1) What was your initial impression after touring the prison?
My initial impression after touring the prison was that it had so much information behind the artifacts that we now were able to see along our tour. The overall building architecture was extra ordinary and uniquely built. The building was pretty grand considering the fact that this was a prison dating back to the early 1800’s. Surprisingly the solitary confinement does not look as small as I would have expected it. The grand scheme of things flowed, it definitely looked like photo we see in history books about the earliest prisons. The court yard was the part that made everything so surreal, it really was closed in by these high thick stone walls. The prison was a great touring place because the up keep of the building
…show more content…
However I feel like overtime, they realized that they were not capable of keeping everything under control. So they started using solitary confinement to punish individuals who did something that they deemed wrong. The Penitentiary was built to cause prisoners display penitence or regret. It was not built to punish, but was more so used as a form of public humiliation. The hospital within the prison was one of the greatest of that time. The doctors were so skilled that even the staff who worked in the prisons would have themselves evaluated there. The fact that there were lots of activities for the inmates to participate in tell me that they were not being punished once in the prison. The idea was that they would pay back the time for their crimes, and only if they did something to go against the rules of the prison would they be isolated. Back in the early 1800’s they were not able to understand the harsh effects of isolating individuals for long periods of time. Finally the fact that there was no use of life in prison, proves that they were intended to be rehabilitated and not
On 4/3/2016, I was assigned as the Dock officer at the Lower Buckeye Jail, located at the above address.
The conditions of prisons were a bit dreadful. In some prisons, prisoners had their feet fasten together by iron bars and had chains around their necks. Most prisoner cells had very little furniture and bedding, prisoners had to sleep on the floor or unless had their friends supply them with furniture and bedding. Most cells did not have a toilet, prisoners were given buckets. A prisoner was giving a small loaf of bread unless they had money to buy more food but that was a bit expensive. Even children were allowed in prisons. Some prison...
... layout of the building or recognition of the various guards (Woodham, Internet). In 1913 the Board of Mental Health stepped in and advised the penitentiary to change their policies regarding punishment (Eerie History). Officials from the Board of Health deemed the methods being used to reform the inmates were not reforming them but doing the exact opposite. These methods were found to result in extreme anger, deep set depression, and were in fact making the inmates that much more likely to commit another crime (Eerie History). Doctors at the Eastern State Penitentiary countered these accusations by making absurd excuses for why the inmates went insane (Eastern State). This fact alone provides the proof that the officials of the penitentiary knew that what they were doing was wrong and therefore came up with faulty excuses to cover their mistreatment of the inmates.
On Thursday, December 1, 2016, ROY ONEAL MOODY died of unknown causes while incarcerated in the Winston County Jail at 25166 Alabama Highway 195, Double Springs, Alabama. Upon learning of MOODY’S death, Winston County Sheriff Tommy Moore contacted State Bureau of Investigation (SBI) Captain Jonathan Winters and requested an independent investigation into the events, which led to MOODY’S death.
Prisons have dated back to the twentieth century when the United States had almost two million people confined in prisons or jails. Prisons have been a form of government punishment that has shaped our nation to what it is today. The first jail was established in Philadelphia, in 1970. It was called the Walnut Street Jail and was recorded as the first use of imprisonment through solitary confinement. The basic principles of the new system were to reform those in prison, and to segregate those according to age, sex, and type of offenses charged against them (Schoenherr). The second prison was called Sing-Sing a...
A prison, or penitentiary, is used to house people that are convicted of serious crimes. Based on the ideals of a penitentiary, prison should be a clean and healthy environment, isolating criminals to keep our communities safe. Prisoners should follow strict rules and carry out any prison labor that is required. Prison should be a place that changes the way a criminal thinks and acts by enforcing regulations and consequences for breaking them. A penitentiary should also meet religious needs for every
... walls. Auburn penitentiary’s inmates were basically totally isolated from the world. The Auburn penitentiary was built to make up for the problems and overcrowding at the Newgate penitentiary located in New York City. Quaker Thomas Eddy was Newgate penitentiary’s first keeper. Quaker Thomas Eddy believed that rehabilitation of the criminals was ultimate goal at the end of prison sentence. I can apply the information I learned to my chosen field as a parole officer, by being able to tell the inmates about how far our prison system has come, and letting them know if they thought it was bad now, it was a lot worst. It can be used as a reminder of a place they don’t want to return to.
During the early half of the 19th century, there were two new models of prisons being built in the United States. Along with the new styles of prisons being constructed, two new styles of correctional systems were developed, the Pennsylvania system, and the Auburn, New York system (Mays & Winfree, 2009). Although the designs of the actual prisons were dramatically different, both systems shared similar ideals, with regards to how inmates should spend their days. Ultimately, the Auburn system prevailed as the more popular system of corrections in the United States, with some of the system’s correctional philosophies being used well into the 20th century (Mays & Winfree, 2009). Before discussing the actual philosophies, which were used to manage the inmates in each system, we should first look at the difference in the design of the prisons used in each system.
The overall goal of correctional facilities can be broken down into three main functions which are retribution, deterrence, and rehabilitation of the inmates. Today, there is much debate on rather private or public prison admiration is best to suit those goals. In a private prison the inmates are contracted out to a third party from either local, state, or federal government agencies (Smith 2012). Public prisons are where the government themselves house and supply the inmate’s basic needs with no third party involved. However, a large portion of the argument of private verses public prisons is over, which is best in achieving those goals more efficiently.
The exact time and location of the world’s first actual prison is unknown, but obviously at some point in time incarceration within a prison system became a common consequence for criminal activities. Schmalleger writes that punitive imprisonment appeared to have been introduced in Europe in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries for debtors and certain offenders against canon law (Schmalleger, 2009). In those decades penalties for criminal activities dealt more with shaming the offender in hopes of deterring them from future criminal activity. Examples of shaming include the ducking stool, the pillory, whipping, branding, and the stocks (History of the Prison Systems). In addition to the various forms of shaming and deterring, the death penalty was a common punishment for criminal activity, such as hangings, stoning, or burning. Within these decades, prisons were occasionally used as an alternative to corporal punishment. However, as years went on society’s view of an individual’s liberties and humanity were changing thus changing the views of how criminal acts should be handled changed as well. Schmalleger writes that near the end of the eighteenth century is when the concept of imprisonment as punishment reached its fullest expression. The prisons that had been established and continually altered in the United States eventually become models for European reformers that were in hopes of creating a prison system that would humanize criminal punishment (Schmalleger, 2009). The concept was that restricting a person’s liberty would be retribution enough, and that an exact period of time served in a prison could be assigned depending on the severity of a crime committed (Prison History). Early prisons came in the forms of ...
In final analysis, this research project looks to provide a new way of understanding the current prison situation and its various manifestations. A comprehensive report of how things might be for those closely involved in the punishment and rehabilitation process might enable policy-makers and the public alike to change their ideas and help them perceive what it might mean to be in the position of officers or prisoners. The higher objective of this project will be to bring, through new knowledge, the necessary reforms that could leave both the taxpayer and those in the prison system more satisfied.
Another problem with prisons are the terrible conditions and poor medical supervision that is provided. Diseases can be spread easily in highly populated prisons so it is highly recommended that prison facilities are clean and hold prisoners to their made capacity. These conditions can even affect prisoners long-term. Some prisoners have shown to have psychological problems because of the conditions they experienced in prisons. Prisons are created to reform prisoners, not harm them. Health care in prisons has been a problem for many years. It got so serious at one point, that in 1972, a Health Advisory Committee was set up to commend the matters affecting the health of prisoners. This committee gave prisons standards to follow, but prisons
Gresham M. Sykes describes the society of captives from the inmates’ point of view. Sykes acknowledges the fact that his observations are generalizations but he feels that most inmates can agree on feelings of deprivation and frustration. As he sketches the development of physical punishment towards psychological punishment, Sykes follows that both have an enormous effect on the inmate and do not differ greatly in their cruelty.
Although it may not seem like a major problem to most people in the United States, prisons are becoming overcrowded, expensive to maintain and have little to no effect on the moral discipline of inmates. The current prison system is extremely inefficient and the purpose of prisons has been completely forgotten. According to Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology, the primary purpose of prisons is to punish, to protect, and to rehabilitate. Not only is there an increase in prisoners, but there is a rise in the number of repeat offenders. Alternatives such as counseling, drug rehabilitation, education, job training and victim restitution must be better enforced and organized. People do not understand the severity of the problem mainly because
In "Prison Studies" Malcolm X briefly details how, during his incarceration, he embarked on a process of self-education that forever changed him and the course of his life. Malcolm writes of his determination to learn to read and write, born out of his envy and emulation of Bimbi, a fellow prisoner. His innate curiosity, sense of pride, and ambition to learn and be someone of substance motivated him to study relentlessly. As he learned more about the world he developed a great thirst for knowledge that left him with a lifelong desire that only his continued studies could satisfy. He believed that prison offered him the best possible situation in which to educate himself.