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
Proceedings of the Ladies' Committee, at Newgate
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
About four years ago, Mrs. Fry was induced to visit Newgate, by the representations of its state, made by some persons of the Society of Friends.
She found the female side in a situation, which no language can describe. Nearly three hundred women, sent there for every gradation of crime, some untried, and some under sentence of death, were crowded together in the two wards and two cells, which are now appropriated to the untried, and which are found quite inadequate to contain even this diminished number, with any tolerable convenience. Here they saw their friends, and kept their multitudes of children, and they had no other place for cooking, washing, eating, and sleeping.
They slept on the floor at times one hundred and twenty in one ward, without so much as a mat for bedding, and many of them were very nearly naked. She saw them openly drinking spirits, and her ears were offended by the most terrible imprecations. Every thing was filthy to excess, and the smell was quite disgusting. Every one, even the Governor, was reluctant to go amongst them. He persuaded her to leave her watch in the office, telling her that his presence would not prevent its being torn from her. She saw enough to convince her that every thing bad was going on.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- An Inquiry, whether Crime and Misery are Produced or Prevented, by our Present System of Prison Discipline , pp. 113 - 136Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2009First published in: 1818