
is
ternational for a prisoner of conscience in that those it is
is
incarcerated for his or her beliefs or for
is
peaceful expression or association. This definition
included;
persuaded the U.S. Supreme
the Smith Act a nullity.
definition of a political prisoner used here
libertarians in the
393
objected to the punishment of "mere advocacy." Eventu-
cases decided in the late 1950s
The
/
who have
merely advocated violence are
narrower than the definition of political prisoners in
much of the world in
that
have employed violence, or imminently incited violence, are excluded.
The Seventeenth and Eighteenth Centuries Some
and eighteenth
cases of political imprisonment in the seventeenth
centuries, like the
case of Lilbume, are considered landmarks in the history of civil liberty. These include the
imprisonment of the future founder of Pennsylvania, William Penn,
England in 1670 on
in
charges of unlawful assembly for preaching a sermon to a group of Quakers; of newspaper
New York in
editor John Peter Zenger in
1735
for publishing "seditious libel" in his
and of John Wilkes on more than one occasion
per;
denunciation of King George
mayor
lord
of
trial,
court,
and
London and, during
lowing year
who acquitted him were
In France, the Bastille in Paris
The building was almost start;
acquit-
contempt of
themselves jailed briefly for disobeying
Penn was imprisoned
for
another six months the
fol-
it
became
as old as the
legend has
it
that
its
Tower
architect
symbol of
political
to confine a
number
a
had been used
of
London and had
became
its first
imprisonment during the
well-known
of
also
dissenters.
been used as a prison
Among those
inmate.
confined
whom we might call political prisoners was Voltaire, who was incarcerated in the Bastille
for several
months
in
1717-18
for libeling the regent of Orleans; Voltaire again spent a brief
period in the Bastille in 1725. Yet even in the eighteenth century, not Bastille
mon
jail for
another unauthorized sermon.
for
eighteenth century because
from the
House of Commons. Penn and Zenger were
but Penn was not immediately released; he was sent back to the twelve jurors
newspa-
and virulent
American Revolutionary War, was an outspoken de-
the
the court instructions to convict him.
there
for his satirical
Wilkes survived imprisonment and by 1774 had become
III.
fender of the cause of the colonists in the ted at
1760s
in the
were imprisoned there
crimes. Indeed
place in history,
when
for political dissent; a larger
the Bastille
was stormed
all
the inmates of the
number were charged with com-
in 1789,
and thereby earned
none of the seven inmates who were freed by the crowd were
oners. That did not prevent the
fall
of that institution from
coming
to
its
special
political pris-
symbolize the triumph
of liberty over tyranny.
Though itself
"liberty," "fraternity,"
produced
a far larger
and
"equality"
were the expressed
goals, the Revolution
number of political prisoners than were ever confined in the
Bastille
or anywhere else in prerevolutionary France. Generally, however, their imprisonment did
not endure long: they were either killed or freed.
On the evening of August 29, and Georges-Jacques Danton,
1792,
at the instigation of Jacobins
a series of arrests
began of
such as Jean-Paul Marat
priests, nobles,
and many ordinary
394
Aryeh Neier
/
who were
people
lance. In
all, it is
considered suspect by the Paris
Commune and many known
At about this time a band of toughs, including Paris, recruited
Committee
of Surveil-
criminals,
had arrived
in
from Marseilles by the Girondins,' the opponents of the Jacobins in the As-
sembly, to help shore up their
own
an agreement with Marat and,
a
were
its
estimated that some four thousand persons were rounded up and arrested.
set loose in the prisons
strength.
few days
and began
When the
toughs arrived, however, they made
after the arrests of the priests
killing the prisoners.
Some
and the others began,
of those
who had been
imprisoned had already been released and escaped death; others, such as Abbe Roch-Ambroise
renowned teacher of
Sicard, the
the deaf
who had been
were spared because soldiers intervened in
swept up because he was a
their behalf at the last
teen hundred persons were murdered in the prisons in what
moment. But
became known
priest,
at least four-
as the "Septem-
ber massacres." The journey of these cutthroats from Marseille to Paris became associated
with a song written by Claude-Joseph Rouget de because they sang
it
months
Lisle several
they were a group of freedom-loving volunteers defending liberty.
"Chant de guerre pour l'armee du Rhin"
originally entitled
the
Germans
that inspired
The following
when
a
mob
tatives to the
composition,
its
on June
year,
incited
many
Though Rouget's song was
for the patriotic struggle against
soon became known
cases, guillotined.
Marat did not
On July
Party.
known
as "La Marseillaise."
as the "Reign of Terror"
They were imprisoned and,
year, Girondins
began
by
he
several
months
were hunted down, imprisoned, and
in
completion of his triumph over the
live to see the
13, 1793, as
time, trying to relieve the pain caused
bath in which he spent nearly
sat in the
a skin disease,
all
his
he was stabbed to death by Charlotte
de Corday, a young admirer of the Girondins. The Reign of Terror continued year,
apparently
by Marat entered the Tuileries and seized twenty-two elected represen-
Assembly from the Girondins
Girondins however.
it
1793, the period
2,
were executed. For the next
later,
earlier,
along the route. This association helped to convey the impression that
for
another
however, until others of its architects, such as Louis Saint-Just and Maximilien Robespierre
themselves, killing
fell
victim and were guillotined without
trial
on July 28, 1794. Considerable
continued even thereafter in several provincial areas of France during the period
known
as the "Counter-Terror."
There
nomenon
is
no known precedent
generations.
Somewhat
larger
numbers of peaceful
the nineteenth century, though efforts to
in the seventeenth
and eighteenth centuries
of extended mass political imprisonment that has
it is
difficult to
become
is
political dissenters
available
who
phe-
political dissenters
were incarcerated in
determine the numbers because systematic
compile information on such matters are a more recent phenomenon.
information that
for the
familiar to subsequent
on nineteenth-century
practices
is
to
Much of the
be found in the writings of
themselves experienced imprisonment for expressing their views.
The Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Russia in the Nineteenth. Century Perhaps the largest number of
was
in Russia.
by the
An
political prisoners in
important account of
political
any country in the nineteenth century
imprisonment under the
great Russian memoirist Alexander Herzen.
A
tsar
was provided
scion of one of the most aristocratic
— Confining Dissent
families of Russia,
Herzen was arrested
was apparently due
arrest
and the Saint-Simonists
Fourierists
in
1834 when he was twenty-two years
to his participation in a circle in
in France
/
395
old. Herzen's
which the Utopian ideas of the
were discussed enthusiastically and which
sympathized with the Poles, whose insurrection against Russian rule had recently been suppressed.
My Past and Thoughts, also recounts the arrest of several of his fellow who were active in discussing such matters. In custody, they were treated their social status apparently provided some protection. Herzen wrote: "To know
Herzen's memoir,
young
aristocrats
badly, but
what the Russian prisons, the Russian lawcourts and the Russian police are a peasant, a house-serf,
part belong to the
upper
whom
ceremony. To
can the
Political prisoners,
like,
one must be
who
for the
most
kept in close custody and punished savagely, but their
class, are
no comparison with
bears
fate
an artisan or a town workman.
With them
the fate of the poor.
workman go
do not stand on
the police
afterwards to complain?
Where can he
find
justice?"
Herzen tion.
was
As
in
in the
who were
us that those
tells
more
taken into custody were
recent times, the most dangerous period
hands of the
police.
The
commonly abused in detentrial, when the prisoner
was before
prisoner, he wrote, "looks forward with impatience to the
time he will be sent to Siberia; his martyrdom ends with the beginning of this punishment."
Martyrdom at
hands of the
the
police, according to Herzen, included torture.
times and places, ostensibly such practices were not officially sanctioned. Peter
III
II
Alexander
I
an accused all
it
again.
man
renders himself liable to
trial
to a prison at
Perm,
a
town near
Herzen was sent into internal
who
tortures
men
are tortured.
the Urals that remained a favorite spot for
the confinement of political prisoners for the next century
were freed by Mikhail Gorbachev. From Perm,
official
and severe punishment.
over Russia, from the Bering Straits to Taurogen,
Herzen was sent
tions,
in other
abolished torture. abolished
Answers given "under intimidation" are not recognized by law. The yet
As
wrote:
abolished torture and the Secret Chamber.
Catherine
And
He
and
a half until
like political prisoners in
exile in Siberia,
not to return to
most
—
if
not
all
subsequent genera-
Moscow
until six years
after his arrest.
Another Russian writer Dostoyevsky. Petrashevsky
He was circle," a
who
spent several years as a political prisoner was Fyodor
1849
arrested in
group of young
for his participation in a
men who
—met
associated a decade and a half earlier
—
like those
to study the
with
group known as "the
whom
Herzen had been
works of the French socialists and the
possible application of their ideas in Russia. Dostoyevsky's treatment included a purported
death sentence followed by a that the shots
ankles, he ria,
from the
was sent on
firing
mock
execution, which he thought was real until the
squad
failed to materialize.
With ten-pound
a two-thousand-mile sled ride to the prison at
fetters
moment
around
Omsk in western
his
Sibe-
where he was incarcerated. Dostoyevsky's novel Memoirs From the House of the Dead
of which Leo Tolstoy said,
"I
know no better book in all modern literature"
fictionalized account of his four years at
serving sentences for
common
crimes.
Omsk, where most
—
is
an only slightly
of his fellow prisoners were
396
/
Aryeh Neier
Though Anton Chekhov was not Russia's great writers,
months
three
a political activist like
and accordingly never got
enormous penal colony on
in the
some
among
of his predecessors
to see a prison as
an inmate, he did spend
1890
the island of Sakhalin in
as a doctor
undertaking a medical survey of the prisoners. Chekhov had sought permission to interview
and obtained
the convicts tively small
number
Though
number
the
it
readily,
but his permit prohibited him from talking to the
of political prisoners
among them, an
rela-
indication of official sensitivities.
of political prisoners remained small
by the standards of our own
century, the growing use of imprisonment to punish peaceful expression and association
during the nineteenth century reflected the emergence and spread of ideologies such as socialism, syndicalism,
communism, and anarchism, which threatened
rope. In addition, those Africa, Asia,
European powers
that
the monarchies of Eu-
were completing the colonization of most of
and the Middle East feared native insurrections against
their rule and,
did not resort to more draconian forms of punishment, imprisoned those
were
stirring
up
who
when they
they thought
trouble.
Political Prisoners in the United States
In the United States, activists in a
number
century for peaceful expression or association. before the Civil
War
was committed
to jail after
opponents of the
(for
draft
and Great Britain
of causes were imprisoned during the nineteenth
Among them
were
abolitionists in the years
example, the crusading newspaper editor William Lloyd Garrison he declined to pay a
fine for libeling the
during the Civil War, women's
the second half of the century, objectors to Jim
Crow
suffragists
owner
of a slave ship),
and labor organizers during
legislation in the
southern states in the
1880s and 1890s, and also during those decades, participants in the various radical move-
ments of the times.
One
of the most hotly disputed cases of the latter part of the nineteenth century,
long thereafter, was the imprisonment of eight
Chicago on
May
4,
men
for the
and
Haymarket Square bombing
for
in
1886. As police arrived in the square to disperse a crowd that had gath-
ered to protest an earlier episode in which police had beaten striking employees of the
McCormick Harvester Company,
a
many more were wounded. Those
bomb
exploded. Several of the police were killed, and
arrested were the speakers at the rally,
were in the process of dispersing. Their sympathizers contended that the
oned
for the expression of their
men were
the police
impris-
views and that those arrested had nothing to do with the
bombing. Nevertheless, four of the defendants were hung, one committed of the
which
men were suicide,
and three
sentenced to long prison terms. Those convicted for the Haymarket bomb-
ing were widely regarded as "martyrs"; protest demonstrations against their conviction, and
on the anniversaries of the hangings, became occasions on which many and
radical
movements
activists in the labor
of the times were imprisoned for the peaceful expression of their
political views.
One of those who was especially stirred by the Goldman,
a
fervent anarchist
she
made
in
fate
of the
young Russian immigrant. Already an adherent and was soon arrested and
New York. Goldman,
like
tried
Haymarket convicts was of radical causes, she
on charges of "inciting
many who have been arrested
Emma
became
to riot" for a
a
speech
for their political
views
Confining Dissent
/
397
Imprisoned and executed for the bombing oj Chicago's ket
Haymar-
Square on
1886, the
May
4,
Hay market
"conspirators" were
regarded as political
martyrs by their sympathizers,
them
who
believed
guilty only oj
publicly expressing
dissenting views.
over the years, saw her arrest as an opportunity:
"I
sonage, though
I
could not understand why, since
distinction. But
1
was glad
wonderful chance
for
to see so
propaganda.
much I
quarter of a century
later, in
had done or
I
interest in
must prepare
carry the message of anarchism to the
A
had suddenly become an important per-
my
for
ideas.
it.
My
.
.
said nothing that merited .
My trial would
give
me
a
defence in open court should
whole country."
1917, after repeated arrests and sojourns in
jails for
ex-
Goldman was one of those imprisoned for opposing conscripWith the exception of the Japanese-Americans interned during
pressing her anarchist views, tion during
World War
World War
II
I.
—who represent
arrested at that time,
to the "red scare" that
after
somewhat
—
distinct category
swept the country, constituted by
prisoners in American history. the accused radicals,
a
the opponents of the draft
and those arrested in the two years following the war on charges
number
relating
of political
Goldman, along with several hundred other immigrants among
was deported from the United
her release from prison.
far the largest
States in
December 1919,
three
months
398
Eugene Debs
Aryeh Neier
/
(left),
wearing a prison uniform, discusses his nomination as the SoParty's
cialist
1920
presidential candidate
with party leaders
Seymour Stedman and fas O'Neil
(right).
Debs conducted his campaign from the Atlanta Federal Penitentiary,
where he was
serving a ten-year
sentence for his public opposition to the U.S.
entry into
War
World
I.
The foremost
historian of freedom of speech in the United States in the
twentieth century, Harvard Professor Zechariah Chafee,
Jr.,
first
half of the
wrote, "Over nineteen hundred
prosecutions and other judicial proceedings during the war, involv[ed] speeches, newspaper articles,
pamphlets and, books." In Minnesota,
the state Espionage Act
troops
and sent
when he remarked, "No
a
man named
Freerks was convicted under
women from knitting for the socks." A prominent opponent of the
to prison for discouraging
soldier ever sees these
war, Rose Pastor Stokes, was convicted in a federal court and sentenced to ten years in prison for writing in a letter, "I
am
the field
people and the government
for the
Van Valkenburgh, who presided
at
her
trial,
is
for the profiteers."
stated in his charge to the jury,
and our navies upon the seas can operate and succeed only so
ported and maintained by the folks
at
home." (A year and
a half after the
Judge
"Our armies
far as
in
they are sup-
war ended,
Stokes's
conviction was set aside by a U.S. Court of Appeals.)
Perhaps the best leader
known of the wartime prosecutions was the case
and presidential candidate of the
the antiwar speech for fit
for
Socialist Party. In Debs's
of Eugene Victor Debs,
most extreme statement
which he was prosecuted, he noted, "You need
something better than slavery and cannon fodder."
ments, Debs was sentenced retrospect, his conviction
On
at trial to ten years in prison,
was upheld unanimously by
decision in Debs was written by
no
less
to
know
that
you
in
are
the basis of such pronounce-
and astonishing
the U.S.
as
it
seems
in
Supreme Court. The Court's
than Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes,
Jr.,
also the
Confining Dissent
399
/
author of the landmark opinion for a unanimous Supreme Court earlier in the year in the case
upholding the conviction of Charles Schenck. Schenck, general secretary of the Socialist Party in Philadelphia, had been convicted under for circulating a leaflet describing the draft as unconstitutional
and
upholding his
six-
the Espionage Act of
1917
saying, "A conscript
is little
month prison
sentence,
better than a convict
Holmes wrote
misquoted countless times
.
.
.
assert your rights." In
for the Court, in
words
that
have been quoted and
over the world in justifying political imprisonment:
all
We admit that in many places and in ordinary times the defendants in saying all that was would have been within their constitutional rights. But the character The most stringent on the circumstances in which it is done. speech would not protect a man in falsely shouting fire in a crowded
said in the circular
of every act depends
protection of free theater in
.
and causing a panic.
.
.
The question
.
such circumstances and are of such
in every case
.
.
whether the words are used
is
a nature as to create a clear
and present danger
they will bring about the substantive evils that Congress had a right to prevent.
question of proximity and degree. in time of peace are as
a
When a nation is at war, many things that might be said
such a hindrance
to its efforts that they will not
be endured so long
men fight and that no court could regard them as protected by any Constitutional right.
Given his
own
had no choice but at the
that
It is
opinion for the Court in Schenck, Holmes apparently considered that he
also to
uphold the savage sentence imposed on Debs. Accordingly, Debs,
age of sixty-three, began his prison sentence on April 13, 1919. The following year, he
was nominated
for the fifth
time as the Socialist Party's presidential candidate and, though he
remained in prison, received 919,799 votes. Debs was released from prison on Christmas
Day 1921
at the direction of
pher Bertrand Russell,
who
acting chairman of the
gone
to prison"
war were imprisoned. Among them was the philoso-
wrote in his autobiography about interceding with his friend
Prime Minister Herbert Asquith conscientious objectors
Warren G. Harding.
President
In Britain, also, opponents of the
to help secure
commutation of the sentences of thirty-seven
who had been condemned to No Conscription Fellowship
—
—and was sentenced
article for the fellowship's
to six
newsweekly,
in
months
which he
death. Subsequently Russell "after all the original
1918
in prison himself in said:
Germans,
will
American Army Russell's
is
no doubt be capable of intimidating accustomed when
at
efficient against
which
the
home." This statement was apparently the cause
for
strikers,
an occupation
imprisonment. His class connections, however, ensured that Russell
the Russian aristocrats in the previous century ers.
—obtained
to
—
better treatment than
like
some
By the intervention of Arthur Balfour [then foreign secretary]
I
did no pacifist propaganda.
engagements, no work.
I
I
I
was
able to read
I
as
,
I
was placed
much as
I
make, no
fear of callers,
wrote a book, Introduction
to
in the
liked,
found prison in many ways quite agreeable.
difficult decisions to
read enormously;
and write
first
provided I
had no
no interruptions
to
my
Mathematical Philosophy, a semi-
popular version of The Principles oj Mathematics, and began the work
of
most prison-
In his autobiography he recalled:
division, so that while in prison
an
for writing
"The American garrison which will
by that time be occupying England and France, whether or not they will prove the
became
committee had
for Analysis of Mind.
400
Aryeh Neier
/
I
was rather
my
interested in
usual level of intelligence, as was the
first
terrible
for
accustomed
me
several
in
no way morally
slightly
below the
to reading
and writing, prison
thanks to Arthur Balfour, this was not
end of the war produced no slackening
power
peaceful political dissenters. In 1919, with the Bolsheviks in
making great gains in
me
shown by their having been caught. For anybody not in
punishment; but
In the United States, the
to
though they were on the whole
division, especially for a person
and
severe
who seemed
fellow-prisoners,
inferior to the rest of the population,
in the
a
is
so.
imprisonment of
in Russia,
communism
European countries, and an unprecedented wave of labor strikes
in the United States reflecting resentments that
had been kept
in check during the
war years
when work stoppages might have seemed disloyal, a worldwide Communist revolution seemed to many to be a realistic possibility. Tensions were heightened considerably when letter bombs were sent to the homes of several prominent public figures over the course of a few weeks from April
to
Among the recipients of the letter bombs was U.S. Senator Thobomb tore off the hand of his maid, who opened the letter.
June of 1919.
mas Hardwick
of Georgia; the
Targets of other bombings were U.S. Senator Lee Overman; Justice Holmes; Judge
Mountain Landis, subsequently commissioner of baseball and,
mous ist
for presiding over the political trials in
Victor Berger, a former
Rockefeller;
at the time,
Kenesaw
famous or
which labor leader Big Bill Haywood and
member of Congress, had been sentenced
to prison terms;
infa-
social-
John D.
Morgan; Postmaster General Albert Burleson; Secretary of Labor William
J. P.
Wilson; and Attorney General A. Mitchell Palmer. Just
who
sent the
bombs was never
one that had the greatest
effect
Palmer on the night of June
was no evidence
to
The
Most of the bombs did
1919;
it
injured
into the
home
no one but wrecked
little
harm. The
of Attorney General
his house.
Though
there
who had thrown the bomb, the New York Times immediately asserted, plainly of Bolshevik or IWW origin." The bombing of his home spurred
as to
"The crimes are
Palmer
2,
established.
was the bomb thrown
launch raids on radicals, raids with which his name became associated.
first
of the raids took place
on November
7,
1919, the second anniversary of the
Russian Revolution, and involved coordinated roundups of suspected radicals in twelve ies.
Some
following
was
who were rounded up were among the 249
of those
month on
a ship, the Buford. This
deported. In preparation for
was
subsequent
also the sailing
raids,
American
a lawsuit
Civil Liberties
on which
more than 3,000
were prepared, and the number actually taken into custody was were stopped by
cit-
persons deported to Russia the
Emma Goldman
federal arrest warrants
larger
still.
The Palmer
raids
brought in federal court in June 1920 by the newly established
Union. The
suit
had been
filed in
Massachusetts with the help of
such prominent lawyers as Harvard Professors Zechariah Chafee, Jr., and Felix Frankfurter,
and
its
immediate
The testimony the casual
and
its
legal effect
elicited
was
to free eighteen persons
who had been seized in Boston. W. Anderson about
during the proceedings by Federal Judge George
methods of identifying
targets for the raids so
embarrassed the Justice Department
Bureau of Investigation that the case also turned the
red scare was on the wane. That did not of those imprisoned during the
years
and were not released
over,
many
war
mean
for
that
all
tide nationally.
radicals
From then on,
the
were freed immediately; some
speaking against the draft remained in prison for
until after President Calvin
radicals continued to be arrested
Coolidge took office in 1923. More-
throughout the 1920s and 1930s
for violating
Confining Dissent
401
/
Japanese-American
in-
ternees arrive at the
concentration
Manzanar,
m
such laws as those, passed by virtually all the
states,
requiring the display of an American
(The Massachusetts law prohibiting a red or a black
flag
had
to
be repealed because
it
flag.
made
the Harvard crimson illegal.) Others were imprisoned for unlawful assembly for their efforts to organize labor
unions or
for their public
speeches in support of various radical causes.
The Japanese -Americans who were interned during World War II do not definition of political prisoners used here.
Even
so, they must be mentioned.
were forcibly evacuated from the West Coast and interned to
on the ground of their ethnic all
attack
assumed
on
Pearl
Among the
the
be ready to
to
identity. Aliens, naturalized citizens,
assist the
Harbor on December
the
camps from early
7,
Japanese enemy,
who had
and
citizens
launched
by birth
a surprise
1941.
most vigorous proponents of the exclusion of the Japanese-Americans from
West Coast was
Earl
Warren, then attorney general of California. He argued, "Every
Japanese should be considered in the ren, the absence of
the
fit
Some 120,000
January 1945. They were deprived of liberty not for expression or association but
1942 solely
were
in concentration
precisely
light of a potential fifth columnist."
any sabotage attributable
war only proved
that they
were biding
to the
Japanese-Americans
their time to
According
in the early
engage in sabotage
later on.
to
alien
War-
weeks of (Accord-
ing to Jack Harrison Pollack, a biographer of Warren, in later years, "There was nothing that
Chief Justice Warren regretted more poignantly than his vehement [for]
the forced resettlement of Japanese -Americans into
Immediately
after the
war,
Warren became
a
champion
—even
rabid support
.
.
.
West Coast concentration camps."
of their right to return to their
homes
camp
in
California,
March 1942.
402
/
Aryeh Neier
and communities.) The actual exclusion took place under an order signed on February
when
1942, by President Franklin D. Roosevelt, and internment followed the states in
which relocation centers had been constructed refused
19,
the governors of
to allow the resettlement
of the Japanese -Americans. At that point, the relocation centers were transformed into detention facilities,
and the War Relocation Authority
camps without permission. The American Supreme Court
justices
Union brought
a series of court
on the Japanese -Americans, but these did not succeed. Sev-
cases challenging the restrictions eral
criminal penalties for those leaving the
set
Civil Liberties
who were
noted
at
other times for their defense of individual
rights
—including Harlan Fiske
those
who upheld the restrictions on the Japanese -Americans entirely on the basis of ancestry
Stone,
Hugo
Black,
and William O. Douglas
—were among
or racial identity. After
ments
World War
for
movement
civil rights
War
such as
—
and the
civil rights
1970s
early
—
and the
produced
II
imprison-
red scare, the
protests against the
Vietnam
On some
occa-
demonstrations in the South or antiwar gatherings in Washington,
the Washington, D.C., police herded
enough
May
1971, for example,
more than twelve thousand persons
arrested in antiwar demonstrations into the Robert F. the only place large
political
War
political prisoners.
D.C., thousands of peaceful protesters were arrested at one time. In
was
mass
the post-World
of the late 1950s and the 1960s,
of the late 1960s
sions,
the United States did not again experience
II,
extended periods. Certain controversies
to hold
whom
they had
Kennedy Memorial Stadium because
them while they were processed
for
it
arraignment in
court on such charges as disorderly conduct. Their incarceration was brief, however, and the
number imprisoned for extended after the
1920s was
sisted of those their claims to
Perhaps the greatest number in the
latter
at
any time
category con-
imprisoned during the Vietnam War era either because the courts had rejected be
classified as conscientious objectors,
emption from military ticular
periods for peaceful protest in the United States
relatively small.
service
on grounds
war rather than such opposition
among them
those
who
sought ex-
of conscientious scruples against service in a par-
to all wars, or
because the courts were unwilling to
apply freedom of speech protections to such symbolic protest as the burning of draft cards.
At
its
was
highest point, the
in the
number
low hundreds;
of those serving prison sentences at one time in such cases
in contrast,
during World
War and in I
the red scare following the
war, the United States confined thousands of political prisoners for the peaceful expression of their views.
Russia in the Twentieth Century
The deportation of Emma anticipated
to Russia
produced
by those who put her aboard the
critics of political
Goldman scribed her
Goldman
imprisonment in the Soviet
arrived in Russia in January
first
a
consequence that was probably not
Buford: she
became one of
full
my
me
to
outspoken
of hope. In her autobiography she de-
Ground, Magic People! You have come
symbolize humanity's hope, you alone are destined to redeem mankind.
blood with yours, find
first
state.
1920
reactions: "Soviet Russia! Sacred
you, beloved matushka. Take
the
your bosom,
let
me pour
place in your heroic struggle,
to
have come to serve
myself into you, mingle
and give
needs!" Soon, however, her disillusionment began. She wrote:
I
to the uttermost to
my
your
Confining Dissent
had been asked
I
my
to find that
place.
.
.
Presently
.
and
factories
to attend a conference of anarchists in Petrograd,
comrades were compelled
mills,
came
the
answer
comrade who had escaped while under sentence of death. Soviets, the
upon
suppression of speech and thought, the
peasants, workers, soldiers, sailors,
and
from
in the Putilov Ironworks,
from Red Army men, and from an old
sailors,
betrayal of the Revolution, of the slavery forced
was amazed
I
an obscure hiding-
to gather in secret in
—from workers
from the Kronstadt
and
403
/
.
.
.
They spoke of the Bolshevik
the toilers, the emasculation of the
prisons with recalcitrant
filling of
rebels of every kind.
They
told of the raid with
machine-guns upon the Moscow headquarters of the anarchists by the order of Trotsky; of the
Cheka and wholesale executions without hearing or trial. These charges and me like hammers and left me stunned.
denunciations beat upon
At
some
first,
Goldman was unable
of her fellow
American
to accept
what she heard, but
radicals to justify
tion to face the truth increased.
One
as she
encountered
efforts
of her arguments
was with John Reed,
from her
a friend
He
years in the United States and the author of a dramatic account of the Russian Revolution.
them
told her that counterrevolutionaries should be dealt with harshly. "To the wall with say," she recalls
him
as saying.
(execute by shooting)."
enough
in the
mouth
"I
by
what was happening, Goldman's determina-
I
learned one mighty expressive Russian word, razstrellyat'!
Goldman
"Stop, Jack! Stop!'
recalled:
I
cried; 'this
of a Russian. In your hard American accent
it
freezes
word
is
terrible
my blood.
Since
when do revolutionists see in wholesale execution the only solution of their difficulties?'" The autobiography goes on to describe an argument in which Reed acknowledged to Goldman that five hundred prisoners had been executed as counterrevolutionaries; Goldman denounced this as "a dastardly crime, the
worst counter-revolutionary outrage committed in the
name of
the Revolution."
After
many arguments with others, including Maxim Gorky, along similar lines, Goldman
and her longtime companion and erstwhile see Lenin to take their complaints to him.
asked.
Goldman
lover,
Alexander (Sasha) Berkman, arranged
Why were
anarchists in Soviet prisons,
to
Berkman
recalled:
"Anarchists?" Ilich interrupted; "nonsense! believe them?
We
do have bandits
Who told you such yarns, and how could you
in prison,
and Makhnovtsky [followers of Makhno, a
counterrevolutionary military leader] but no udeiny anarchists." "Imagine,"
I
broke
categories, philosophic
in,
and
"capitalist
criminal.
America also divides the anarchists into two
The
first
are accepted in the highest circles:
one of
them is even high in the councils of the Wilson Administration. The second category, to which we have the honour of belonging, is persecuted and often imprisoned. Yours also seems part,
to
be a distinction without a difference. Don't you think so?" Bad reasoning on
my
Lenin replied, sheer muddleheadedness to draw similar conclusions from different
The proletarian dictatorship was engaged
premises. Free speech is a bourgeois prejudice in a life-and-death struggle,
and small considerations could not be permitted
to
weigh
in
the scale.
The
political situation in the
new
Soviet state deteriorated thereafter; repression grew
worse, and less than two years after her arrival fortunate to be able to escape Soviet Russia.
full
Out
of
hope and enthusiasm, Goldman
felt
of the country, she tried to publish her
findings in a liberal publication in the United States, but her articles were rejected,
and
after
404
first
Aryeh Neier
/
turning
down an offer from the New York World, she eventually agreed to
publish a series
of seven articles in that "capitalist" publication.
Though Emma Goldman was clear-eyed about Union, most
through the 1950s
more
—refused
Joseph
and
other liberals
who
from the West
leftists
—Theodore
Soviet Russia
Dreiser,
and its successor, the Soviet
traveled there from the 1920s
George Bernard Shaw, Jean-Paul
would have seemed inconceivable
Stalin soared to levels that
Goldman was arguing with
Lenin. Despite
tenure as head of state in the
late
were imprisoned under That
it
was
1980s and subsequent
to his
fall, it is
been known
in the millions has
who
for a
long time, but not
supplement his previous research. Conquest wrote
was
number
at its
peak
—
that
remains so enormous that
The That
is
it
is
not to say that his figure
is
too low. But trying to determine
and numbers have
mony
yet
on
on glasnost-era
revela-
when
Stalin's
a
trials
little less,
—
the
a figure
had previously estimated but one
in support of his figures are not
wrong
or too high;
numbers
it
that
come
could be
right,
wholly persuasive.
and
it
could even be
of prisoners a half century later in a vast country
political
imprisonment on an enormous
such information is very difficult.
essary for those intent
how many millions.
that at the point
Union was seven million or
eight million he
with a totalitarian system that practiced
dates,
who
virtually incomprehensible.
by Conquest
calculations cited
that sought to conceal
at this
of those
end of 1938, following the Moscow purge
the
is,
of political prisoners in the Soviet
was somewhat lower than the
that
number
has attempted for decades to document the extent of
repression under Stalin, published a "reassessment" in 1990 drawing
terror
not yet possible
Stalin for expressing their views or for associating with others peace-
Robert Conquest, a historian
tions to
when
in the period
the revelations during Mikhail Gorbachev's
all
writing to establish with certainty even an approximate figure for the
fully.
and many
Sartre,
what was going on, even when the number of political prisoners under
to see
to light. Inevitably,
scale
and
Few records containing actual names, under these circumstances,
it
is
nec-
establishing figures to extrapolate from sources such as the testi-
of survivors. At best,
it
may be
possible to determine a range from such limited data,
number of political prisoners involves considerable guess-
but even suggesting an approximate
work. If
at the
one assumes that Conquest
end of 1938
in the Soviet
one person in every
is
right in calculating that the
Union was close
thirty in the country, or
to
number of political prisoners
seven million, that figure represents about
one in every
fifteen or sixteen adults.
another way, the figure means that one in every six or seven families of four or
throughout the entire Soviet Union had a at that
member who was imprisoned
moment. Moreover, when one considers
three decades
throughout than the
—
and
that the
particularly
number
number imprisoned
at
is
provided, and
the general point that the
death in 1953
—
Union
it is
for nearly
was always high
the total
any particular moment. (Conquest suggests
the year before Stalin's death, the prison basis for this figure
until his
Taken
persons
for political reasons
that Stalin ruled the Soviet
of those imprisoned for political reasons
from the mid- 1930s
five
was
that,
far larger
by 1952,
camp population had swelled to twelve million. No difficult to know what to make of it. Nevertheless,
number remained enormous seems well-founded.)
It
appears that
hardly any individual or family was not directly and immediately affected by political
Confining Dissent
405
/
imprisonment. The testimonies we have from survivors establish that conditions were ex-
many more died from
tremely harsh, that large numbers of prisoners were executed, and that
combined
the for
effects of
what took place
in the
was repression on
this
hunger, cold, disease, and ill-treatment in the prison camps. Except
same era in Nazi-occupied Europe and in Japanese-occupied China,
a scale
perhaps never previously
who
Alexander Solzhenitsyn, and others Stalin
known
have written about
human
history.
Conquest,
imprisonment under
have rendered a great service in conveying the enormity of the crimes committed against
the inmates of the Gulag Archipelago. Revelations yet to
may
in
political
permit future historians to document
may
bers that
not be different but that
come
Stalin's repression
may
in the
more
fully
post-Communist
and
to
provide
era
num-
be better supported.
The Nazis
month
Large-scale political imprisonment by the Nazis began less than a
after
Adolf Hitler
was appointed chancellor of Germany on January 30, 1933. The pretext was the Reichstag fire.
On February 24, Hermann Goring's police conducted a search of Karl Liebknecht House, formerly the headquarters of the
Communist
Party,
and claimed
to
have discovered, in a
basement, documents showing that the Communists planned to launch a revolution by ting fire to vital Kessler,
the
an
government buildings.
aristocrat
and
Weimar years and
On
a patron of the arts
February 27, the Reichstag caught
whose diary is one of the most
fire.
set-
Harry
vivid accounts of
of the advent of the Nazi regime, provided this entry
on February 28,
1933: Marinas van der Lubbe, a poor wretch of an alleged Dutch Communist has been arrested as the incendiary responsible for the Reichstag
suborned by Communist deputies the
SPD
[Social
to
fire.
He promptly
confessed that he was
perform the deed and that he was also
in
touch with
Democratic Party] This twenty-year-old youth is supposed to have stored .
inflammable material
Reichstag and to have kindled
at thirty different spots in the
without either his presence, his
activity, or his
material being observed by anyone.
it
bestowal of this enormous quantity of
And finally he
ran straight into the arms of the police,
having carefully taken off all his clothes except for his trousers and depositing them in the Reichstag so as to ensure that no sort of mistake could
He
even supposed
is
to
fail
to result in his identification.
have waved with a torch from a window.
Goring had immediately declared the entire Communist Party guilty of the crime and the
SPD
as being at least suspect.
He
has seized this heaven-sent, uniquely favorable
opportunity to have the whole Communist Reichstag party membership as well as
hundreds or even thousands of Communists There appear to be no limits searches,
and closure of Party
set to the
offices.
all
over
Germany
arrested.
.
.
.
continuation of arrests, prohibitions, house
The operation proceeds
to the tune of blood-thirsty
speeches by Goring.
Ernst Torgler, the leader of the
Communists
in the Reichstag,
Bulgarian
who was a
were
with van der Lubbe on charges of setting the
tried
Dutchman was
leader of the
Communist
International, fire.
and Georgi Dimitrov,
a
were among those arrested and
The young, mentally unbalanced
convicted, but Torgler and Dimitrov were acquitted.
406
Aryeh Neier
/
Inmates of Buchenwald, photographed in
1945 during
the lib-
eration oj the Nazi
concentration camp.
Konrad Heiden, who was later a biographer of Hitler and who was still time, described the
manner
place: "By truck loads the
which the
in
arrests of the
in
Germany at
the
Communists and SPD members took
storm troopers thundered through
cities
and
villages,
broke into
houses, arrested their enemies at dawn; dragged them out of bed into S.A. barracks where
hideous scenes were enacted in the ensuing weeks and months. be arrested on the strength of Goring' s big
blacklist.
These
...
At
men were
first
one was lucky
to
sent to ordinary police
prisons and as a rule were not beaten. But terrible was the fate of those which the S.A. arrested for their
At
own
"pleasure."'
this juncture, for the
happened
to be
Communists
most
part,
Jews were not arrested
though they were treated especially brutally
in detention
wrote, "In the National Socialist formulation
must be broken, not
The Nazi
first
racist
being Jews; Jews
who
Jewry
[in early
because they were Jews. As Heiden
1933], the political
weapon
of Jewry
itself."
time significant numbers of Jews were arrested for being Jews was for violating
laws that prohibited marriages or extramarital relationships between Jews and
Aryans. Under the
1935, both
yet
for
or Social Democrats were arrested for their political affiliations,
Law
for the Protection of
German Blood and Honor,
of September 15,
men and women could be punished for mixed marriages, but only the man could
be imprisoned for extramarital intercourse. Reinhard Heydrich, the security police chief whose
name
is
indelibly associated with the "final solution," effectively overrode this exception,
.
Confining Dissent
however, by issuing orders to send Jewish
women
camps
to concentration
their
if
407
/
German
partners were jailed.
The Nazis had were camps
started to develop the concentration
camp system in
in Germany, as at Dachau near Munich, used to confine
the Nazis considered their enemies, including
members
all
1933.
Initially,
sorts of people
these
whom
of rival Nazi factions. In the years
before the outbreak of the war, according to Raul Hilberg, the leading historian of the Holocaust, the Nazis confined the following groups: 1
Political prisoners: a.
Communists
b.
Active Social Democrats
c.
Jehovah's Witnesses
(systematic round-up)
e.
Clergymen who made undesirable speeches or otherwise manifested opposition People who made remarks against the regime and were sent to camps as an example
f.
Purged Nazis, especially S.A.
d.
to others
So-called asocials, consisting primarily of habitual criminals
3.
Jews sent
After the
and
camps
to
war broke
These became the sies,
men
2.
out, concentration
killing centers to
camps were
which they were exterminated,
also established in Nazi-occupied Poland.
which millions of Jews, hundreds of thousands of Gyp-
numbers of "asocials" and
large
and sex offenders
in Einzelaktionen [individual encounters]
political
enemies of the Nazis were deported and
at
particularly during the last three years of the war.
Gandhi During World
War
I,
the British colonial authorities in India
convened
secret tribunals that
sentenced thousands of nationalists to prison terms for such offenses as sedition. The prisoners included Bal
Gangadhar
Indian
Home
and renowned orator of Irish descent who established the
Rule League and became
the Indian National Congress in 1917.
its It
president in 1916 and
number
who
had been widely expected
restore civil liberties in India after the war, but this did not
the war, the
and Annie
Tilak, the foremost nationalist leader of the time,
Besant, a British-born theosophist
served as president of that the British
of nationalists imprisoned for political offenses rose even higher.
beginning of 1922, the prisoners included virtually
all
would
happen, and in the years following
By the
the leaders of the Indian National
Congress (forerunner of the Congress Party) including Motilal Nehru. The next three generations of Nehru's family
Indira Gandhi,
and
would each provide
Rajiv Gandhi.
India with a prime minister: Jawaharlal Nehru,
On March
10, 1922, the
man who came
worldwide decolonization movement, Mohandas K. Gandhi, was arrested India; he
had been arrested previously during one of his sojourns
tion with a strike
it
is
basis of three articles that he
published on September 19, 1921, he had written, sinful for
South Africa in connec-
by indentured Indian workers.
Gandhi was charged with sedition on the first,
in
to symbolize the
for the first time in
anyone, either soldier or
"I
had written. In the
have no hesitation in saying that
civilian, to serve this
government
.
.
.
sedition
had become the creed of Congress." In the second, published on December 21, 1921, he wrote: "Lord Reading [the viceroy] must understand that Nonco-operators are at war with
408
/
Aryeh Neier
the government.
They have declared rebellion against it."
23, 1922, he wrote:
"How can
there be any
shake his gory claws in our face? resolved
upon achieving
In court,
He
in
law
.
.
own
The
.
is
rice-eating,
puny
He told
against the indictment.
law
is
to this statement
no respecter
are a great patriot
by bowing
of persons. Nevertheless,
from any person
are in a different category
would be impossible
to
the judge,
you as a man of high
"I
be the highest duty of a
am here me for
citizen."
it I
will
ideals
presided
be impossible to ignore the
have ever tried or
Even those who
a great leader.
who
at the
Gandhi and pronouncing his sentence: "The
to
am
likely to
to ignore the fact that, in the eyes of millions of
and
have
can be inflicted upon
According to Gandhi biographer Louis Fischer, Justice Broomfield,
responded
to
impose on him "the severest penalty provided by law."
invited the court to
trial,
seem
millions of India
to the highest penalty that
and what appears torme
a deliberate crime
the British lion continues to
destiny without further tutelage and without arms."
Gandhi offered no defense and cheerfully submit
... to invite
what
their
on February
In the third, published
compromise whilst
and of noble and even
differ
With
you
try. It
your countrymen, you
from you in
saintly life."
fact that
have to
politics
look upon
Broomfield
this, Justice
sentenced Gandhi to six years in prison.
Gandhi served
than two years of his sentence. In prison, he suffered an attack of
less
acute appendicitis, and
when
government considered
it
the operation he
and though he was imprisoned to
a
number
speak in court by being brought to
and almost everywhere sible
of times, he
were
was never again given the opportunity
in India
were also imprisoned
their counterparts in a great
else, political
prominence
many
for taking part
countries. (Indeed, in India
in the postcolonial period
was hardly pos-
without a record of imprisonment during the struggle for independence.) Nonviolent
protests such as those in struggles, however.
the
in complications, the
trial.
Many of Gandhi's colleagues in the struggle in peaceful protest, as
underwent resulted
expedient to release him. Thereafter, he was arrested repeatedly,
which Gandhi engaged were by no means the
Nor were Gandhi's
maximum punishment
struggle
and
in
generally emulated. Yet
some subsequent
the anti-Vietnam
War
refusal to contest his
protest
some
his request for
participants in the anticolonial
—including follow Gandhi's —did
movements
protests in the United States
rule in anticolonial
punishment and
the civil rights struggle
try to
and
lead. Just as
Emma Goldman had regarded her trial as an opportunity for propaganda,
Gandhi and those
who
their
tried to
model
their behavior
on
his grasped that they could
means
ness to accept punishment as a
to
employ
own
willing-
advance their causes.
The Human Rights Era The experience of World War
II
caused a dramatic
shift in attitudes
generally of governments and citizens worldwide. Previously, the its
own
citizens
was considered
to
way
toward a
human
rights
government treated
be primarily and almost exclusively a matter for concern
within that country and was not an appropriate basis for action by other governments or by the international
community
generally.
There were exceptions. In 1876, to
example, Turkish atrocities against the Bulgarians
—
at a
time
when
Bulgaria
cite a
was
notable
still
part of
Confining Dissent
the
Ottoman Empire
Benjamin
—and
Disraeli, to
the failure of the
government of Queen
respond appropriately became
reason for British outrage was that
it
a
major
Victoria's
409
/
prime minister,
political issue in Britain.
was a case of Muslims abusing Christians.
One
Disraeli's rival,
William Gladstone, his predecessor and successor as prime minister, wrote a pamphlet enThe Bulgarian Horrors and the Question of Evil, which sold two hundred thousand copies
titled
month and may be regarded as a precursor to the international human rights become familiar a century later. Other atrocities that stirred a measure international protest before the outbreak of World War II in Europe were Italy's use of
within a
reports that started to of
mustard gas against the Emperor Haile "rape of Nanking"
by Japanese troops
against another country
ment
of
its
in 1937. Yet
both of these were abuses committed
by invading armies; they did not involve
own citizens. The imprisonment of millions in
and the deaths of
large
1935 and 1936 and the
Selassie's forces in Ethiopia in
numbers because
a government's mistreat-
Union
the 1930s in Stalin's Soviet
of the conditions of incarceration aroused
little
or
no protest from other governments and only a few isolated denunciations from citizens' groups aroused by such blindness of
critics as
many
Emma
Goldman. This was not only
visitors to the Soviet
Union;
it
consequence of the
a
the
West spoke
worldwide
also reflected the prevailing
consensus that such matters were not an international concern. of their differences with the Soviet
Union
When
political leaders in
in the 1930s,
espouse the superiority of capitalism over communism, not to uphold
willful
it
was mainly
civil liberty
to
against
totalitarianism.
The
revelations at the
tion
camps were
shift
was
that
it
inhabitants of
The
II
about what happened in the Nazi concentra-
was evident
that the cruelties practiced
Germany could not be separated from
tribunal at
Nuremberg considered
of aggressive war,
ment
end of World War
the principal cause of the shift in thinking worldwide.
One
factor in this
by the Nazis against Jews and other
their role as
three kinds of crimes
an international aggressor.
committed by the Nazis: crimes
which involved the Nazi invasions; war crimes, which included
of foreign combatants such as the
wounded and
their treat-
prisoners of war; and crimes against
humanity, such as their extermination of Jews and others in Germany and in Nazi-occupied Europe. The links between these crimes were apparent. Accordingly, in language whose revolutionary significance in 1945,
human
was not
committed the
rights"
fully
grasped
institution to
and committed the member
eration with the Organization" to
at the time, the
states "to take joint
promote human
governments of the world acknowledged
that the
man
solely
rights of their
own
citizens
United Nations Charter, adopted
promote "universal respect
was not
legitimate concern of the United Nations
and of
rights.
in
an internal the
and observance in
of,
coop-
By joining the United Nations, the
manner
all
for,
and separate action
which they
affair;
member
dealt with the hu-
henceforth,
it
would be
a
states.
In 1948, the United Nations adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights with no negative votes but with abstentions declaration spelled out the
provisions of the declaration
made by governments when of the international body.
by the Soviet
bloc,
meaning of the "human
made
political
South
Africa,
and Saudi Arabia. The
rights" referred to in the charter.
imprisonment
a violation of the
they ratified the United Nations Charter and became
The declaration
explicitly
The
commitment
members
guaranteed such rights as "freedom of
4
10/ Aryeh
Neier
thought, conscience and religion," "freedom of opinion and expression," and "freedom of peaceful assembly and association." In subsequent years, several additional international agree-
ments were adopted incorporating these provisions., Among them were the International Covenant of
and
Civil
Political Rights (1966), the
Human
(1950), the American Convention on
and the African Charter on
Such declarations and that
were parties
to
Human and treaties
imprisonment were appropriate matters
Covenant of
it
regularly insisted that political
People's Republic of China
and
rights
was
Political Rights
all
governments
Though
the Soviet
Union
and signed the Helsinki Ac-
Communist system began
imprisonment was an internal
to collapse in the late
affair.
and India remained among the major nations
least intermittently, to insist that international
man
Rights
that domestic practices regarding political
for international concern.
Civil
cords in the 1970s, in the years before the
1980s
Human
Peoples' Rights (1981).
did not instantly ensure, of course, that
them would acknowledge
ratified the International
European Convention on
Rights (1969), the Helsinki Accords (1975),
In the 1990s, the
that continued, at
concern with their domestic practices on hu-
illegitimate.
Despite the failure of the provisions of the United Nations Charter to gain universal
acceptance in the half a century during which the nations of the world formally subscribed to
them,
it
may be
said that today they are widely accepted, at least in principle. Moreover, with
each passing year, fewer and fewer governments have resorted to the claim that international
concern with their are criticized facts.
ful
human
rights practices
on such grounds
They claim
that those people they
improper. For the most part, governments that
is
imprisonment
as political
now
dispute their critics on the
have imprisoned were not merely engaged in peace-
expression or association but were, in
fact,
engaged in violence or conspiracies
to
commit
violence. Accordingly, over time, the international effort to free political prisoners has in-
creasingly required proponents of
over the
groups
facts.
—
especially the latter
reporting by groups such as
imprisonment zations has
human
rights to enter into disputes with
governments
Intergovernmental groups, foreign governments, and nongovernmental
—seeking freedom Human
Rights
for peaceful expression
become
investigative.
and
They go
for political prisoners increasingly rely
Watch and Amnesty
association. far
The modus operandi of these
beyond mere
on
International in opposing
organi-
assertions that prisoners are con-
fined for political reasons or are mistreated in custody; instead their reports are filled with
most
part,
the predictable response from governments will not be to try to justify practices but to
deny
detailed discussions of the evidentiary basis for such allegations because, for the
that prisoners are being held for peaceful expression or association ers
have been treated well. The aim of organizations promoting
these debates about the facts by persuasively
Political
Imprisonment
documenting in the
and
human
to insist that prison-
rights
Human
countries in
from-complete
list
all
parts of the world have practiced
would include
mass
political
human
imprisonment.
Ethiopia, Sudan, Uganda, Guinea, Zaire,
in Africa; China, Indonesia, India, Afghanistan,
to prevail in
Rights Era
In the period following the adoption of international agreements to respect
many
is
their allegations.
and South
Burma, Cambodia, and Vietnam
rights,
A
far-
Africa
in Asia; Iraq,
Confining Dissent
Syria, Iran, Israel, Egypt, Haiti,
and Cuba
in Latin
and Morocco
in the
Middle
East; Argentina, Chile,
/
Uruguay,
411
Brazil,
America; the Soviet Union, Poland, Turkey, Greece, and Yugoslavia
in Europe.
In
Prison chant political
some
cant dispute.
cases, the
number
An example
is
of such prisoners has been
Uruguay,
a tiny
ment was about
six
Islamic Republic,
What
it
is
known and
slogans during a
not subject to
political prisoners at
tries
any given mo-
thousand; elsewhere, as in Iran, whether under the shah or under the
has been
plain
is
difficult to
gather the information that
that political
would permit
such as India and
Israel as well as
a confident
imprisonment was practiced extensively by many
governments aligned with either side in the four decades of the cold war racies
signifi-
country of three million persons where, for a
decade following a 1973 military coup, the number of
estimate.
struggle:
by dictatorships of the Right and the
by democ-
Left;
by coun-
with long democratic traditions, such as Chile and Uruguay, before they succumbed to
dictatorship;
and by both
sides in such regional disputes as those
between Iraq and
Iran, or
Greece and Turkey. Though a Communist country, the People's Republic of China undoubtedly ranks
during
Iranian inmates in the
sewing hall ojEvin
first
by a
large
this era; a fiercely
more than one million
margin in the
total
number
of political prisoners that
it
confined
anti-Communist country, Indonesia, ranks second. Indeed, with
political prisoners at a
time confined during the
1960s and hundreds of thousands of them detained
latter part of the
until the late 1970s, the ratio of political
prisoners to population in Indonesia was probably comparable to that in China during those years. Since the
decade beginning in 1966 was also the period of the Cultural Revolution in
visit
by the press in 1987.
4
12/ Aryeh
Neier
China, these two Asian countries with violently antagonistic political systems experienced the
most intense
political repression at the
same
time.
China and Indonesia The term
"political
imprisonment"
somewhat imprecise
is
great majority of the victims of repression
were sent
in the Chinese context because the
to the countryside rather than placed
behind walls or fences. In many respects, however, -their treatment was similar
were taken from
prisoners: they
their
homes; separated from
a particular place; not permitted to leave that place;
Many endured
great hardships.
urban environments and sent years,
were punished in
this
to
Members
and required
of the intelligentsia,
remote parts of the country
manner
on
solely
to that of
their families; required to live at to
work
at particular tasks.
who were
taken from their
for periods of six, eight, or ten
the basis of their class background.
Liu Binyan, Chinas most renowned journalist, has described his experience during the Cultural Revolution in his memoirs,
A
Higher Kind of Loyalty. At the outset, in 1966, the
newspaper were invaded from time
offices of his
drop into the courtyard of his colleagues
would be
and
[his] offices
insulted
to time
by groups of Red Guards who "would
and
"struggle' against the capitalist roaders." Liu
and humiliated
in these sessions.
Worse was
to
come. In
June 1968, he was detained in a cowshed along with some of his professional colleagues. "They were ordered to
show
made
to stand together in front of
contrition for their sins,
a mistake."
from Beijing,
to
and
to recite
Mao's image every morning and every night
Mao's quotations; they were punished
That lasted a year. Then he was sent
to
Henan
if
they
Province, five hundred miles
spend eight years planting rice, making adobe bricks, and
raising pigs.
Through-
out this period, he was cut off from books and forced to participate in sessions in which he
handy
found he was
"a
opponents in
political
became
ing of feet
tool" for those trying "to
mudslinging."
part of the
members demonstrated solidarity
burden
their class
prove their revolutionary
zeal, to
outdo
their
He noted, "Shouts, insults, banging on tables, and stamphad
I
and Party
to bear; this loyalty,
became
the
means by which
Party
non-Party members demonstrated their
with the Party as a steppingstone to membership, and those from bad social back-
grounds demonstrated
Though
their
change of
class allegiance."
the treatment of members of the intelligentsia sent to the countryside
was harsh,
who were actually sent to prison during the Cultural Revolution generally even more. One of the outstanding memoirs from this period a classic of prison
the class enemies
suffered
—
literature,
the
Dead
worthy of comparison
—
is
Nien Cheng's
Nien, a well-to-do to
remain
in
revolution.
China
When
Company in
Life
to
such works as Dostoyevsky's Memoirs from
and Death
in
the
House of
Shanghai.
woman who had been educated abroad, and her husband had chosen
after the
Communist triumph in 1949 because they sympathized with
the Cultural Revolution began in 1966, she
was working
the
for the Shell Oil
Shanghai, where her husband had been general manager before his death some
years earlier. In 1966, she
was
fifty-one
and
lived with her daughter, a twenty-four-year-old
film actress.
Her ordeal began when Red Guards invaded her home and house
arrest. After a
"confess." Initially,
it
initially
held her there under
few weeks, she was taken to prison in Shanghai, amid demands that she
was not
clear
what she was supposed
to confess; over time,
however, as
— Confining Dissent
she underwent interrogations in prison, ing information to "British agents"
Nien Cheng was
a
stubborn
—
it
that
woman who
appeared that she was supposed
is,
colleagues with
whom she
413
/
admit
to pass-
had worked
at Shell.
to
apparently took a certain amount of pleasure from
her frequent verbal battles with her interrogators. Inevitably, however, her captors became
annoyed with her intransigence, leading
increasingly in
January 1971, more than four years
demands
of the
to the following episode that
after the start of
occurred
her imprisonment and the beginning
her confession:
for
At the door of the interrogation room, the guard suddenly gave ... a hard shove, so that I
room rather unceremoniously. I found five guards in the room. As soon
staggered into the
as
I
crowded around me, shouting abuse
entered, they
me.
at
"You are a running dog of the imperialists," said one. "You are a dirty exploiter of workers and peasants," shouted another. "You are a counterrevolutionary," yelled
a third.
Their voices mingled and their faces became masks of hatred as they joined in the litany of abuse with
which I had become so
they were shouting, they pushed
one guard
me
to another like a ball in a
Nien Cheng was bounced against the the hair. She vomited,
to
familiar during the Cultural Revolution.
show
their impatience.
for
out, but did not confess.
—making
it
extremely
—and though her hands and
herself, sleep, or eat
confess. Eventually
Nien Cheng was released
without ever confessing.
had died to the
as a
When
in
feet
States,
The demand
for confessions has
asserted: "Disclosure
is
better than
thorough disclosure
is
way
Confessions
been
it
a half years in prison
Nien was permitted
may
no
has figured in the
to emigrate
and
also reflect the
many
Communist period
in
A government document from the period
disclosure; early disclosure
his crimes to the people
for safe conduct,
made torture so
refused to
a characteristic of political repression in
is
better than late disclo-
one sincerely discloses his
humbly, he
be treated leniently
will
his case will not affect his family."
need of
mouths of their victims, of the justice of their has
later,
better than reserved disclosure. If
whole criminal story and admits a
and
still
where she wrote her prison memoirs.
China, particularly during the Cultural Revolution.
and given
after six
Though they
for her to relieve
she emerged from prison, she discovered that her daughter
countries but perhaps never to the extent that
sure;
and painful
swelled enormously, she
1973
and pulled by
the cheek,
She was then handcuffed
until she confessed.
difficult
consequence of persecution. Several years
United
on
wall, slapped several times
and nearly passed
many days
While
was passed around from
game.
behind her back and told the handcuffs would remain on
were kept on
I
political
oppressors for confirmation, from the
actions. This
is
probably one of the factors that
frequently a concomitant of political imprisonment; by inflicting pain
on
detainees, the captors obtain the confessions that they seek. In addition, of course, torture a
means
cies,
and
for extracting it
may
is
from detainees the names of other participants in suspected conspira-
be used simply as a punitive measure.
No
doubt, there
is
sometimes also a
sadistic element.
The Cultural Revolution accounted China, but
it
for the highest level of political
was by no means the only period
since the
numbers were incarcerated because they participated
imprisonment
Communist triumph when
in
great
in peaceful expression or association or
simply because they were considered to be class enemies. In the antirightist campaign of
4
A group march of the
14/ Aryeh
Neier
of journalists
support
in
prodemocracy
student protests in Beijing's
Square
Tiananmen
in
1989.
Following the June 4
massacre of demonthousands
strators,
of activists were
imprisoned.
1957, the period
at the
end of the 1970s and
1980s when the Democracy Wall
in the early
movement was crushed, and the crackdown following the Tiananmen Square protest of 1989 and
into the 1990s,
many
central authority have
of great
numbers
political prisoners
emerged
in regions
were confined. In addition, when challenges
and
reliable figures are not available.
In Indonesia, the era of
attempt on October
1,
mass
political
imprisonment began with a purported coup
a
bloodbath in which large numbers of sus-
pected PKI members were massacred; the usual estimate killed over the course of the six
munist Party had been the third
is
months following the coup. largest in the
world
—
that half a million people
more than
a decade. In 1985,
who had been imprisoned as 1980s,
of 1965.
some
1
were
Previously, the Indonesian
Com-
Union and China
—and
after the Soviet
the survivors of the massacres were imprisoned, most without charge or
late
Com-
1965, attributed by the Indonesian armed forces to the PKI, the
munist Party of Indonesia. This was followed by
in prison for
As to how many,
of political prisoners has been the inevitable consequence.
estimates vary greatly,
to
such as Tibet and Inner Mongolia, the confinement
an Indonesian military
Many remained gave the number
trial.
official
been used. In the
,459, 1 07. At other times different figures have
of those imprisoned since 1966 were executed for their part in the events
By then, the majority were men
in their sixties.
Those who were released from prison
continued to suffer prohibitions on various forms of employment, and the Indonesian gov-
ernment also imposed such
oned
restrictions
overthrow the
on
their children.
A
small
—whether government has always been disputed — remained
in connection with the alleged
coup attempt
there
number was an
of those impris-
actual attempt to
in prison in the
mid-1990s.
Confining Dissent
By and
large, neither
ciations for abuses of political
China nor Indonesia figured
human
rights during
in
Union and
to
onment on
produce the
Communist
allies in
and South America; South
military dictatorships of Central
combined
its
relative neglect of the
Africa;
two countries
the Universal Declaration of
Human
Rights
Israel.
war
two superpowers
era, the
human
denounce the
to
proponents of the Western cause denounced the
from Vietnam
clients
hand, focused heavily
rights cause did not
members
By then, the
in Indonesia
were
to a close.
In addition, during the cold
its
Several factors
a focus for major public attention until the latter half of the 1970s.
partisans of the
a
and
was adopted by the United Nations
Cultural Revolution in China and the mass imprisonment of PKI
and
more on
that practiced political impris-
1948 and Amnesty International was founded in 1961, the human
drawing
far
Eastern Europe; the right-wing
the most massive scale.
Though become
denun-
which they practiced mass
imprisonment. For a variety of reasons, international attention focused
other regions: the Soviet
in
significantly in international
most of the period
415
/
Poland
to
to
human
rights abuses of the Soviet
Cuba. Critics of the United
state that
was more or
less aligned
its
Another
on the other
a peculiar slot in the cold war:
abuses of
factor
was
human that
it
was
with the United States against the Soviet
Union. Neither side in the cold war debate was particularly eager to
denouncing
States,
is,
Union
many of their denunciations on Latin American military regimes that depended
on support from Washington. China occupied
Communist
was often exploited by
rights cause
practices of their antagonists. That
try to discredit
China by
rights.
most international human
rights
campaigns originated
in
and
derived the largest part of their support from the public in the United States and Western
Europe. Indonesia was remote,
its
language was unfamiliar, and there were not
nesian exiles in the West to arouse interest in their country. (There tional
human
movement
rights
in Australia,
and
its
difficult for
it
in the 1970s, the
West experienced
more
alike. In addition, after
a collective
romantic infatuation
with all things Chinese; the country was epitomized by Ping-Pong, panda bears, and ingly benign leader,
Indo-
too was far away, the language
Westerners, and Chinese names tended to sound
China was "opened"
many
a significant interna-
greater proximity has stimulated
concern there than elsewhere with Indonesia.) As for China,
was also
is
its
seem-
Deng Xiaoping.
Indonesia's invasion of East
Timor
in
1975 and subsequent abuses there aroused some
human rights denunciations in the West; and the democracy demonstrations and massacre in Beijing in 1989 ended China's capacity to evade international campaigns for human rights. Yet both countries had failed to attract international attention to their abuses of human rights on
a scale
commensurate with
their
extreme practice of
forms of repression. That had become
political
less true in the case of
imprisonment and other
China by the 1990s, but Indo-
nesia continued to be largely neglected.
Latin America
From
the 1960s to the 1980s, political imprisonment
was practiced
in a large
number
of
Latin American countries. During this period, however, the authors of political repression in
4
16/ Aryeh
many
Neier
of these countries began to adjust their
national
human
prisoners.
A
rights
methods
case involving a political prisoner
cal
imprisonment, by
its
its
was proving the
for
months
campaign and making
prisoner was out of the country, or in possible to convene meetings at
lowing testimony before
some
which
legislative
it
human
—
rights
and
politi-
groups out-
possible to sustain the
cases could travel from the country,
that person
cam-
campaign
friend, lawyer, or other advocate for the
would speak about
bodies or interviews with the press.
response to an international campaign tional denunciations
member,
a
that incarcerated the
responsibility for the prisoner's incarceration;
or years. Frequently a family
inter-
political
such
ideal focus for
government
nature, endured for a long period, giving
side the country time to organize a
around cases of
effectively
paign: such a case involved an identifiable individual; the
person generally could not evade
emergence of organized
to the
campaigns that could mobilize
making and
the prisoner
When freed
—
it
al-
often in
the former prisoner could contribute to interna-
by giving press interviews or writing
a
memoir. This happened,
ample, in the case of the Argentine editor and publisher Jacobo Timerman.
for ex-
He had been
imprisoned in April 1977 and was tortured, but as a consequence of an international campaign that was mobilized speedily, and unlike
murdered
in detention. In
he was placed under a bizarre form of house his
less-prominent journalists, he was not
arrest in
which his
Buenos Aires apartment with him. The campaign
period,
bring
and two years
down
later
moment
the Argentine military dictatorship
States
that the
newly
had assumed
for
by publishing
and was proposing
exile,
to
end the
Timerman and for the
his
book
Jimmy
this
Timerman helped
to
his account of his ordeal, Prisat the
Ronald Reagan in the United
existing prohibition
military aid to the Argentine military government, a prohibition
cessor administration of President
moved into
book attracted enormous attention just
installed administration of President
office
military watchers
Timerman continued during
he was expelled from the country. In
oner without a Name, Cell without a Number. The
and
many
September 1977, a military tribunal released him from prison, but
on economic
imposed by the prede-
human rights abuses. made it impossible
Carter because of Argentine
figured crucially in the U.S. political debates that
Reagan administration
military regime in Argentina
to
implement
that plan,
from collapsing
which might well have prevented
the
in 1983.
The Decline of Political Imprisonment and the Rise of Alternative Modes of Repression The cases of rights
political prisoners
were made
to order for the
movement, which launched campaigns
emerging international
to free the prisoners,
human
and conversely, were
extremely damaging to the governments that confined such prisoners. As a consequence, by the
end of the 1980s, the only Latin American country
prisoners for extended periods to the
low hundreds from
was Cuba, and even in
a high of fifteen
that continued to confine political
that country, the
thousand
to
number had
twenty thousand
at a
declined
time in the
1960s. Yet the elimination of political imprisonment in the rest of Latin America did not signify
an end
to political repression
—
far
from
it.
In
some
countries,
more
sinister
means
were devised, which had the advantage, from the standpoint of the governments practicing these measures, of enabling
them
to
deny
responsibility.
Confining Dissent
The forms of countries in the
squad
quents, and either
dump
at a
in a death
squad
is
The
Latin
El Salvador.
a
on
the spot or is
it is
fifty
forces.
flight
rights
by the
it is
thousand
or so civilian
of killers
travel: as
many
car.
killings
were most prevalent was during the 1980s while
killed
and government troops, about one-third
guerrillas
was the death squad
place nearby and
The number
which they
an ordinary
noncombatants
who apprehend
that the person fre-
some
at
terror.
died in indiscriminate attacks by Salva-
rest
killings that inspired the greatest fear,
these killings were denounced, the Salvadoran
much
helping to
government disclaimed
of the 1980s, the administration of President Ronald Reagan in
which financed and armed the Salvadoran armed
blaming the
rity forces,
It
During
the United States,
human
American
from the country of more than one million people, about 20 percent of the
When
responsibility.
denials,
spread
American country in which such death squad
war was under way between left-wing
population.
him or her
kill
likely to
when
a van; four or five
were murdered by death squads; most of the
cause the
in civilian clothes
usually determined by the size of the vehicle in
Of the
doran armed
men
group of heavily armed
spot where the sight of it
when
as eight or ten
a
home, or place of work or some other place
the person
kill
body
the
is
or her
at his
of certain Latin
quarter of a century were death squad killings and "disappearances."
last
Typically, a death
an individual
became the hallmarks
political repression that
417
/
killings
on
"extremists of the right and the
forces,
On
left."
echoed these
the other hand,
groups such as Americas Watch attributed the killings to the Salvadoran secu-
noting varied circumstantial evidence: the death squads were never apprehended
sometimes the police blocked
police;
traffic in a
neighborhood
to allow the death
squads to operate uninterruptedly; the death squads passed through military checkpoints without
difficulty;
street at night
random
during the early 1980s,
would be shot on sight,
when
a curfew
was
in effect
and anyone on the
the death squads operated safely during curfew hours;
stops and searches of vehicles, which were
common
during
many
of the
war
years,
never turned up the weapons carried by the death squads; and so on. (In Argentina in the
1970s there had been another refinement: shortly before several heavily armed into their victim's
home, the
electricity in the area
had been turned
men
late
broke
off.)
During the 1980s, the Salvadoran government often imprisoned several hundred persons
at a
time for politically motivated offenses. The
odic amnesties
would be
declared, followed
restore the prison population.
prisoners; others
may
Some
number would
fluctuate because peri-
by new rounds of arrests, which would quickly
of these prisoners warranted designation as political
well have been involved in violence.
It
was
difficult to
which category they belonged because almost none were ever brought In neighboring Guatemala, the ally
phenomenon
Guatemalan army conducted killed in massacres that
a
when
known
to
virtu-
mode
of
(In the early 1980s, the
counterinsurgency campaign in which tens of thousands were
wiped out
to the definition of
they are
been
in that country in 1966, that
means employed against dissenters.
a large
number
victims were the predominantly Indian residents,
According
determine in
trial.
of political imprisonment has
unknown. Since "disappearances" were invented
repression has been the principal
to
human
of villages in the western highlands.
The
who may or may not have been dissenters.)
rights organizations, individuals
have "disappeared"
have been taken into custody and subsequently their whereabouts
4
18/ Aryeh
Neier
cannot be determined. In
them
into custody, but
fathers, is
alive,
ment
since
no body is located
husbands, and sons are actually
common
kept
such persons are almost invariably
fact,
—
to hear
is
when
hope
is
know
questioned about the disappeared, they claim to
it
When
known
to
govern-
nothing and, from
the country or joined a guerrilla group.
left
and include on
partisans of the disappeared are careless
have been taken into custody,
and did leave the country or join the
alive
that their
practiced,
accounts of secret detention centers in which the disappeared have been
missing but not actually
the person
by those who take
Where disappearances have been
alive.
time to time, assert that such individuals have
who
killed
their families cling to the
but these accounts usually turn out to represent wishful thinking.
officials are
(Indeed,
—
guerrillas.
their lists it
may
someone
turn out that
Any case in which that can
be demonstrated will be seized on by those denying governmental responsibility as a way to discredit reports of disappearances.)
There
no
is
reliable
count of the number of disappearances in Guatemala in the past
quarter of a century, but the most
commonly
This could be too high or too low; what
is
sands, but the scarcity of effective domestic
The other
to
Latin
was Argentina
December 1983. by human
piled
American country in the period in
that the
is
more than
number
a
more
which the
which the
forty thousand.
in the tens of thouto the great
danger
greatest
number
of disappearances took
military ruled that country,
from March 1976
on disappearances was com-
throughout the period of military repression.
A govern-
that investigated the disappearances following the transition to democratic
government was able
to
draw on
this
information and confirmed 8,960 disappearances by
the
armed
this
count as "not exhaustive.") The Argentine military also practiced
forces during their seven
and a
and held about 8,000 persons without 1983.
is
reliable figure unavailable.
In the Argentine case, detailed information
rights organizations
ment commission
in
is
human rights monitoring due
makes
of such efforts during most of that period
place
repeated estimate
certain
Though many
trial
half years in power. (The
commission described political
imprisonment
or charge during most of the period from 1976 to
of these people were tortured or otherwise abused in detention, they
were considered the fortunate ones because they survived. Nicaragua, and Uruguay were
Brazil, Chile,
among
took place in
Augusto Pinochet's accession
by the mid-1980s,
political
to
power by means
of a military
imprisonment had come
to
two and
when
numerous
The
last
great
September 1973. But
these countries except
members
"contra" combatants, captured during the
war
of the National
Somoza
that
in
number from a handful
Many critics of the
to several
hundred at
Sandinistas within the country and
political prisoners. Indeed, the U.S. State
for
actual
number even
if
the
holding
Department and other
published claims that the Sandinistas held ten thousand or more political prisoners
more than doubling the
different
internation-
counted the guardsmen and the contras in denouncing the Sandinistas
numbers of
in July
began about
with political opponents imprisoned for peaceful expression
group varied
periods of Sandinista rule. ally regularly
in
all
the Sandinistas overthrew the regime of Anastasio
a half years later, along
or association.
also
coup
an end in
Nicaragua, where the Sandinistas confined thousands of former
1979, as well as
that
these countries, particularly in Chile in the five years following General
all
Guard, captured
American countries
Some disappearances
the Latin
confined substantial numbers of political prisoners in the 1970s.
critics
at a time,
guardsmen and contras were included and
.
Confining Dissent
multiplying twentyfold the largest
number
419
/
moment
of peaceful dissenters held at any
of
Sandinista rule. Such denunciations reflected the significance that political imprisonment
had acquired explain
why
as a factor in international relations
were the focus of international
human
In the 1990s, the
such countries as
human
and torture
importance helps
Its
to
such as Latin America, that
rights attention.
rights situation in Latin
Colombia, Guatemala,
Brazil,
sinations, disappearances, tries,
by the mid-1980s.
this practice fell into disuse in parts of the world,
are the
Haiti,
America remained particularly
and Peru. Death squad
means of repression practiced
dire in
killings, assas-
in these
coun-
but none of them confine prisoners for extended periods for peaceful expression or
association.
Cuba alone
part of the world,
Western Hemisphere continues
in the
In the post-Stalin era, the Soviet
continued to practice Relatively large
political
its
Union and
its
client states in Eastern
and Central Europe
imprisonment, though the numbers were greatly reduced.
numbers were imprisoned
protests in 1956, in
to practice what, at least in
an outdated means of repression.
is
Hungary following
in
Poland and East Germany
after the anti-Soviet
the crushing of the revolution in 1956, in Czechoslo-
vakia after Soviet tanks rolled in to end the "Prague Spring" of 1968, and in Poland after the declaration of martial law in an effort to suppress Solidarity in
By the time thousands of
Solidarity activists
hours and days following the imposition of martial law, the a firm place
human
on the agenda of relations among nations. The United
immediately imposed economic sanctions on Poland, and
most of these measures remained
States,
December 1981.
were rounded up and imprisoned in the rights issue
States
had achieved
and Western Europe
at least in the case of the
in place until all the political prisoners
United
were freed
several years later.
While they were held
no end
in prison, the Solidarity prisoners caused the Polish
propose to one of the best known, historian and could spare himself a
trial at
political essayist
Adam
which he would be convicted and given
Michnik, that he
a long sentence
would leave the country. Michnik, General Kiszcak suggested, had only to agree and he could spend Christmas on the Cote d'Azur instead of
sition
prison.
government
of discomfort, leading the minister of internal affairs, General Czeslaw Kiszcak, to
Michnik responded in
a letter dated
circulated widely throughout the Solidarity
organization was declared
illegal
and
December
10, 1983.
underground
that also
in the
to this
Rakowiecka
that flourished in
became well known
have reached the conclusion that your proposal to
1
You admit
to accuse
me
that
I
have done nothing that would
of "preparing to overthrow the
defensive capacity of the state" or that
would
me means
entitle a
Street
Poland
after the
in the West, the letter
entitle a
that:
law-abiding prosecutor's office
government by
force" or
"weakening the
law-abiding court to declare
me
guilty. I
2.
agree with
You admit I
this.
that
agree with
my sentence
he
Smuggled out of prison and
read:
I
if
propo-
has been decided long before the opening of
my trial.
this.
3. You admit that the indictment written by a compliant prosecutor and the sentence pronounced by a compliant jury will be so nonsensical that no one will be fooled and that
420
Aryeh Neier
/
they will only bring honor to the convicted and shame to the convictors. agree with
I
4.
You admit
this.
purpose of the
that the
embarrassing
rid the authorities of
agree with
I
From 1.
2.
proceeding
not to implement justice but to
is
this.
we begin
here on, however,
For
to differ.
believe that:
1
To admit one's disregard for the law so openly, one would have to be a fool. To offer a man, who has been held in prison for two years, the Cote d'Azur in exchange moral suicide, one would have
for his 3.
legal
political adversaries.
To
believe that
I
to
be a swine.
could accept such a proposal
to
is
imagine that everyone
a police
is
collaborator.
Timerman helped
Just as the imprisonment of Jacobo tary regime, the
imprisonment of
Adam Michnik
hastened the end of the Communist government in Poland. At
on which organized and
a half, the
promote human
efforts to
pens of such
political prisoners
down
to bring
the Argentine mili-
in the age of international
human
rights
least in the case of countries
rights have focused during the past
decade
have proven mightier than the swords of their
captors.
The
failure of political
to lead the
way
imprisonment
to achieve
purposes in Poland allowed that country
its
in bringing about the revolutions that
swept the
Eastern Europe in
rest of
1989 and brought about the disintegration of the Soviet Union
in 1991. Before those
mo-
Union had
political prisoners in
1987
mentous
events, the Soviet
and 1988;
earlier in the decade,
labor camps. trist
about a thousand
Many of their names
—
its
time had been confined in prisons and
at a
physicists Yuri Orlov
Anatoly Koryagin and poet Irina Ratushinskaya
world. ing
released the majority of
and Anatoly Shcharansky, psychia-
—had become
familiar in the rest of the
When Mikhail Gorbachev came to power in the Soviet Union in the mid-1980s,
them proved an
sented something
essential
new and
demonstrated his bona
means
different. Indeed,
if
fides internationally,
it
phoned Andrei Sakharov
in
Gorky
free-
of demonstrating to the rest of the world that he repre-
(the
there
was
a single event in
was on December
phone had been
16, 1986,
installed in the
ous evening), where Sakharov had been exiled seven years
which Gorbachev
when he
tele-
apartment the previ-
inform Sakharov that he
earlier, to
could return to Moscow.
Almost immediately
Gorbachev was ousted
after
dissolved, the president of one of the
the Soviet Union, Zviad uprising.
than a year
means
Though Gamsakhurdia had won 87 percent
earlier,
had been
and economic
the massive
Communist regimes
difficulties of the
bombardment
of
Chechnya
that
of the past; indeed
Union
in
an armed
he was holding
in large part
which he was engaged were those
a political prisoner of the Soviet
that
of the vote in an election
he was driven out of office in January 1992
of political repression in
tensions
and the Soviet Union
that formerly constituted
Gamsakhurdia of Georgia, was himself overthrown
associated with the discredited self
years later
The foremost complaint of Gamsakhurdia's opponents was
political prisoners. less
five
newly independent republics
because the
were particularly
Gamsakhurdia him-
in previous years.
Though
the ethnic
former Soviet Union have led to repression starting at the
end of 1994
—
as in
to crush that republic's
Confining Dissent
421
/
Palestinian prisoners
from Gaza
rest in
then tents in Israel's Ketziot prison
separatist
movement
—
its
forms
differ
from that which particularly characterized the era that
began with Lenin and ended with Gorbachev. As in Latin America,
political
imprisonment
is
out of date in the former Soviet Union and the former Soviet bloc in Eastern Europe.
Political
Imprisonment
in the
1990s
Certain countries in Africa, Asia, and the Middle East continued to practice political impris-
onment
extensively into the 1990s. In South Africa the political prisoners confined at various
times following the advent of the apartheid regime in the late 1960s
numbered many thou-
sands and, for those jailed for violating the pass laws (restricting the movements of blacks),
That country largely ended
imprisonment
in
1991
through negotiations with former long-term prisoner Nelson Mandela and through an
effort
in the tens of
to
thousands
meet the conditions
at a time.
for
ending international sanctions.
other sub-Saharan African countnes,
sharply reduced the
number
those countries were partially
ment
in
talist
military
cal
of political prisoners elsewhere offset,
developments in several
on
the continent. Releases in
however, by a dramatic increase in
government of General Omar
early 1990s, the
Political
among them Angola, Benin, Ethiopia, Kenya, and Malawi,
Sudan following a June 30, 1989, coup
By the
political
that
brought
to
political
imprison-
power the Islamic fundamen-
el Bashir.
Middle East had not been greatly affected by the decline in
imprisonment under way elsewhere. For the most
politi-
part, the countries of the region
had
not been a focus of international
human
enced in the previous decade and
a half to free political prisoners in the Soviet bloc countries
rights pressure to anything like the degree experi-
or in Latin America. That began to change in the 1990s, but such countries as Iraq, Iran, Syria, Israel, Egypt,
and Turkey continued
to confine
many
political prisoners.
Of
these
camp
in
42
2/ Aryeh
Neier
Turkey was the
countries,
of Europe,
most sustained pressure, including from the Council
target of the
which demanded an improvement of human
rights practices. This led to a sharp
decline in political imprisonment in Turkey over the course of the 1980s, but not an end to
On
the practice.
Occupied
the other hand, political imprisonment
by
from the
Israel of Palestinians
Territories reached a high point at the beginning of the 1990s, reflecting the
government's response to the intifada, which began in December 1987. With the advent of Palestinian
autonomy by
political prisoners
In Asia, large
the 1980s
in
Gaza
new phenomenon emerged:
in 1994, a
Palestinians held as
their fellow Palestinians.
numbers
of political prisoners were confined in the 1970s
by the Soviet-backed governments
in Afghanistan
and
and Vietnam. In the
for
much of coun-
latter
many thousands of people who had been associated with the government of South Vietnam and who were confined for "reeducation" after that government fell. India these included
try,
imprisoned several thousand
political
opponents of the government during the "emergency"
declared by Prime Minister Indira Gandhi from 1975 to 1977 but subsequently did not hold
numbers of such prisoners.
large
political
imprisonment
It
cerated for peaceful expression or association
dred
political prisoners at the
is
it is
widely believed that the number incar-
high. South Korea
still
confined several hun-
beginning of the 1990s, including some elderly men accused of
supporting the North Korean side in the war
were the longest-term
much information about
has never been possible to gather
North Korea, though
in
political prisoners
beginning of the 1950s. By then, they
at the
anywhere
in the world.
Burma (now Myanmar),
Ne Win
power
in
1962, maintained the extensive use of political imprisonment from then until the 1990s.
It
which
largely cut itself off
from the
rest of the
remains to be seen whether an international
award of the Nobel Peace
of the
San Suu Kyi,
house of
all
will
reduce
political
and the country's
arrest,
Prize in
world
human
1991
after
rights focus
to the country's
on
seized
the country in the
best-known
dissenter,
wake
Aung
imprisonment. In 1995, she continued to be held under
military rulers
seemed
intent
on maintaining
the suppression
opposition.
The foremost symbols of mocracy
activists in
imprisonment worldwide
political
China imprisoned
after the
prisoned.
A
brought to
more than
large
trial.
five
number
number
them were
hundred who were
on such cases
actual
of
Six years later, in 1995,
in China,
it is
of such prisoners.
still
Rights
1990s were the de-
1989,
In the
many thousands were im-
Watch had
months without being
detailed information
on
imprisoned. Given the difficulty of gathering informa-
impossible to say
Those
Wang Juntao and Chen
4,
released in the subsequent
Human
how
who were
hands," as the Chinese authorities refer to them
For example,
in the
Tiananmen Square demonstrations.
immediate aftermath of the massacre in Beijing on June
tion
General
large a proportion this
considered the ringleaders
—had been sentenced
was of
—
to long prison terms.
Ziming, two young intellectual leaders
who had
previ-
ously been associated with Beijing Spring, an
influential unofficial journal of the earlier,
mocracy Wall period, were each sentenced
to thirteen years in prison,
(MFN)
De-
though they were
released in 1994, ostensibly for medical reasons but actually to ensure that U.S. President
Clinton would renew most-favored-nation
the
or "black
trading status. Previously
it
Bill
had been the
practice of the Chinese authorities to require prisoners to serve their sentences to the last day;
but
Wei Jingsheng,
the best-known prisoner from the
Democracy Wall period, who had been
Confining Dissent
423
/
Wei Jingsheng, a prominent leader of China's democracy
movement, shown during his
1979
trial
for
counterrevolutionary activities.
Sentenced
to
fifteen years in prison,
Jingsheng was freed six
months early during a
wave
of prison releases
intended to encourage the United States to
renew China's mostfavored-nation status.
Soon after President Bill
Clinton's
May
26,
1994, decision severing the link between trade
and human rights, Jingsheng and some other freed dissidents
were rearrested.
sentenced to
prison in 1979, was released six months early, in October 1993,
fifteen years in
also because of the
MFN
impending
decision.
However, he was rearrested
after
China
won
renewal of MFN, as were other prominent dissenters. Accordingly, barring a dramatic turn of events in China, or a great increase in the effectiveness of
on
human
rights
campaigns focusing for
many
too soon to predict the end of political imprisonment, the increased use in
many
that country,
China can be expected
to
be a leader in
political
imprisonment
years to come.
The Future of Political Imprisonment Though
it is
countries of alternative
modes
we
of repression suggests that
will not again see
anything
resembling what occurred during the middle decades of the twentieth century. In some stances, as in Latin
American countries such as Colombia, Guatemala, or Peru, or
countries such as India and Sri Lanka,
they are less susceptible to
human
more
rights
may be
violent abuses
in-
in Asian
practiced, both because
campaigns and because they inspire more
terror.
Elsewhere, in countries with as widely varying political systems as Vietnam, Saudi Arabia,
and Kenya, governments may suppress dissent by controlling employment, education, and other aspects of
daily
life.
college, or of a passport, lend themselves far less readily to international
human
rights than political
travel,
Actions such as denial of a job, or of a child's right to attend
imprisonment. Even
so, they
may
campaigns
for
be effective in suppressing
dissent. Political
feared
imprisonment flourished during an era
most was the printing
press.
in
which
Imprisonment was used
the
weapon
that
governments
to try to suppress the spread of
424
/
Aryeh Neier
information and ideas, from the books distributed by John Lilburne to the in Tiananmen Square
by the Chinese dissidents. The
when some governments
apogee in the twentieth century,
its
practice of political
millions of their citizens, they could hold back ideas that
leaflets
handed out
imprisonment reached
believed that by imprisoning
had infected
entire populations.
This proved to be effective so long as the rest of the world went along with the tradition that
what any
does within
state
its
own
borders
is
not the proper concern of governments and
citizens elsewhere.
The decline of
political
imprisonment in the past decade, and the prospect
that
it
will
decline further, reflect the inability of governments to silence their external critics by the
same means states
sion,
had been using
that they
have become aware that
makes them
their abuses of
human rights. Though
because of their
to deal with domestic dissenters. Indeed, repressive
imprisonment, as the perfect symbol of their repres-
relatively easy targets for those outside the
governments find that
common
political
it is
they
country denouncing them for
may try to shrug off such criticism
for a time,
few
comfortable to be identified over the long term as pariah states
human rights abuses.
Unfortunately for the cause of human rights,
for repressive regimes to seek alternate
ceptible to international denunciations, than to
means
end
it is
more
of repression, ones that are less sus-
their efforts to suppress dissent.
who continue to suffer imprisonment for peaceful expression or association, of course, there is little comfort to be derived from the knowledge that they may be victims of an anachronistic mode of repression. Yet there may be some solace in their awareness that they are in distinguished company. The dissenters who were imprisoned for their views and assoFor those
ciations during the past three centuries or so include a disproportionate
standing thinkers and writers of our
number
of the out-
era.
Bibliographic Note
The memoirs of former political prisoners are 1
particularly benefited
Herzen's
My
Past and Thoughts, trans. Constance
Fyodor Dostoyevsky's lightly ed.
a distinctive
and rich literary genre. Among those
from in writing about the history of
fictionalized
political
Gamett (New York: Vintage Books, 1974) and
Memoirs from
the
House ojthe Dead,
trans. Jessie
Ronald Hingley, World's Classics (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1990).
Russian authors,
Knopf, 1990). Terror:
1
relied
Among
Richard Lourie
trans. I
Coulson,
Among more recent
(New York:
Alfred A.
cited Robert Conquest's The Great
1990) in discussing political imprison-
Stalin.
Another country China.
on Andrei Sakharov's Memoirs,
non-Russians writing about Russia,
A Reassessment (New York: Oxford University Press,
ment under
that
imprisonment are Alexander
Among recent
that
must
figure significantly in
any discussion of
memoirs, two notable works are Liu Binyan's
A
political
imprisonment
is
Higher Kind of Loyalty, trans.
in Shanghai (New (New York: Norton, 1990) Communist countries, one may choose from a
Zhu Hong (New York: Pantheon Books, 1990) and Nien Cheng's
Life
and Death
York: Grove Press, 1986). Jonathan Spence's The Search for Modern China is
an excellent general history. In discussing other
plethora of important
memoirs by dissenters who were imprisoned; if a single book had to be chosen
to represent this extensive literature,
Maya Latynski
Adam
Michnik's Letters from Prison and Other Essays, trans.
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1985),
political insights
and
its
eloquence.
seems
to
me
outstanding for
its
;
Confining Dissent
To illustrate
political
imprisonment in the United
radicals of the early decades of the twentieth century: reprint,
New York:
States,
Bill
International Publishers, 1929; reprint, Westport, Conn.: is
cite the
memoirs of two of the leading
Emma Goldman's Living My Life, 2 vols. (193
Dover Publications, 1970), and Big
overview of that era
I
Zechariah Chafee's Free Speech
World War
II, is
1
Haywood's Autobiography (New York:
Greenwood
in the
Press, 1983).
United States,
Atheneum, 1964). A different kind of political imprisonment in the United of the Japanese -Americans during
425
/
new
ed.
An
essential
(New
York:
States, the incarceration
discussed in Peter Irons's Justice at
War (New
York: Oxford University Press, 1983) and also in biographies of leading participants in that shameful episode, such as Jack Harrison Pollack's Earl Warren: The Judge Cliffs, N.J.:
Prentice Hall, 1979).
Investigation in the imprisonment of dissenters Secrets
(New York: Norton,
Who Changed America (Englewood
A biography that tells a lot about the role of the Federal Bureau of is
Curt Gentry's J. Edgar Hoover: The
Man and
the
1991).
The only Latin American memoir that under the military dictatorship
I
cite
isjacobo Timerman's account of his imprisonment
in Argentina: Prisoner without a
Name,
Cell without a
Number,
trans.
Toby Talbot (New York: Knopf, 1981). Two other important works on repression in the region are Nunca Mas: The Report of the Argentine National Commission on the Disappeared (New York: Farrar, Straus, Giroux, 1986)
and Michael McClintock's The American Connection, 2
vols.
(London: Zed
Books, 1985).
Germany and Nazi-occupied Europe to Power, trans. Ralph Manheim (Boston: Houghton-Mifflin, 1 944), and Raul Hilberg, The Destruction of the European Jews (New York: Important sources on
political
imprisonment
in Nazi
include two classic works: Konrad Heiden, Der Fuehrer: Hitler's Rise
Quadrangle, 1961; reprint,
New York: Harper Colophon,
1979). For the period in which the Nazis
were rising to power, perhaps the outstanding memoir is Harry Kessler, In the Twenties, trans. Charles Kessler
(New York:
Finally,
I
Holt, Rinehart
relied
on Bertrand
and Winston, 1971).
Russell's Autobiography, 3 vols. (Boston: Atlantic/Little,
1967-69) and Louis Fischer's biography Gandhi: His
American Library, Signet Key Book, 1954)
Life
in discussing the experiences of
political prisoners of the twentieth century.
Brown,
and Message for the World (New York:
New
two of the most famous
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
The Literature
o:
Confinement W.
There
no material content, no formal category of an
is
mysteriously changed and reality
Carnochan
B.
from which
it
unknown
breaks
to itself,
artistic
which did not
creation,
however
originate in the empirical
free.
—Theodor Adomo, "Commitment" n "Commitment" (1962), Theodor Adomo argued, on and denied, on the
itly political art
the one hand, against explic-
other, claims that the art of the avant-garde,
represented by writers like Franz Kafka and Samuel Beckett, could be thought of as
autonomous: the iconoclasm of the avant-garde originates in empirical could reality
it
—evokes
be otherwise. Adorno's figure of speech the prison
theme
that,
that understands artistic creation as
Whether of constraint
how
freedom
is
art "breaks free"
does mind break
therefore, analogously, also concerns
free?
and even when they
Following
sion to this paradoxical relationship
under friendly house
is
concerns the interplay
its
own creation.
Prison
are not, they imply the ques-
Adomo, we could
say that in a secular context
always and only the figure; prison, the essential ground.
Picture of the Progress of the
nor
broadly defined, has played a large part in a culture
fictional or autobiographical, the literature of the prison
and freedom and
reality,
from empirical
an act, forever being repeated, of release from constraints.
fictions are often told in the first person, tion,
—
A text
that gives expres-
the Marquis de Condorcet's Sketch for a Historical
Human Mind
(1795):
arrest to escape prosecution
it
was composed while Condorcet was
during the French Revolution's "Reign of
Terror."
The prison theme internment camps,
is
jails,
not encompassed by dungeons, debtors' prisons, penal colonies,
or penitentiaries alone; such a
list,
though something of
necessity, overlooks the larger, metaphorical pattern that includes
human action. The sort
and the
ment
of
overarching category
is
confinement;
particular experience of imprisonment.
body or mind.
its
all
manner
a practical
of restraint
on
subcategories are captivity of any
Confinement
restricts the free
move-
The Punishment of '"^
j^O)^ Ato Van Dyck.
428
/
W.
Carnochan
B.
Originary fictions of confinement in the Western tradition, quite different in surface
meanings yet linked by a
common
thread of feeling, include the story of Zeus's antagonist,
whose punishment
the rebel Prometheus,
is
to
be chained to a rock in the Caucasus; Plato's
Adam and
image of the soul locked helplessly within the body; and
whose expulsion
Eve,
from the walled garden can be seen, on one interpretation, as merely the beginning of
woe
but,
on another,
experience
is
as a release, a fortunate
world of the human.
into the
fall
If
their
Western
conceived as having originated in a sense of confinement, the theme of impris-
onment may then be thought
of as one metaphorical convenience
many forms
ing that original feeling. Confinement comes in
—on
among
others for render-
islands, in
madhouses,
in
abbeys and convents, in domestic households, in underground apartments in Harlem, where
we
last see
the protagonist of Ralph Ellison's Invisible
those in which Kafka or Beckett
and prisoner-of-war camps; are there countless texts their
—
immure
in the
human imagination,
poems, dramas, opera,
own prison experience
—but
Man
if
(1952), in claustral settings like
their characters, as well as in jails, penitentiaries,
every
artistic
prison
fictions,
is
where one
finds
it.
Not only
and works by those who write of
expression exemplifies a breaking free from
empirical reality, the subject also has no natural limit. Prisons of the self and
Others are as
mind may be
realistic as fiction,
the mythical prison
may be simply
comes
called imaginary in that imagination forms them.
or the descriptive powers of the prisoner, can
in as
many
guises as
mind can
called the real or actual prison rely
on the accumulation of grim
physical surroundings, the behavior of guards or wardens,
physical brutality and erotic violence of prison all is
life.
make them.
If
conceive, representations of what
and
in
In the one case,
modern
all is
detail
—
the
instances, the
mind; in the other,
body. Yet these paradigms in practice flow into each other and merge in unpredictable
combinations. In the
first
case, the subject
is
the
self;
in the other, society. In either case,
imprisonment means being imprisoned by someone or by some internal;
hence prison
literature
force,
whether external or
concerns the workings of power and resistance to power,
whether represented by Zeus, by the
state, or
by compulsions and needs within.
Ideas of struggle underlie the plot of prison literature, although the very absence of struggle, the radical acceptance of confinement
imprisoned
on such
—
is
sometimes the
—
real story.
the desire not to escape or even the love of being
Lord Byron's "The Prisoner of Chillon" (1816) ends
a note:
My very chains and much
1
grew
friends,
communion tends To make us what we are: even I So
a
long
—
Regain'd
my
freedom with
a sigh. (IV. 16)
free, which may be read allegorically either as submission or existenmay itself be a version, if not quite the usual one, of transcendence; prison commonly share a hope of transcendence, as represented by the overcoming of limi-
Yet the desire not to be tial
indifference,
stories
tation or of degradation,
The protagonist
whether by the exercise of mind or by interventions of providence.
of John Cheever's Falconer (1977),
urban characters but with a difference: a sent to Falconer Prison,
named
Farragut,
is
one of Cheever's sub-
drug addict who has murdered
where he becomes prisoner #734-508-32.
On
his brother,
the
he
book jacket
is
the
— The Literature of Confinement
publishers described the
tale:
"This
toward the essence of his ardor
what happens
and beauty, how he
to Farragut
Though
ishing salvation."
imperfectly true of the tale Cheever actually
getting out of
is hell;
prison
tively,
—how he moves and
in love unexpectedly
falls
may
itself
as autobiography,
tells,
and
the rhetoric
mark the prison theme.
religious overtones, the litany of "essence," of "love," of "salvation,"
Prison
429
how he experiences those hours of imprisonment that open the way to his aston-
profoundly;
its
the story of
is
for life
/
or overcoming degradation, a pathway to heaven. Alterna-
it,
One
be a type of paradise.
of Jean Genet's fictions of the prison, told
The Miracle of the Rose (1946).
is
The Claims of Order and Freedom Yet transcendence acter
whose
story
in the process,
opposing claims of order and freedom, of authority
and the individual, must be weighed. That the prison became the eighteenth
on the char-
uncertain. Interpreting prison fictions requires a judgment
is
is told;
and nineteenth centuries
common
reflects the historical
fictional
moment when
currency in
individualism
dominant ideology of the West. But the theme of individualism was hardly new,
became
the
and the
figure of
Prometheus, capable of inspiring quite different feelings
among
different
onlookers, remains at the ambiguous center of Western consciousness.
To be shrined tue; is
Prometheus
sure, the
lodged in the Western mind since Percy Shelley en-
in Prometheus
Unbound (1820) represents martyred
his role also in Aeschylus's Prometheus
The curious
figure of
Ocean who
deflates the
Promethean
and
"What I wish
fustian.
know
thyself." (45,
signify
rhetoric. to give
44) That
some absence
Bound (460-450
Prometheus of Aeschylus
is
quiet, don't
you (smart
as
Promethean
splendid thing to have stolen Zeus's
run
off at the
you
are)," says
self?
less
Why
comic:
—but
that live
the rendering of
Zeus's messenger
fire
.
.
.
celestial
who committed
by cunning, not by heroic
harmony compels
of noise
sound and Is it
fury,
truly
does
such a
off as
merely pious
a
second thought; and when providing another view
gets,
you
.
.
.
are,
I
presume, the
crimes against the Gods" (76). Prometheus stole Zeus's
action,
and Hermes challenges the Promethean image:
Hermes's eyes, Prometheus is not the heroic rebel but the satirist
that
posturing?
may write
Hermes comes on stage, he gives as good as he
intellectual
all
full
the best advice of all:
"is
die ever overstep the orchestrated universe of Zeus?"
of the Promethean character. "You there!" says Hermes, "Yes, bitter
blowhard
silly
fire?
and
power as
and then
mouth" and "calm down"
Ocean,
all this
Elsewhere in the play the chorus utters words that one
"Can the plans of things
but not his only one; more
For a moment, the hero seems a
even more provocative,
in the
b.c.)
suspiciously given to rant and rapture.
is
enters, ridiculously, riding a four-footed bird
— prudence "Keep
offers counsels of
(55)
vir-
he stands for compassion and humanity in the face of the gods' tyrannical unreason. That
subtle than Shelley's, the
it
figure
him among Romantic heroes
agile intellectual
in
and sharp-tongued
who has himself been tricked in turn by the superior power and wit of Zeus. It is a part The antagonist of authority opposes his own strength,
that fictional prisoner-heroes often play.
often wittily
and
satirically, against the
superior weaponry of society or the gods. Another
hero of the Romantics, John Milton's Satan in Paradise Lost (1667),
fits
the profile too: the
430
/
W.
B.
Carnochan
Gulliver captured
by the Lilliputians
remains one 0} the
best-known images 0/ captivity in English literature. Illustration
by
T.
Morten, 1865.
guise of the ster
and
satirist
is
venomous serpent
the
emblem
whose verbal or
in
whose form he tempts and seduces Eve conceals
of his sinister yet faintly comic masking. artistic
the trick-
The prisoner- hero,
antagonisms the prisoner acts out, evokes double
like the
feelings. Is
the chance of transcendence, intimated by the atmospheric horrors of the prison, really a
mirage? The words of Ocean, "know thyself" and of Hermes warn against taking too granted. a
much
for
Only after Shelley and other of the Romantics could Prometheus or Satan have seemed
complete hero.
The ambiguity of the captive hero, ambiguous by virtue of being captive rubs off on other fictional characters
Prometheus or Satan. Few
figures in English fiction are
more
common
nothing more),
familiar than the heroes of Daniel
Defoe's Robinson Crusoe (1719) or Jonathan Swift's Gulliver's Travels (1726), in
(if
whom one would not otherwise place in the company of and they have much
(including a role unanticipated by their creators in the growth of a literature for
children). Both fictions depict captivities,
umbrella raised, utterly alone yet lording
and every reader remembers Crusoe on it
Gulliver awakening in the land of tiny Lilliputians,
bound by thousands of exquisitely thin
blinded by the sun pricked by volleys of tiny arrows unable to ,
his island,
over his nonexistent kingdom, or the prostrate
,
ties,
move But even though Crusoe .
/
431
four voyages that
make
The Literature of Confinement
and
up
Gulliver,
who undergoes one strange captivity after another in the
his Travels, are etched
On one view,
on Western memory, neither
on another,
which makes him incapable even
Gulliver's ultimate, violent misanthropy,
of sitting at the table with his ness;
a simple case.
is
it
marks
own
family,
his blindness to
human wickedhuman decency. And Crusoe exemplifies either (as is
grounded on
a true estimate of
Jean-Jacques Rousseau believed) the natural self-reliance of mankind or (as readers are more likely to believe
now)
the colonizing mentality at work, an
dom, waiting to people
it
economic man
with subjects as compliant as the
man
he will
in his island king-
call Friday. Conflict-
ing interpretations of literary texts are nothing new, but these divergences are sharp and partly
depend on
the natural psychology of response to the prisoner theme. In the eyes of
—
some higher power
the Christian God, for example,
ing ways by confining and testing often calling
him
in solitary
up deep human sympathies,
—
who
punishes Crusoe for his wander-
the captive has earned captivity.
Though
the case of the prisoner cannot be abstracted from
considerations of lawfulness, hence with claims of order as well.
Nor,
it
should here be added, can the
literature of the prison
be abstracted from consid-
erations of gender, associated as they are with those of the social order. sively male, the literature of the prison
prison literature
would
is
Any survey
largely so.
yield a different account of
how claims
Though not
that focused
of order
exclu-
on women and
compete with those
of freedom.
Poetry; Drama; Opera and the French Revolution Literature of the prison includes,
on the one hand,
fictions written
about prison experience
and, on the other, writings of every sort by inmates. Yet the categorical division tight
and overlaps other
distinctions of period
about prison experience: Thomas Malory in prison,
is
and genre. Prisoners write
is
not water-
fictions,
not always
thought to have written Le Morte Darthur (1485)
and Cervantes, who spent time both
as a captive
and
as a prisoner, describes
Don
Quixote (1605) in the prologue as the sort of thing that might be conceived in a jail. Because these texts are not directly concerned with the experience of confinement, they are not con-
modern drama, and—with an eye —operas and some postrevolutionary then
sidered here. This account begins with poetry, early
mythography of the French Revolution historically
more
to the
texts;
recent genre of prose fiction, including,
century, a side glance at dramas
by Jean-Paul
Sartre
when
it
comes
the
to the twentieth
and Beckett; then autobiographical and
other writings by prisoners; and finally texts in which boundaries between the kinds of prison literature are
put in question.
Poetry Prison experience has not produced
much
poetry in English that has entered the canon,
though the concentrated power of a collection
like
The Light from Another Country: Poetry from
American Prisons (1984) suggests that the canon could be amended in
this area, as
it
has been
in others. In the seventeenth century Richard Lovelace addressed verses "To Althea,
Prison" (1642), but they have
phor here made
literal,
more
to
do with the imprisonment of
love, a
than with Lovelace's imprisonment for his political
from
medieval metaactivities.
Byron
432
W.
/
Carnochan
B.
somewhat improbably turned
the story of Frangois Bonivard, the prisoner of Chillon's castle,
into poetry. Oscar Wilde's last work, the hugely popular Ballad oj Reading Gaol (1898),
memorialized a trooper of the Royal Horse Guards, hanged
Wilde was confined served
months
five
in
for the
Reading Prison on conviction of sodomy.
in federal prison in
1943-44 on charges
murder of his wife while
And
Robert Lowell,
who
of draft evasion, wrote about the
experience in "In the Cage" (1946) and again in "Memories of West Street and Lepke" (1959). Short and powerful, "In the Cage" It
ends: "Fear, /
From the body
The yellow
is
a flashing surrealistic glimpse into the prisoner's
chirper, beaks
its
royal hostage Charles d'Orleans
of verse, the prison has been a
more
mind.
cage" (23).
(1394-1465)
fertile
to Genet,
who produced a small
source of poetry in France than in England
and America. Other French poets of the prison experience
are the picaresque troubadour
Frangois Villon; the revolutionary Andre Chenier, imprisoned and executed during the Terror;
and Paul Verlaine, who shot and wounded
passion. During his
two years
his fellow poet Arthur
in prison Verlaine
composed
Rimbaud
in a
crime of
a lyric, "Le ciel est, par-dessus le
(1875), that beautifully expresses the sensory and psychological deprivation of one sepa-
toit"
rated from, yet acutely conscious of, retains
its fragile
The Is
A
life
beyond prison
walls.
Even
in translation, the lyric
beauty:
sky, above the roof,
so blue, so calm!
above the
tree,
Sways
The
its
roof,
crown.
bell, in the
sky one
sees,
Softly rings.
A
bird
Sings
on its
the tree one sees
lament.
My God, my God,
life is
there,
Simple and quiet. This peaceful music there
Comes from
And
the town.
as the outside
world fades from view, the poet's gaze turns inward:
What have you done, o you Who weep so endlessly,
there
Say, what have you done, o you With your youth?
In
its
there,
crystalline lucidity, Verlaine's lyric captures
and
purifies
an experience
resistant to the
usual impulses of lyricism.
Early Modern Drama: Shakespeare and
Gay
More common in plays than in poetry, prisons are scattered through the drama of early modem Europe. Yet in these settings they are usually incidental, not thematically central.
king
is
imprisoned in William Shakespeare's Richard
11
When
the
(1595), his being captive matters less
The Literature of Confinement
433
/
than the larger turnings of the wheel of fortune, whose revolutions bring princes down. In a
famous soliloquy Richard of the death of kings" less
reflects
(III. ii.
his fate: "let us
sit
upon
ground /And
the
own
tell
sad stories
end. Being in prison counts
than having been dethroned.
Nor are prisons usually at
Dream (1595-96)
Night's
edy, though often relying
prison image to effect
its
comedy or tragedy in
the heart of either
Pyramus and Thisbe
wall that separates
mer
on
155-56), thus anticipating his
their purer forms.
in the play-within-a-play of Shakespeare's
—perhaps
the purest of comedies
on metaphorical confinement and
meanings. Prisons are too
—
palpably unreal; com-
is
release,
seldom
relies
on
comedy and, Prometheus
real for
The
Midsum-
the
not-
withstanding, too confining for conventional tragedy. Unlike other classical tragedies, Prometheus Bound lacked the
drama
all
of all-or-nothing;
of the action that Aristotle thought essential. Tragedy thrives its
destination
having recovered the shreds of his reason
is
on
death. King Lear, in Shakespeare's play (1605),
after the
storm on the heath and having been taken
captive, imagines passing his remaining days with his daughter Cordelia in the quiet shelter
"Come,
of prison.
outlast "packs
let's
and
away
to prison; /
sects of great
the logic of the tragedy defeats
death can measure up to
The prison theme to-classify
all
We two alone will sing like birds
ones/That ebb and flow by th' moon" any resolution
that Lear has
in
which prison might
Of all Shakespeare's
plays, the
a
But
offer sanctuary: only
comedy, the mixed and
dominant
modern
strain in
difficult-
literature.
dark comedy Measure for Measure (1604), a meditation on the
depends most on the prison as
memorable dialogue occurs
cage," there to
undergone.
better suits tragicomedy, or "dark"
form that has become, not just in drama,
uncertainties of justice,
th'
i'
(V.iii.8-9, 18-19).
a vehicle of
its
meanings, and
in prison. Disguised as a friar, Vincentio, the
Duke
its
most
of Vienna,
addresses Claudio, under sentence of death for violating a long unenforced law against fornication:
both"
"Thou hast nor youth, nor
(III. i.
age, / But as
it
were an after-dinner's sleep
32-34). This underscores the duke-friar's admonition to
"Be absolute for death: either death or
dreamlike sense of
life /
stasis fits the speaker's
represents a halfway house between the
Shall thereby be the sweeter"
he may,
recalls the play's resolution,
more
ing as he does to the condition of life and calling
from which time alike, the
at last
up
is
at least this
dinner dream of prison and escape his sentence. This
who
is
a type of
once,
life.
5-6), but the
will
remember
comedy, Vincentio
the duke's words, speak-
the image of body
unjustly, consigns us
In either case, the only
good advice
the after-
But for every reader
and
flesh as a
brings release. The combined roles of Vincentio
where authority, sometimes
condition of earthly
i.
awaken from
how it turns out.
double image of civil authority and of religious consolation
as the real place
(III.
mobility of life and the calm enclosure of the
grave. In prison, time stops. Yet because Measure for Measure
or spectator
Dreaming on
homiletic moral to the hearer's situation: prison
random
also implies to Claudio the consolation that
/
come to terms with death,
—mirror those and
in the long
bondage
—duke and
friar
of prison
as the metaphorical
run
is
the same: "Be
absolute for death." If Measure for
Measure, as a so-called dark comedy,
is
hard to situate within Shakespeare's
canon, John Gay's musical drama The Beggar's Opera (1728) not only
is
the
work on which
author's reputation mainly depends, holding the stage to the present both in
and
as the source for Bertolt Brecht's The Threepenny
its
own
Opera (1928), but also so
its
right
wittily
434
/
W.
B.
Carnochan
reflected the social
A
scene from John
Gay's
The Beggar's
Opera. Painting by William Hogarth, 1728.
and
environment as
political
Robinson Crusoe, a central text of
its
to
make
it,
along with Gulliver's Travels and
time. Using popular tunes
and based on the
life
of the
notorious outlaw Jonathan Wild, The Beggar's Opera satirizes the conventions of Italian opera
and, at the same time, the corruptions of Robert Walpole's government. The play said to have originated in Jonathan Swift's suggestion to his friend
gate pastoral." Rich in irony, the notion of a role,
Newgate
Gay
that he write a
pastoral, like Vincentio's
Gay
also sports with the irony of death as the last sanctuary. At the end, the im-
prisoned highwayman Macheath (Brecht's model for longs for the gallows to release
cause prisons before the
him from
Mac
the Knife in The Threepenny Opera)
the importunities of his
rise of the penitentiary
numerous wives; be-
were places of public coming and going,
the profligate Macheath, though in Newgate, cannot escape his past. But the hero
"in
double
captures the contrasting values of prison as a place both of confinement and of
sanctuary.
by
is
"New-
a totally implausible reprieve
Triumph"
wife, Polly
acidic
mix
(64).
Whether
—"an Opera must end happily"—and returned
is
rescued
to his
wives
the triumph belongs to Macheath, to his wives, or to the one
Peachum, who has the best claim on him, of musical parody
and
is
the final uncertainty in Gay's
political caricature. Like other successes of its kind,
The Literature of Confinement
The Beggar's Opera spawned
with
Newgate
its
setting
it
many
imitations;
comedy
a
is
it
can be called the
—
or a farce
—
435
/
musical comedy. Yet
first
dark in some ways as Measure jor
as
Measure.
Opera and the French Revolution If
musical
comedy begins
in
Newgate, the nineteenth-century tradition of grand opera also
begins in a prison setting. Just as the French Revolution and the
fall
came
of the Bastille
to
symbolize the meanings of modern history, the prison came to serve as the principal image of political oppression.
Beethoven's
drama of
the psychic
Fidelio, first
performed in 1805 and later revised,
the Revolution as release. Based
Conjugal Love (1799), a
drama
said to have
on Jean-Nicolas
sets to
been based on an actual incident of the Revolu-
tion, Fidelio dramatizes the power of love and fidelity with no inflections of doubt. The cal prisoner Florestan lies in prison,
young man
Fidelio
and serving as
some last-minute help from the of trumpets
and
music
Bouilly's Leonore, or
condemned
to die.
politi-
His wife, Leonore, disguised as the
assistant to the chief jailer, ultimately saves Florestan
king's minister, friendly to Florestan,
in the usual nick of time.
The
first
act closes
with
who arrives to the sound
with a chorus of prisoners, briefly
released into the courtyard of the prison; the next act opens with Florestan, chained in his
dungeon, lamenting his lost freedom. "In des Lebens Fruhlingstagen," he time of life." Literature of the prison often
caught through windows and bars, of the world out there, and vision;
now
joy:
seeks.
it
When Florestan is freed and reunited with
"O namenlose Freude" The
prison of
memory may re-form
—
a
Lazare,
to
make
fate. cell.
dungeon might be
where Andre Chenier awaits execution,
in
said to
end
Condemned during
Umberto Giordano's Andrea
poem at poem is redolent of spring:
the Terror, Giordano's Chenier writes his last
Like Florestan's "In des Lebens Fruhlingstagen," the 1
"Comme un dernier rayon, comme un dernier zephyre"
a final breeze"); or in the version of Giordano's librettist,
day in May"). But unlike Florestan's
Maddalena, of the
who
condemned, Chenier goes
hurls herself off a parapet. is
"Come un
of
night in his in Chenier's
life,
then
("Like a final ray, like
bel di di
Maggio" ("Like
one foreshadows death. With
name
for
kills Scarpia,
his lover,
another woman's on the
to execution. In Tosca, Puccini's
Scarpia's treachery before her eyes,
Beethoven,
aria, this
has bribed the jailer to substitute her
villainous Scarpia for Cavaradossi's
by
Rome
794 (which was not, histoncal legend notwithstanding, written immediately before
his execution),
a lovely
in the
Napoleonic coup of 1799, where Tosca's lover, Cavaradossi, awaits the same
after the
original of
the
redemption that in other settings might be in doubt.
operatic tradition that begins in Florestan's St.
mind may seem
life,
Leonore, he sings of "unutterable"
Chenier (1896), or in the Italian prison of Giacomo Puccini's Tosca (1900), set in the
1800
itself as
Florestan cries out to a vision of Leonore, and she appears, though unrecogniz-
able to Florestan in her disguise. In prison, as in ordinary reality
sings, "in the spring-
on fragments of memory or imperfect glimpses,
relies
list
heroine bargains with the
only to see Cavaradossi executed
and those of the audience. In
The revolutionary triumph of love's
a
famous climax, Tosca
release into joy, celebrated
by
now a memory.
Like prisons themselves, the Revolution
—and
the idea of revolution
the Western imagination, not only in operas but also in
dramas
like
—have bewitched
Georg Biichner's Danton's
436
W.
/
Carnochan
B.
Death (1835) or Peter Weiss's The Persecution and Assassination of Jean-Paul Marat as Per-
formed by
Asylum ofCharenton under the Direction of the Marquis de Sade, more
the Inmates of the
commonly known
as Marat/Sade (1964), or in fictions like Charles Dickens's Tale of
Two
(1859). Since the Revolution, the prison in literature has carried meanings inseparable,
Cities
psychologically and politically, from the events in France two centuries ago.
Prose Fiction ^
Prose fiction
first
makes
image, in Western or
account of "the tory that
no
the prison a
dominant image, and
far
why,
in a
perhaps
the reasons
an event so deeply embedded
rise of the novel,"
brief account will serve. But
prison decisively, though
for a time
To pin down
at least in British literature.
in social
narrower question,
is
the
dominant
would require an
and economic
his-
the literature of the
from exclusively, one of prose?
For one thing, prose has simply become more
—and prose
constraints of the ordinary
is
common
than poetry. For another, the
nothing if not "ordinary"
—and
of realistic narrative
embody the confinement theme itself. For all its suppleness, the ordinariness of the language we speak can be felt as a constraint. For that reason, it may be felt as the very limitation that literary
and
expression seeks to overcome. Yet
limitations of ordinary language
realistic tradition, therefore, lies a
are
and language
as
really
it
—
its
grammar,
syntax,
its
art's
quotidian. This paradox grows increasingly hard to support
generated
all
manner
its
diction. At the heart of the
paradox: though aiming to represent things as they really
realism also participates in
is,
has typically relied on the powers
realistic fiction
of efforts to overcome
it.
aspiration to reach
and
The modern
beyond
by
tradition, as represented
writer like James Joyce, often violently disrupts the terrain of ordinary language while using, as in Joyce's Finnegans
Wake
conspicuous
and
in the history of the realistic novel the prison
at its start.
,
Lazarillo of
A
Tormes and
the Origin of the Picaresque
Spanish novel of uncertain authorship, Lazarillo of Tormes (1553), began the
picaresque novel that dominated European fiction for
at least
strong trace throughout the history of later fiction. Picaro fictions tell a formulaic story: a
young boy
survive alone in the world, learns street milieu, jail lies
him may be
or
girl, left
false),
when
then
his father
realities:
"When I was
people were bringing to the
is
sent to
jail,
They took him
to jail,
God
that he's in
heaven because the Bible
a
left
and picaresque
Lazarillo
first
to
In this
learns the
confesses (though the charges against
eight years old, they accused
mill.
of the
an orphan or otherwise having
Moors and
my
killed
father of gutting the sacks that
and without a word
calls that
is
this story expresses his defiance of
ahead and confessed everything, and he suffered persecution trust
"rogue,"
wisdom through experience and hard knocks.
during the journey. Lazarillo's nonchalance in the face of harsh
means
released to join an expedition against the
is
mode
two centuries and has
around the corner of the next misadventure, and
harshness of the world
a
still
(1939), what can only be called prose. But Joyce comes
after several centuries of the realistic novel; is
the
in the twentieth century has
of protest he
for righteousness' sake.
kind of man blessed"
(5).
went But
I
Colloquial
The Literature of Confinement
piety, largely ironic, joins
matter much. Piety as
much
is
how
as to say "well, that's
done about
it,
let's
get
Was his father guilty or not? The answer does not
with uncertainty.
a stock response,
and
offhandedness radiates wry awareness,
Lazarillo's
things are, everybody
on with it," which is also
dominated the early picaresque. As an ordinary carried less intellectual
and psychological
437
/
knows
to say, let's get
it,
much
there's not
on with
to
be
the story. This attitude
feature of the picaresque landscape, the prison
than
freight
it
has gathered over time.
Eighteenth-Century Fiction In the eighteenth century the literary image of the prison veered
by
and
fits
relative straightforwardness of the picaresque toward the anxieties of the
can best be traced in British prose in
Manon
Lescaut (1731), the
Although prisons or
fiction.
Abbe
finds a prison-like
(and had been transferred from the
in Defoe,
Henry
their counterparts are present
Nun
(1780), the story of a
who
himself spent years in prison
Charenton only days before the
Bastille to
young
Bastille
was
French tradition cannot match the sheer multitude of prisons
14, 1789), the
Fielding,
shift
world of clandestine sexual encounters;
or in the tortured sexual fantasies of the Marquis de Sade,
stormed on July
from the
Prevost's tale of the Chevalier des Grieux's implacable
passion for the courtesan Manon; in Denis Diderot's The
woman who enters a convent and
starts
modern. This
and Tobias Smollett, among writers whose
affiliations are
with the
picaresque, or the tense claustrophobia throughout the seven volumes of Samuel Richardson's Clarissa (1747-48), or the fascination of Gothic fiction,
history of the prison
theme
in eighteenth-century Britain could
What
being an account of the literature of the age.
any such history would plot
Among
in
more
follows charts
sentations of the prison.
growing rich and dying
reflect a shifting
The heroine of Moll
Flanders, as the thief,
roguery
"a Penitent." Moll's
the contrary, she dwells little
room but
on her to
though the prison may be life
under
when she
Though
prison represents a stage of Moll's
life,
is
not quite yet
Tom Jones,
roots in the picaresque,
and
differs
relates,
was born
in
a felon before at last
live life unreflectively.
Quite
cruelty of an environment that
threat of execution, Moll claims to
a
symptom
it
it
undergo
a rebirth. Yet impor-
also remains a natural episode in
of injustice, even an image of hell, the
to transportation, to the
when she is reprieved new world. In Defoe's
the vital heart of the fiction.
at
the prison
Tom Jones
mood,
leading not to the gallows but,
and her sentence changed from execution
In Fielding's
does not
on the
obtains a reprieve, thinks
in her self-reflective
of a picaresque heroine.
novel the prison
page
even more directly the consequence of
is
also
title
and eight years
do what she does. For someone of such self-reflectiveness, prison
a "sincere repentance" (288) and,
tant
and
sinfulness
a place for looking inward. In Newgate,
the
a curve that
toward increased self-consciousness in repre-
social conditions than in the early picaresque, but she
is
some points on
A
close to
detail.
Newgate, was twelve years a whore, twelve years a
leaves her
claustral space.
come remarkably
those novels identified with the picaresque, Defoe's Moll Flanders (1722) and
Tom Jones (1749)
Fielding's
an English invention, with dungeons,
madhouses, and every variety of
vaults, closets, convents, monasteries,
comes
differs
even more substantially in
its
closer to a spiritual center of things. Despite
from
its
its
predecessors in being more tightly plotted
hero, an impetuous but good-hearted orphan
whose
— 438
/
W.
B.
Carnochan
and
troubles arise from imprudence, animal spirits, for
—
instinctive
benevolence
—
a hero, that
is,
whom prison is not a completely predictable interlude. When Tom ends up in the Gatehouse many misadventures and picaresque wanderings across the English countryside, it is crisis but also the moment before everything is finally made right. Just as all seems
after
not only a
with dramatic news. Tom's true parentage
lost, a visitor arrives
Western
before the comic dawn. As such
it
role assigned the prison in
novel and announces the prison's hold on the
modern
As the eighteenth century wore on, the prison
same time
as the reformer
is
and Sophia
the darkness
the site of intolerable hardship.
Tom Jones
is
to the
with a gathering
solidified this hold, but
investigating conditions in
to portray prisoners as victims
Whether in
new
literary imagination.
John Howard was
European prisons, novelists came more and more itself as
revealed, he
has antecedents in_drama (Fielding was a dramatist before
he became a novelist), but the structural
difference. At the
is
what they deserve. Prison here
are at last united, his persecutors get
Clarissa,
whose heroine
is
and prison
trapped by the
repeated stratagems of her would-be seducer; in Mary Wollstonecraft's unfinished Maria;
The Wrongs of
Woman
(1798), whose heroine
husband's order; in images
over,
"I
—
can't get out
Random (1748), (1762), and
I
incarcerated in a private
who
or,
madhouse by her
A Sentimental Journey
caged starling of Laurence Sterne's
like the
through France and Italy (1768),
is
has been taught to speak but can only repeat, over and
can't get out" (71); or in Smollett's five principal novels
Roderick
Peregrine Pickle (1751), Ferdinand, Count Fathom (1753), SirLauncelot Greaves
Humphry
Clinker (1771), each of
them emphasizing
the ugliness of prison
in every case the story represents social oppression or indifference,
keeping with the custom of prison novels that will illustrate this
fiction,
life
though the victims,
in
may be complicit in their own victimization. Three
new understanding
of social realities are Fielding's last fiction,
Amelia (1751), Oliver Goldsmith's The Vicar of Wakefield (1766), and William Godwin's Caleb Williams (1794).
A lawyer by training, Fielding had spent two years as a London magistrate and had grown disillusioned with the legal system
when he wrote Amelia:
Reflecting this disillusion
never-quite-extinguished hopes of reform, Amelia could almost be called his well as his last novel,
and
it
has a claim to be the
first
where we
first
lawyer
who
aided the fraud
is
Much
of Amelia takes place
meet both the heroine and her husband, where the
Amelia has been defrauded of her inheritance
is at last
is
the exemplary victim of a system of corrupt
laws and unjust penal practices. In default of just laws, London risks anarchy and
mob
always
at
hand, commenting
threatening to administer justice in
its
own rough
is
like a
is
less pervasively
Goldsmith's reforming instincts are as strong as Fielding's. The mitted to county jail, in wintry weather, is
also the
moment,
as in
at a
mob
rule.
Greek chorus and forever
terms.
The Vicar of Wakefield, Goldsmith's only novel,
which
secret that
exposed and where the villainous
eventually taken to await execution. Amelia's husband, per-
petually in prison for debt or one step away,
Indeed the London
his
novel in the Anglo-American tradition
of fictions with injustice as their subject and reform as their goal. inside Newgate,
and
last legal tract as
vicar
grim than Amelia, but
and
his family are
com-
moment when everything has come to the worst
Tom Jones,
before everything turns out for the best.
The
prison provides the vicar a chance to exhibit the ideal benevolence of a late-eighteenth-
The Literature of Confinement
century hero. "in less
He conducts worship, preaches
establishes a system of fines
reformed them
from
to his fellow prisoners,
than six days some were penitent, and
all,
all
attentive."
He
and rewards, and having miraculously
their native ferocity into friendship
endures their jests, and
sets the prisoners to ("in less
regards himself none too modestly "as a legislator,
439
/
than a fortnight")
who had
and obedience" (148). Seldom
is
work,
brought
men
the language of the
social reformer transplanted so directly into a fictional setting as in the vicar's reflections
crime and
its
And it were is
prisons,
power would thus direct the law rather to would seem convinced that the work of eradicating
highly to be wished, that legislative
reformation than severity. That
crimes
it
not by making punishments familiar, but formidable. Then instead of our present
which
find or
make men
one crime, and return them,
we should
if
guilty,
returned
see, as in other parts of
which enclose wretches alive, fitted for the
a state.
This
is
if
innocent.
And
this,
for the
commission of
perpetration of thousands;
Europe, places of penitence and solitude, where the
accused might be attended by such as could give them repentance to virtue
on
punishments:
if
guilty, or
but not the increasing punishments,
is
the
new motives to mend
way
(148-49)
the authentic voice of the hopeful reformer in an age before disillusion set in.
But for their common concern with reform, two novels
and Caleb Williams could hardly be imagined: the one mare fantasy of Gothic voyeurism and
social tyranny.
William Godwin was a Utopian anarchist
who
less alike
a domestic
than The Vicar of Wakefield
comedy, the other
The author of
Political Justice
a night-
(1793),
sought in Caleb Williams, subtitled Things as
The vicar oj Wakejield preaching to his fellow prisoners. Watercolor
by Thomas Rowlandson, 1817.
440
/
W.
Carnochan
B.
They Are, to display political and social injustice in a system founded on the class.
a
As servant
murder in his
past, is
accused of robbery,
is
caught spying,
committed
false
hierarchy of
Ferdinando Falkland, Caleb spies on Falkland, discovers
to the aristocratic
is
relentlessly
to prison,
and
pursued across the countryside,
finally is
is falsely
brought face to face in the court-
room with his master, persecutor, and accuser. At this point in the narrative Godwin faltered, in the presence of feelings at
odds with
his ostensible theme. Uncertain
how to close his story,
he wrote two conclusions, one in which Falkland repents his persecution of Caleb and an-
human drama
other in which he does not. The
Godwin's the
political
theory allows
for. If
of victims
and oppressors runs deeper than
The Vicar of Wakefield unself-consciously appropriates
words and ideas of the reformers, Caleb Williams displays the danger of transplanting
ideology into fiction, namely that the case,
it
is
a long
way from
fervors of Caleb Williams.
life
of the fiction will undermine the ideology. In any
the picaresque offhandedness of Lazarillo to the almost operatic
The emotional temperature of prison
fiction
had gone up.
The Nineteenth Century: Stendhal and Dickens Although the prison theme dominates
fiction less
completely
its
manners and the
historical
that is
its
The Red and the Black Julien Sorel in prison
is.
post-Napoleonic Europe with tied,
its
shadowy
together
fully to
theme coincides with
is
Fabrice, in prison,
falls
emptying of the prisons closes
of Parma, the prison experience
is
a
Clelia,
to
to regret
know what
set in the
Parma
world of are
emp-
have been shattered, and they are dead.
them something
of
felicity: their lives
in love with Clelia, his jailer's daughter.
their story. In
it
the
new concern
understand himself and even
where Julien Sorel comes
political intrigues, the prisons of
for Julien Sorel, prison has taught
when
as
The Red and
sentenced to execution for attempting to
At the close of The Charterhouse of Parma,
but the fortunes of its lovers, Fabrice and
For them, as
the
he learns most
is
doors cannot be locked from inside. Prison
most important: who he
repertory the tale of
fictions. In Stendhal's
Black (1830) or The Charterhouse of Parma (1839), the
murder a former lover;
its
romance, the theme by no means fades from view, appearing
does in some of the next century's most magisterial
for character. In
after the eighteenth century, as
picaresque origins farther behind and adds to
the novel leaves
The Red and
the Black
And,
come
fittingly,
and The Charterhouse
indispensable yet inseparable from claims of individual
character. In Stendhal, the experience of prison
is
a habit of
In Dickens's Little Dorrit (1855-57), however, the prison
mind.
theme
is still
more comprehen-
much under its spell as to deprive them of (or some might say to spare them) the individuality of a Julien Sorel. For many years William Dorrit has been an imprisoned debtor in the Marshalsea prison; for many years his loving daughter, Amy, known as Little Dorrit, has cared for him. And in his working notes for the novel, Dickens seems to
sive,
drawing the characters so
have realized the foundation of his story in a sudden, sharp, parenthetic insight: "(Society like the
Marshalsea)" (704). The habitual metaphor of the "prison of experience" owes
to Dickens, especially to Little Dorrit.
seeps into
all
the corners of the
tale.
of being the prison's senior citizen,
when he
is
The representation of society or life Old
as
Dorrit, the Father of the Marshalsea,
welcomes newcomers with impeccable
finally released, lapses into
much
an imprisonment
grows proud gentility,
and
delusion followed by death, unable to imagine himself
The Literature of Confinement
/
441
Little
friend
Dorrit and her
Maggy huddled
outside the gate of the
Marshalsea. Illustration
by H. K. Browne,
1855.
anywhere but
in prison. If
redemption
exists, as
devotion to her father and to Arthur Clennam, itself
Dickens wants to believe,
whom
is
in
Amy's
out against the backdrop of a world so constrained that the conclusion seems less like
the joyful
outcome of
Fidelio
and more
like a
triumph of hope over experience.
passage near the end strikes a dominant chord: "The the bars of the Marshalsea gate. Black, its
it
she finally marries. Yet her love plays
iron stripes were turned
the city, over
its
jumbled
all
last
night, since the gate
by the early-glowing sun
roofs,
famous
had clashed upon
Little Dorrit,
into stripes of gold. Far aslant across
and through the open
tracery of
church towers, struck
its
the long bright rays, bars of the prison of this lower world" (636-37). rays like celestial bars into the haze of Victorian
A
day of the appointed week touched
London,
how can
As the sun
casts
its
redemption be be-
love's
lieved in?
The prison
figures in
many of Dickens's novels:
not only in The Tale oj Two
Cities,
with
its
pervasive evocation of prisons and of the Revolution, but also in The Pickwick Papers (183637),
whose hero allows himself
ages; in Oliver Twist his hanging;
Gordon
and
riots of
prison theme:
to
it"
be imprisoned for debt rather than pay unjustified damits
vivid description of Fagin in prison the night before
in Barnaby Rudge (1841),
whose hero goes
to
Newgate
for his part in the
1780. In Martin Chuzzlewit (1843-44), one of the characters epitomizes the
"Life's a riddle: a
that like that celebrated
answer
to
(1837-39), with
most
infernally hard riddle to guess.
conundrum, Why's
(48). But in Little Dorrit,
a
man
in jail like a
.
man
.
.
My own opinion is,
out of jail?' there's no
Dickens created a prison novel unsurpassable
in
its
442
/
W.
B.
Carnochan
panoramic intensity
—
if
only because social panoramas in the manner of Dickens, William
Thackeray, or Honore de Balzac are no longer present in the novelist's imagination. After
was
Little Dorrit,
what
The answer
to the post-Dickensian
Julien Sorel
and traceable
else
to
be done?
The Prison of Consciousness dilemma
lay in the tradition represented
Hugo's The Last Day of the Condemned
to Victor
account "of a mind's self-observation as
it
watchesritself
move toward
Condemned
for
he
between horror and the hope of reprieve, the
vacillates
on
footsteps
panoramic
(1829)
the stairs, bringing (presumably) either
by narrower
from within the prison becomes a model. For all
Though
the prison
its
fiction closing
pardon or a
visions,
Hugo's
final
—
the
death" (Brombert, 92).
some unspecified crime, Hugo's prisoner records every nuance
vistas are replaced
a contradiction.
by Stendhal's
Man
of feeling as
with the sound of
order for execution. As
floridly painted existential
imaginative power,
Little
Dorrit
view
embodied
pervasive, the omniscient narrator escapes constraints,
is
except the inescapable ones of language, by moving freely in and out of the Marshalsea, from
England his
to
France and back again, by going, in short, wherever he wants, thus announcing
independence of his
cell,
Recent prison
fictional world.
fictions, like
other contemporary
fic-
renounce narrative omniscience and, by looking outward from the confinement of a
tions,
intensify the conditions of narrative self-reflexivity. Recent prison fictions enact the
drama
of consciousness
Self-consciousness
may be conceived as either a captivity or a glory, a doubleness figured
by the enclosed spaces of prison and (1915) or dramas
them
modern
and self-consciousness.
like Sartre's
No
its
analogues.
Whether
in Kafka's The Metamorphosis
Exit (1946) or Beckett's Waiting for
reflecting the bleak restraints of the
modern, or whether
in Albert
Godot (1953),
all
of
Camus's The Stranger
(1942), Cheever's Falconer (1977), or John Banville's The Book of Evidence (1989),
all first-
person narratives of a gratuitous murder committed by the narrator, in each case, the
inter-
play of hope and resignation within the thinking, perceiving, feeling, and self-conscious self sets the psychological
boundaries of the narrative. These texts will
grandeur of confinement in some of
modernity has inherited an image patron saints, was
first
some remote corner
No
to call the
to
its
modern
versions. In the
(written in
condition," that of being trapped in a tiny cell in
of the universe.
Trial (written in
1922 and published
in
1914 and posthumously published 1926) and whose shorter
offenses that nonetheless inspire guilt, a
Kafka's fictions, The Metamorphosis has that role.
it
inspired a
trial
in
modern than
human
insect.
without hope of acquittal. Of all
most captured the popular imagination, so much so
Broadway production with the dancer Mikhail Baryshnikov
vanishing world:
Trapped inside
Colony"
condition as a suffering
in the principal
The Metamorphosis recounts Gregor Samsa's improbable transformation into
awkward
Kafka,
1925) and The Castle
fictions like "In the Penal
(1919) and "A Hunger-Artist" (1924) relentlessly portray the
unknown
ambiguous
embody its sense of what Blaise Pascal, one of modernity's
"human
writer has a stronger claim to being at the beginning of the
whose novels The
for
illustrate the
metaphor of confinement,
his grotesque
new
a huge,
body, Gregor struggles for a look
at a
The Literature of Confinement
/
443
-^ _____^-^^
41
v"
J
'*