Book contents
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- AN INQUIRY, &c
- The Borough Compter
- Tothill Fields
- St. Albans
- Guildford
- An Inquiry, Whether Crime and Misery Are Produced or Prevented, by Our Present System of Prison Discipline
- PART II
- Bury Jail, AND House of Correction
- The Maison de Force, at Ghent
- Prison of Philadelphia
- Penitentiary, Millbank
- Proceedings of the Ladies' Committee, at Newgate
- Conclusion
The Maison de Force, at Ghent
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2012
- Frontmatter
- PREFACE
- AN INQUIRY, &c
- The Borough Compter
- Tothill Fields
- St. Albans
- Guildford
- An Inquiry, Whether Crime and Misery Are Produced or Prevented, by Our Present System of Prison Discipline
- PART II
- Bury Jail, AND House of Correction
- The Maison de Force, at Ghent
- Prison of Philadelphia
- Penitentiary, Millbank
- Proceedings of the Ladies' Committee, at Newgate
- Conclusion
Summary
This prison is situated just out of the city. It was originally intended to be an octagon, but at present only five departments are finished;–still an entire separation is effected between,
Men and women,
The sickly and the healthy,
The untried and the convicted,
Misdemeanants and felons.
It is in contemplation to finish the building, and when this takes place, there will be six additional subdivisions. For each of the above description of prisoners, an open court is provided, in which they have their daily exercise.
First we saw the untried, and those who have appealed against their sentences. There is nothing peculiar in their treatment. They do not work, and no instruction is afforded to them.
We next visited the tried. Their beds are in small recesses, from a gallery opening to the court. Each has a separate sleeping cell, which is furnished with a metal bedstead, a thick mattress, a double sheet, a double and single blanket, and a pillow. The bedding is brought out to be aired in fine weather, and the doors are open all day. The rooms were perfectly sweet and clean.
The major part of the prisoners of the same class work together, in rooms 170 feet long and 26 broad. The principal employment is weaving calico, damask, and sacking cloth, but there are shops for sawyers, carpenters, blacksmiths, &c.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- An Inquiry, whether Crime and Misery are Produced or Prevented, by our Present System of Prison Discipline , pp. 83 - 89Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1818