Ohio History Journal




THE HISTORY OF PENAL INSTITUTIONS IN

THE HISTORY OF PENAL INSTITUTIONS IN

OHIO TO 1850*

 

BY CLARA BELLE HICKS, M. A.

 

THE EARLY TERRITORIAL PERIOD

The History of Penal Institutions in Ohio properly

begins with the first settlements in the great North-

west Territory.   The development of institutions in

a frontier colony naturally depends to a large ex-

tent upon the character of the settlers and the need for

such institutions.

The first settlers arrived at Marietta, the first perma-

nent settlement in Ohio, on April 7, 1788.1 They came

under the auspices of the Ohio Company, a company

composed of prominent citizens of New England, or-

ganized expressly for the purpose of establishing a

pioneer settlement in the Northwest Territory.2 The

boundaries of the County of Washington in which

Marietta was located were created July 25, 1788 by

Governor St. Clair and they included nearly half of

Ohio. On July 2, 1788 the town was named Marietta

in honor of Marie Antoinette, Queen of France.3 The

great majority of the settlers were from New England

and brought with them characteristics and ideals of that

section.4 George Washington was personally acquain-

ted with several of the early settlers and he believed

 

* A thesis presented for the degree of Master of Arts in Ohio State

University, prepared under the direction of Professor Carl Wittke, Ph. D.

1 Randall and Ryan, History of Ohio II, 459.

2 Hildreth, Pioneer History of the Ohio Valley, 193-202, 206.

3 Ryan, History of Ohio, ch. III, 43.

4 Ibid., 35, 36

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they represented men who would build up a great com-

monwealth.5 The members of the Ohio Company,

familiar with the progress and benefits of education in

New England were interested in promoting education

in the new west and one of their first acts was the found-

ing of a library.6 The settlement seems to have been

singularly free from that lawless and adventurous ele-

ment so generally found in frontier communities.7

For many years Marietta grew            and flourished due

to the character of its inhabitants and their ideals of

thrift and industry.8 This is confirmed by reading the

Journal of T. M. Harris which he kept during a tour

into the Northwest Territory.9

While the influence of the sturdy New England

people was being felt so strongly at Marietta, other parts

of the Territory were being explored and settled by

 

5 Ford, The Writings of George Washington, XI, 282. In a letter

dated June 19, 1788, written to Richard Henderson, Washington says,

"No colony in America was ever settled under more favorable auspices,

as that which has just been commenced at the Muskingum. Informa-

tion, property and strength will be its characteristics. I know many of

the settlers personally, and there never were men better calculated to

promote the welfare of such a community."

6 Ryan, History of Ohio, 36. "The Directors of the Ohio Company

at Brackett's Tavern requested the settlers to 'pay as early attention as

possible to education of youth and among the first enterprises of the

pioneers was a library'."  Also cf. Atwater, The General Characteristics

of the People of Ohio, 14-17; Hildreth, Early History of the Northwest,

233; also Hildreth, Pioneer History of the Ohio Valley, 203, 261.

7 Ryan, History of Ohio, 35, 36.

8 Thwaites, Early Western Travels, XIX, 34. Ogden's Letters from

the West (1821-23). Among these letters is one dated May 7, 1821, con-

taining the following, "It (Marietta) was until within a few years one

of the most flourishing towns of the State, and even rivalled Cincinnati

in the taste and elegance of its buildings, enterprising spirit of its inhab-

itants and the commercial energies which pervaded the people."

9 Harris, The Journal of a Tour into the Northwest Territory, 58,

59. On June 6, 1803, Harris writes, "The industrious habits and neat

improvements of the people are strikingly contrasted with those of the

east. Here in Ohio they are intelligent, industrious and thriving. . . .

Most of the "Backwoods' men,' as they are sometimes called are emi-

grants from foreign countries, but the State of Ohio was settled by

people from  New   England, The Region of Industry, Economy, and

Steady habits."



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 361

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio  361

pioneers of different origin.10 The French were scat-

tered along the Ohio and Pennsylvanians of Irish and

German origin settled at Cincinnati and between the

Miamis but the section known as the Western Reserve

which was settled later,11 and the Muskingum Valley

were settled by the same New England stock as settled

Marietta. The influence of the South was felt in the

Scioto Valley which was settled almost entirely by

Virginians and Kentuckians.12

Among the leaders in the government of the North-

west Territory were men of rather exceptional knowl-

edge and ability. Congress had appointed Arthur St.

Clair as governor and he, together with James M. Var-

num from Massachusetts, Samuel Parsons from Con-

necticut and John Armstrong from Pennsylvania, the

first judges in the Northwest Territory, assumed direc-

tion of the first government as provided under the Ordi-

nance of 1787.13 Parsons was a graduate of Harvard

and had served as a general in the Revolution. Arm-

strong, a former student at Princeton, had been a major

in the American Revolution. Varnum, a graduate of

Brown, had served as an officer in the Continental Army

and had also been a member of the Continental Con-

gress.14

The Puritan ideals of these early New England set-

tlers of the Northwest Territory, and the influence of

these highly educated leaders in the government, with-

out doubt lessened the tendency of the community to

 

10 Howells, Stories of Ohio, 78.

11 Ryan, History of Ohio, 78.

12 Ibid., 56.

13 Ordinance of 1787--Sections 3, 4, also cf. Randall and Ryan,

History of Ohio, II, 463.

14 Randall and Ryan, History of Ohio, II, 463.



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crime. There is much contemporary evidence to the

effect that there was very little or no crime at first.15

According to all accounts the first court held in the

Northwest Territory was the court of common pleas

sitting at Campus Martius in Marietta, September 2,

1788, where it is probable that the sessions of the court

continued to be held for a number of years.16 A notable

procession formed at the Point, where most of the set-

tlers resided and proceeded to the appointed place. The

court was opened by prayer by Rev. Dr. Manasseh

Cutler, himself one of the directors of the Ohio Company

who was a visitor in Marietta at that time. "Happily

for the credit of the people," if we may believe the state-

ment of General Putnam, "there was no suit either civil

or criminal brought before the court."17

The early courts held in the Northwest Territory

resembled the old Anglo-Saxon courts of England.

They served not only as agencies to administer justice

among the pioneers, but incidentally, also furnished the

occasion for social gatherings in a frontier community

where these opportunities for social intercourse were

all too few. The courts were held annually until a law

 

15 Hildreth, Pioneer History of the Ohio Valley and the Northwest

Territory, 515. In the appendix following the description of the Fourth

of July celebration of 1788 these words are found, "One fact is certain,

that from the first settlement to this moment no one of the settlers hath

died or been killed, nor hath there so much as a horse been stolen.

"The people are in good health, high spirits, and extremely happy;

and they want nothing to complete their felicity, but their tender com-

panions whom they have left beyond the mountains, to participate with

them in the rising glories of the western world."

16 Andrews, Notes and Quotations from the Unbound Manuscripts

in Marietta College Library, 33.

17 Cf. Andrews, Washington County and Early Settlements of Ohio,

34--for the above quotation; Hildreth, Pioneer History of the Ohio

Valley and Northwest Territory, 232; also King, Ohio, 235; Hinsdale,

The Old Northwest, 277, 278; Chaddock, Ohio Before 1850, 52; Abbott,

History of Ohio, 302, 303; American Pioneer, 1, May, 1842, 163.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 363

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio   363

was passed, November 6, 1790, by which four sessions

a year were required.18

According to a law passed at Marietta, August 30,

1788,19 the judges were given authority to hold these

early courts, as settlements were made throughout the

Northwest Territory, at such places as they might de-

cide would be for the public good. Because of the wide

extent of the boundaries of the Territory, the judges

in their annual rounds of the courts had to make long

and most trying journeys to reach the points where

courts were convened. Often they would travel almost

a hundred miles without seeing an inhabited house and

this together with other hardships encountered in trav-

ersing forests, swamps, and plains, tested their physical

endurance to the limit. However, the warm welcome ac-

corded them by the Indians on the wayside and the set-

tlers wherever they went, and the different forms of

pioneer entertainment afforded them help to keep up

their spirits.20 Such men as Hammond, Corwin and

Ewing derived their early training from such experi-

ences.21

W. C. Howells, in Recollections of Life in Ohio refers

to the fact that the early settlers often went to law, for

reasons that today would seem trivial.  Many cases

were first gone over by the church authorities and if

the accuser was disappointed in the outcome he would

take his case to the courts. The church trial was in-

expensive and even the cost of a law-suit was so small

 

18 Chase, Statutes of Ohio and the Northwest Territory, Ch. XV,

Nov. 6, 1790.

19 Chase, Statutes of Ohio and the Northwest Territory, Ch. IV, 97,

Aug. 30, 1788--A law, fixing terms of general court.

20 Burnet, Notes on the Northwestern Territory, 63-75.

21 King, Ohio, 304.



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that men of moderate means did not hesitate to avail

themselves of it. Slander was one of the main causes

of litigation. As Mr. Howells says, "The trials served

to break the monotony of country life and sometimes

spiced it to a high degree."22

It has been pointed out above that the standard of

morals among the early pioneers was generally high,

nevertheless cases of slander and intemperance some-

times required the attention of the court. Heavy drink-

ing was characteristic of certain elements in the frontier

settlements. In one particular instance a judge of the

court sentenced those guilty of intemperance to digging

up a stump from the public thoroughfare.23 In some

cases the fines and penalties were quite disproportionate

to the offense. The early penal codes of the territory

inflicted the barbarous penalties that had distinguished

English law and law in the colonies,24 for centuries

before, and continued on our statute-books, in many

states for several decades longer. More than one of-

fender was condemned to death for petty larceny.25

The court also served as a price-fixing agency. It

could determine the price at which certain articles

might be sold; a half-pint of whisky at $15; corn at $10

a gallon; lodging in a featherbed, $6; a "diet," $12; and

stable or pasturage for one night, $4.26

The settlement of Cincinnati, on the Symmes Pur-

chase, was begun in October, 1788. This community

was settled largely by Kentuckians.27 Cincinnati, be-

 

22 Howells, Recollections of Life in Ohio, 157, 158.

23 Clark, The Picturesque Ohio, Ch. IV, 71.

24 Channing, History of the United States, II, 393.

25 Clark, The Picturesque Ohio, Ch. IV, 71.

26 Ibid., 71.

27 Chase, Statutes of Ohio and Northwest Territory, Preliminary

Sketch of Ohio, 21, 22.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 365

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio      365

cause of its strategic location, soon became a garrison

town and the drinking and gambling of some of its

soldier population was believed by many to have a bad

influence upon the pioneers. Nevertheless the court

held in a large room of a tavern does not seem to have

been burdened by an exceptionally heavy docket.28

Andrews says, "As early as 1792 the court of Quar-

ter Sessions submitted estimates for a court house and

jail--$1000 for each. In 1793 Thomas Lord was

directed to take a log house near Campus Martius and

fit it up for a jail."29

The above quotation leads one to believe there must

have been some law-breakers at that time to warrant

providing for a court house and jail. Also in 1794 the

lack of a "sufficient jail for the reception of Debtors and

Criminals" was greatly deplored by Ebenezer Batelle.30

In 1798 the court house and jail of Washington

County was begun. The structure was completed in

1799, the oldest of its kind in the state of Ohio. One

portion of it was used as a jail. It was well built and

was regarded for a long time as one of the strongest

prisons of the state.31

In accordance with the Ordinance of 178732 Gover-

nor St. Clair with the aid of the judges had the authority

to select for the Northwest Territory such laws from

 

28 Black, Story of Ohio, 110, 111.

29 Andrews, Washington County and the Early Settlements of Ohio,

34, 35.

30 Statement of Batelle is quoted in Andrews, Notes and Quotations

from Unbound Manuscripts in Marietta College Library, 33.

31 American Pioneer, I, 163, May, 1842. As proof of the strength

of the prison S. P. Hildreth says in his article written for the American

Pioneer on February 16, 1842, "No prisoner has ever escaped from its

cells except from the carelessness of the jailer. It was and is one of the

strongest prisons of the state."

32 The Ordinance of 1787--Section 5.



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History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 367

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio  367

the codes of the original states as might seem best suited

to the conditions of the new country. Congress, how-

ever, reserved the power to repeal them. Governor St.

Clair realized fully the importance of this part of his

duties. As a matter of fact, the governor and judges,

when satisfactory laws could not be found on the statute-

books of the older states suited to the conditions of the

new country, supplied the want by enactments of their

own. An examination of the laws from 1788 to the

period when Ohio entered the Union as a state (1803)

reveals that most laws were adopted from the codes of

Pennsylvania, Massachusetts, and Connecticut. A few

were taken from those of New Jersey, New York, Vir-

ginia and Kentucky. Among the earliest laws (1788)

were provisions for the organization of the militia, for

the establishment of inferior courts and for the punish-

ment of crime.33

A law respecting crimes and their punishment was

published by Governor St. Clair and Judges Parsons

and Varnum at Marietta, September 6, 1788. Although

up to this time the settlers were in general a law abiding

people, they felt the necessity of creating laws that

would, if possible, totally suppress crime.  In their

efforts to do this the modes of punishment were ex-

tremely severe. However, we find that these methods

were used in New England long before the Northwest

Territory was settled and it was natural that they should

try to apply them to the conditions in their new settle-

ment.

The sentences inflicted upon offenders against the

laws included whipping, confinement in stocks and pil.

33 Chase, Statutes of Ohio and the Northwest Territory, 19.



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lories, binding out to service, commitment to gaols, pay-

ment of fines and forfeiture of life and property.

Provision was made that a person convicted of arson

might be whipped not exceeding thirty-nine stripes;

placed in the pillory not exceeding the space of two

hours; confined in the gaol not exceeding three years

and forfeit all his estate to the territory. If a death

should ensue from burning, a death penalty could be

imposed.34 For larceny, the penalty for the first offense

was the return to the owner of two-fold value of the

things stolen, or if not recovered, a whipping not ex-

ceeding thirty-nine stripes.  If the offender had no

property, the offender could be bound out to hard labor

for a term not exceeding seven years to anyone who

would discharge the sentence.35

Housebreaking was, of course, a punishable crime.

If accompanied by personal abuse, or if the intruder

was armed, proving an intention of violence--then in

addition to the ordinary fine the offender's property was

confiscated and a sentence of imprisonment as long as

forty years might be inflicted.36 Drunkenness was also

considered a crime. The penalty for the first offense

being a fine of "five dimes" and for every succeeding

offense one dollar. For refusal or neglect to pay the

fine, the offender was set in the stocks for the space of

one hour.37 Later provision was also made for the

punishment of drunkenness.38

 

34 Laws of the Northwest Territory, I, 18-21.

35 Ibid., 23-25.

36 Laws of the Northwest Territory, I, 19-23.

37 Ibid., 27.

38 Chase, Statutes of Ohio and the Northwest Territory, Ch.

XCVIII, 98.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 369

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio  369

 

New England regard for parental authority was

most apparent, in section 19 of the law of 1788 which

provided that disobedient children or servants might be

sent to a gaol or house of correction until they should

humble themselves. Moreover, if any child or servant

should strike his parent or master, upon conviction

the offender should be whipped not exceeding ten

stripes.39

The New England method of observing the Sab-

bath was urged upon the settlers of the early territorial

period from the beginning. In Section 22 of the law just

referred to, it was "therefore enjoined that all servile

labor, works of necessity and charity only excepted be

wholly abstained from on this day."40 Some years

later, 1799, in an act for the prevention of vice and im-

morality, provision was made for similar observance

of the first day of the week. Accordingly a small fine

was imposed upon the offender. If the fine could not

be paid, the offender was to be committed to the charge

of the supervisor of the highways to work out his fine.

Provisions were also made for the suppression of pro-

fanity.41

As an example of the speedy justice meted out to a

person guilty of crime in pioneer times the case of

Paddy Grimes is interesting. He was a member of the

Miami Settlement. Having been found guilty of rob-

bing a truck patch he was sentenced to receive twenty-

nine lashes and the penalty was inflicted the same day.42

 

39 Laws of the Northwest Territory, 26.

40 Laws of the Northwest Territory, I, 30; also cf. Chase, Statutes

of Ohio and the Northwest Territory, 101.

41 Laws of the Northwest Territory, I, 28; Chase, Statutes of Ohio

and the Northwest Territory, Ch. XCIV, 98.

42 Burnet, Notes on the Northwest Territory, 57.

Vol. XXXIII -- 24.



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On August 5, 1792, an act passed at Cincinnati,

which was then the seat of government, provided that,

"There shall be erected and established in each and

every county not having the same already established

therein, a good and convenient court-house for the legal

adjudication of causes and a strong and sufficient com-

mon jail or prison for the reception and confinement of

debtors and criminals, well secured by timber, iron bars,

grates, bolts and locks and also a pillory, whipping-

post and so many stocks as may be convenient for the

punishment of offenders and every jail to be erected

shall have two departments, one of which shall be ap-

propriated to the reception of debtors and the other

shall be used for the safe keeping of persons convicted

of crimes."43

Punishment by whipping appears to have been the

sentence most often inflicted and thus we may draw the

conclusion that the judges considered it an effective

penalty. In 178844 according to the law the maximum

number of stripes was thirty-nine, and according to

Andrews, by a state law of 1805, fifty-nine stripes might

be inflicted for robbery and 100 for a second offense.

It is also stated that as late as 1811, fifty stripes might

be the sentence for destroying fruit trees.45 There is

every evidence that this primitive New England type

of punishment was not only characteristic of the early

territorial period but also that these barbarous emblems

of terror were employed in Ohio down to 1812.46

43 Laws of the Northwest Territory, 1792, 26.

44 Laws of the Northwest Territory, I, passim 23-31.

45 Andrews, Washington County and Early Settlements of Ohio, 37.

46 According to Powell, in Historic Towns of Western States,

"Almost before the seeds of New England harvests had germinated in

the virgin soil, Marietta had her pillory, whipping post and stocks for

the discipline of evil-doers, instruments of torture which lingered as late

as 1812"; also Smith, The St. Clair Papers, I, 147.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 371

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio    371

LOCATION AND CONSTRUCTION OF THE OHIO

PENITENTIARY

Return Jonathan Meigs, who was governor of Ohio

from 1811 to 1813, in his annual message of De-

cember 3, 1811, to the State Legislature meeting at

Zanesville discussed the expediency of the establishment

of a State Prison.1 This is the first record of any sug-

gestion by a governor that the State provide a place

for the incarceration and punishment of its criminals.

During the sessions of this same Legislature an

offer to donate to the State two plots of land of ten acres

each was made by a company composed of Lyne Star-

ling, John Kerr, Alexander McLaughlin, and James

Johnston. On one of these a State House was to be

erected, and on the other, a State Prison. This offer

was contingent on the establishment of the permanent

seat of government on the lands of the donors located

on the east bank of the Scioto River nearly opposite

Franklinton.2 The Legislature by an act passed Feb-

ruary 14, 1812 voted to accept these proposals and in

accordance with them a town which was destined to

become the city of Columbus was surveyed and laid out

under the supervision of a State Director who was pro-

vided for in the act, and the plot of land was set apart

on which the State Prison was to be erected. Included in

 

 

1 Senate Journal, 1812, 8, 9. In his message Governor Meigs says,

To your reflections on this subject is submitted the expediency of estab-

lishing by law a state prison, upon a suitable plan and under wholesome

regulations. . . . A small portion of that part of revenue which

goes into the county treasuries would soon complete a state prison."

2 Laws of Ohio, 1812, X, 92-94. An act fixing and establishing

permanent and temporary seats of government.



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the proposals of this company was an offer of $50,0003

toward the construction of a State House and State

Prison.4

A resolution passed by the General Assembly Feb-

ruary 18, 1812, authorized the appointment of a com-

mittee whose duty it should be to devise a plan for the

construction of the State House and the Penitentiary

and to decide upon the materials to be used.5 Two days

later, February 20, 1812, the Legislature agreed that

the State Director of Public Buildings should select the

squares and sites where the buildings were to be located,

and proceed to their construction according to the plans

of the committee. These plans related only to the size

of the prison building itself and to a surrounding wall--

the details should "be regulated by said director accord-

ing to the most approved models of modern architecture,

so as to combine, as far as possible, elegance, con-

venience, strength and durability."6

The State Legislature having passed the necessary

preliminary measures, the first penitentiary building

in Ohio was begun in 1813 and completed in 1815. It

was erected on the ten-acre lot which had been selected

for that purpose and which had been conveyed to the

State by the original proprietors of the town for the

erection of the penitentiary and its dependent buildings.

 

3 By authority of the Legislature granted January 28, 1817 (in an

act to provide for adjusting the account between the Proprietors of the

town of Columbus and the state for erecting public buildings--Laws of

Ohio, 1817, 171-173) the Governor was authorized to pay to the pro-

prietors the additional cost for the construction of these buildings which

amounted to $31,274; House Journal, 1830-31, 120--Report of Standing

Committee on Penitentiary.

4 Laws of Ohio, 1817, 171-173; Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 22.

5 Law of Ohio, 1812, X, 198-199.

8 Ibid., 199.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 373

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio     373

It was located in the southwest corner of the town

fronting on Scioto Street. William Ludlow, the state

director, had charge of its construction. Michael Pat-

ton undertook the carpenter work and Benjamin Thomp-

son, the mason work.7 The structure was built of brick

upon a stone foundation with stone walls projecting in

a line with the front--fifty feet on each side.  The

building was sixty feet in length by thirty feet in width.8

Including the basement which was partly underground

it was three stories high. The basement which was

divided into three parts was used for a cellar, kitchen,

and dining room for the prisoners. The second story

which was entered by high steps from the street was

used as the Keeper's residence. The third floor was

used for the prisoners only and it was laid off into thir-

teen cells -- there being nine light ones and four dark

ones. The third floor and basement could only be

entered from the interior of the yard.9 The area of

the prison yard including the site of the building was

approximately one hundred and sixty feet by one hun-

dred feet, and was enclosed by a stone wall fifteen feet

high.10

Upon the completion of the penitentiary building

which was essentially, in 1815, nothing more than a

state prison, and the passing of a law for the punish-

ment of crime, January 27, 1815,11 (the first statute in

 

7 Martin, History of Franklin County, 348; Studer, Columbus, Ohio,

368.

8 Laws of Ohio, 1812, X, 199.

9 Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 368, 369; Martin, History of Franklin

County, 368, 369.

10 Laws of Ohio, 1812, X, 199; Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 369; Ac-

cording to Martin, History of Franklin County, 348--the contractor in

charge of the construction of the wall was Colonel McDonald of Ross

County.

11 "Laws of Ohio, 1815, Ch. XXVIII, 85 ff.



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Ohio providing for punishment in the penitentiary) the

penitentiary system was officially introduced into Ohio.

Crimes which prior to this time had been punishable

by whipping were now punishable by imprisonment.12

For example, section 13 of the new law provided that

a person convicted for arson should be imprisoned for

a term varying from one to fifteen years.13

The first prisoners, two brothers, Jack and David

Evans, whose ages were nineteen and twenty years,

respectively, having been convicted of assault and bat-

tery with intent to murder and rob were committed to

the penitentiary on August 8, 1815.14 With their re-

ception the penitentiary system was definitely put into

operation in Ohio.

The original building was used as a prison but

three years, a new one being constructed in 1818. With-

in little more than a year after its completion the Board

of Inspectors in a report made November 24, 1816,

mentioned "the absolute necessity of enlarging the peni-

tentiary within the ensuing year."15  On December 7,

1816 Samuel Persons, President of the Board of In-

spectors reported that it would not accommodate con-

veniently, including its dark cells, more than sixty men

--exclusive of the dark cells, only fifty men. By

comparing the number received in the first year with

the average time of their imprisonment, and, without

allowing an additional number of the natural increase

in the state's population, Persons estimated that in

three and one half years there would probably be one

 

12 Ibid., passim, 85-105.

13 Ibid., 90-91. Cf. Ch. I, 9 of the present works.

14 House Journal, 1816, 63; Dyer, History of the Ohio Penitentiary, 8.

15 House Journal, 1816, 62.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 375

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio           375

hundred and ten prisoners. Therefore, on December 7,

1816, he advised that the prison be enlarged by twenty

additional cells and also that the prison yard be ex-

tended.16

In accordance with the recommendations of the

Board of Inspectors the General Assembly17 asked Gov-

ernor Worthington to obtain the services of a compe-

tent architect who should draw plans for the erection of

a new penitentiary and a building for work shops. This

proposed penitentiary was to accommodate one hundred

prisoners and was to be built only after studying other

prisons throughout the country, which might serve as

models for the Ohio Institution. Through correspond-

ence18 with Thomas Bradford, Jr., Inspector of the

State Prison of Pennsylvania, a plan for such a build-

ing was received. The aims of safety, health of the

prisoners, and economy in administration were care-

fully observed in this plan. It also included the prin-

ciple of solitary confinement.19 On January 3, 1818,

provision was made by the State Legislature for the

erection of the new Prison and a strong brick building

to be used for work shops. Provision was also made

for the use of convict labor in the work.20

 

16 House Journal, 1816, 63.  Also cf. chart opposite page 63 which

contains a list of the names of thirty-three prisoners who were confined

in the penitentiary on December 5, 1816, together with data regarding their

age, crime for which committed, term of imprisonment including sen-

tence to solitary confinement; county from which they came, distance and

cost of transportation, etc. It was compiled by the keeper, James Kooken.

17 "Laws of Ohio, XV, 239, 240.

18 House Journal, 1818, 65--for copy of Governor Worthington's

letter of July 11, 1817, to Thomas Bradford. For a copy of Bradford's

letter dated December 26, 1817, in response to Governor Worthington's

request, see Senate Journal, 1818, 208-213. Bradford also encloses a

letter from Benjamin Rush which is an argument for solitary confine-

ment.

19 Senate Journal, 1818, 209-211.

20 Laws of Ohio, XVI, 57-59.



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The new Prison built in 1818 was located near the

old one -- and like the former was made of brick upon

a stone foundation. In size it was one hundred and

fifty feet long by thirty-six feet wide.21 It was a two

story structure with center hall-ways eight feet wide

on either side of which the fifty-four cells were located.

There was also a dining room and kitchen on the first

floor and a hospital on the second floor. Below the sur-

face of the ground under the floor there were five dark

and solitary cells which could only be entered through

a trap-door in the hall. No provision was made for

heating or ventilating these cells. The outside wall of

the new prison was extended to four hundred feet by

one hundred and sixty feet, and was three feet in thick-

ness with a plank walk on its top and a hand rail on its

inner side. The work shops were placed near the center

of the enclosed yard.23 The original prison building of

1815 was reconstructed to serve as a residence for the

keeper.24

A number of the convicts were employed in grading

and digging down the hills of the elevated ground on

which the prison was located, and in levelling and gravel-

ling the yard. Others who had experience in such work

were used in preparing iron materials for the new

prison.25  The total cost of this new penitentiary built

in 1818, including the expenses incurred in erecting a

 

 

21 Ibid., 57.

22 Prison Discipline Society -- Annual Report for June 1, 1827, 83;

cf. Lee, History of Columbus, 578; Studer, Columbus, Ohio,369, Martin,

History of Franklin County, 351.

23 Laws of Ohio, XVI, 57; Martin, History of Franklin County, 351.

24 Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 369.

25 House Journal, 1819, 121-124, a report in regard to enlarging the

penitentiary.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 377

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio  377

building for additional workshops at that time, amounted

to $33,391.26

From the year 1822 the Institution hitherto known

as the State Prison or Penitentiary was to be designated

as "The Ohio Penitentiary" in all business and legal

matters.27

The number of persons committed to the penitentiary

increased so rapidly that by 1826 Governor Morrow

felt the necessity of bringing the conditions existing at

the Ohio Penitentiary to the attention of the Legislature

in his annual message. He pointed out that because of

the insufficient size of the penitentiary he had exercised

too free use of his power of pardon in order to make

room for new convicts. As a remedy for this condition

he felt that "more capacious prisons" must be planned.

Owing to the then existing lack of State funds he did

not agree with the suggestion of some that a new site

should be sought with the hope of making the prison

self-supporting.28 Governor Trimble in his annual mes-

sage to the General Assembly in 1827 again suggests

the "propriety of enlarging the prison buildings or of

erecting a new prison on a more improved plan."29

The Standing Committee on the Penitentiary in its

report of December 22, 1820, reported "The Peniten-

tiary is of too small a size to contain the number of

convicts necessary; it is insufficient as a place of con-

finement and safekeeping or of punishment and reform-

ation. It has been and if continued in the present con-

 

26 House Journal, 1830-31, 121, A report of Standing Committee on

the Penitentiary.

27 Laws of Ohio, 1822, 44.

28 House Journal, 1827, 23, Governor Morrow's message was deliv-

ered on December 6, 1826.

29 House Journal, 1827-1828, 21.



378 Ohio Arch

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dition, must continue to be expensive to the State, whilst

similar Institutions in other States, are productive and

yield a revenue."30 As a result of the committee's in-

vestigation the conclusion was reached that it was ad-

visable to provide a new prison building sufficiently large

to accommodate at least five hundred prisoners. The old

buildings had been poorly constructed and were now in

such a state of dilapidation that prisoners were often

able to escape from the cells and sometimes from the

prison itself. The committee also favored the introduc-

tion of the Auburn plan of solitary confinement which

would be impossible according to the plan of construction

of the old building.31 The conclusions of this Committee

were supported by the Keeper's annual report of Feb-

ruary 28, 1831, in which he pointed out that for six

years it had been generally agreed that a complete

renovation of the prison and its form of management

was necessary.32 The fact that most of the work shops

had been destroyed by a fire of incendiary origin in

October, 1830, added to the need for new and better

equipment.33

Governor McArthur in his annual message of Decem-

ber 6, 1821, presented a detailed account of the situation

based on a personal investigation of the State Prison.

He emphasized the fact that the location of the prison

on uneven ground was not desirable; that the buildings

were too dilapidated to be worth repairing and also

much too small; and that as constructed, it was a school

of vice, since it was impossible to isolate the convicts.

 

30 House Journal, 1830-31, 115.

31 House Journal, 1830-31, 115-122.

32 Senate Journal, 1831, passim 493, 497.

33 House Journal, 1830-31 in Annual Report of the Keeper, pages

33, 34.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 379

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio  379

He advised that a new site be secured and that a new

penitentiary be built upon the Auburn or Wethersfield

plan.34

M. T. Williams, Alfred Kelley, and Ebenezer Buck-

ingham, commissioners appointed to view a site for a

new penitentiary, reported February 13, 1831, after

careful investigation, in favor of removing the prison

from Columbus. They arrived at their conclusions after

fully considering the possibility of establishing two

State Prisons, one at Akron and the other at Dayton,

points geographically located so as to lessen the cost of

transportation of convicts, but finally abandoned this

plan because of the additional cost of construction and

operation of two prisons. The comparative advantages

of three places other than Columbus were then con-

sidered, Cincinnati, Rockville and Zanesville.  The

commissioners reported in favor of Zanesville because

it was a rapidly growing manufacturing town favorably

situated for commerce.35

The elaborate and minute report of the commis-

sioners was, however, ignored by the legislature, and an

act for the establishment of a new penitentiary was

passed February 8, 1832, providing that it be erected

at Franklinton or Columbus. Another provision of

this act was the election by the General Assembly of

three directors of the new penitentiary whose compensa-

tion per year was to be $100 each. These directors were

to secure a site for the new prison and to appoint a

superintendent of buildings whose salary was not to

 

34 Senate Journal, 1832, 9.

35 House Journal, 1831, passim, 456-485.



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exceed $1000 per year. The latter was to secure a plan

for the penitentiary and superintend its construction,

including the contracting for all materials and the hiring

of the necessary labor.36

The Directors reported December 6, 1832, that after

having carefully considered the advantages of the sites

proposed and the generous donations that had been

offered, they had concluded to select the site37 on the

east bank of the Scioto River and north of Columbus.

In securing a title to the site some unexpected difficulties

arose. However, the board of directors made an agree-

ment with five "public-spirited" citizens of Columbus,

namely, Joseph Ridgway, Jr., Otis Crosby, Samuel

Crosby and W. D. Deshler, who in consideration of

$750,000 succeeded in purchasing fifteen acres of land

from the original proprietors who were living in Phila-

delphia. A deed for this plot of ground which con-

tinues to be the site of the penitentiary was transferred

to the State on October 7, 1832. The cost of the whole

site, including a small piece of land adjoining the fifteen

acres which was desired for the purpose of securing a

good landing on the river bank, amounted to eight hun-

dred dollars.38

In May, 1832, Nathaniel Medbery was appointed

superintendent of buildings. Soon after contracts were

36 Laws of Ohio, XVI, Ch. XXIII, 57-59.

37 The site was wisely selected as is shown by the following quota-

tion from Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850 in Annual

Report of Directors for December 10, 1834, p. 3, "The progress of the

work has been greatly facilitated by some advantages in the site of the

Prison, not anticipated at the time of its selection. Excellent clay for

brick making is found within the Prison yard; and an abundant supply

of sand, and of good quality, is also found upon the Prison ground.

The value of the sand alone, in the construction of the buildings and

walls of this institution, is more than twice as great as the whole cost

to the State of the Prison site of fifteen acres."

38 House Journal, 1833, 43-46.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 381

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio         381

made for stone and brick for this prison.39 One of the

Directors visited the Auburn Prison in New York, that

of Wethersfield in Connecticut and the  Prison of

Charlestown, Massachusetts. It was decided to base the

plan of the Ohio Penitentiary upon that of the Wethers-

field prison, and the Superintendent of Buildings fol-

lowed this decision, in the main, although in some details

the plan was changed and somewhat improved.40

The building, constructed under the direction of

Superintendent Medbery according to the adopted plan,

was four hundred feet long. The residence for the

keeper and the guard room were in the center. The

building contained seven hundred cells. The surround-

ing walls were twenty-four feet high.41 The New

Penitentiary was in process of building from March,

183342 to 1837 when the Directors declared it completed

in their Annual Report of December 12, 1837.43 A

building which contained a well-appointed hospital44 was

erected in 1833. The Penitentiary itself was so far

completed that the prisoners were transferred to it on

October 28 and 29, 1834, and Nathaniel Medbery, the

first warden, as provided for by act of February 8, 1832,

was duly installed.45

In 1837 a building was provided for women pris-

 

39 Ibid., 45.

40 Ibid.

41 Ibid., 46.

42 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Report of William

W. Gault, Keeper of Ohio Penitentiary, November 15, 1833, 3.

43 Ibid., Annual Report of Directors, December 12, 1837, 4.

44 Lewis, The Development of American Prisons and Prison Customs,

263. Lewis in this book mentions the fact that when Gerrish Barrett

visited the Ohio Prison in 1843-44, as a representative of the Prison

Discipline Society, he said of this hospital, "One of the best planned

hospitals that I ever saw is in this Prison."

45 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Report of Direc-

tors, December 10, 1834, 4.



382 Ohio Arch

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oners to the east of the main building. This was equip-

ped with eleven cells and could accommodate as many

more. In addition there were rooms in this building

where the women followed various employments during

the day.46

The final cost of the penitentiary was $93,370.50 in-

cluding 1,113,462 days of convict labor47 (estimated

cost $78,428). All materials and equipment from the

old building, which were useful in the new, were trans-

ferred.48 The Penitentiary as constructed was well

built and the materials used were the best that could

be obtained. The plan followed the most approved

methods and theories of prison management. The new

equipment now afforded the opportunity to put into

practice a long desired change in methods and manage-

ment.

The disposal of the original penitentiary lot donated

to the state was the cause of much contention and long

discussion. Being no longer in use for the penitentiary

buildings, should it revert to the original proprietors or

their heirs, or remain the property of the state? The

question having been carried from one court to another

through a long term of years was finally decided in

favor of the state and by an act of the Legislature in

1856 the Governor was ordered to have the land laid

off in lots and sold. The next Legislature voted one

thousand dollars ($1000), on her petition, to Martha

 

 

46 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Annual Report of

Directors, December 12, 1837, 4.

47 Ibid.

48 Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 371.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 383

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio            383

McLaughlin, widow of Alexander McLaughlin, one of

the donors of the land.49

 

THE FIRST PERIOD IN THE HISTORY OF THE OHIO

PENITENTIARY (1815-1834)

The organization of the first Penitentiary of Ohio

took place in August, 1815, when the building was com-

pleted and ready for the reception of prisoners. By

an act1 passed in January of the same year the General

Assembly by a joint ballot elected a Board of Five In-

spectors, which was given the power to name a Keeper

for the prison and to formulate such rules and regula-

tions for the management of the institution as from

time to time might be deemed necessary. James Kooken

was appointed as the first Keeper of the Prison and he

selected Colonel Griffith Thomas as his clerk. These

two men together with three or four guards consti-

tuted the administrative authorities for the manage-

ment of the prison and the safe-keeping of the convicts.2

According to the law of January 30, 18153 the

members of the Board of Inspectors4 were elected an-

 

49 Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 373, 374; Lee, History of Columbus, I,

581.

1 Laws of Ohio, 1815, 117, 118. An act for carrying into effect the

act for punishment of crimes.

2 Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 370; Martin, History of Franklin County,

350.

3 Laws of Ohio, 1815, passim, 118-127.

4 This Board of Inspectors has often been referred to by authori-

ties as a "Board of Directors." The terms appear to have been synony-

mous. For instance Orth in The Centralization of Administration in

Ohio in Studies in History, Economics and Public Law, edited by faculty

of Columbia University, XVI, 109, states in reference to the conduct of

the Penitentiary from 1816 to 1890, "Its management has been in the

hands of a board of directors appointed at first by the Legislature and

later by the Governor and the Senate. Practically the only changes in

administration have been in the members of this board, their method of

appointment and the designation of subordinate officers they may appoint.

These changes have been dictated by party politics, the penitentiary being

a fruitful source of party manipulation."



384 Ohio Arch

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nually. Each inspector was to receive the sum of $2.00

per day for each and every day necessarily employed

in the duties of their appointment. In addition to the

duties of the Inspectors as mentioned above the law

provided that they hold meetings quarterly in the prison

and that two inspectors appointed by the board itself

(to be changed as often as convenient) should visit the

prison once each week to inspect its management by the

Keeper and assistants, and to examine the accounts of

the clerk.5 The law of 1819 reduced the number of in-

spectors from five to three members.6 The board of

control of the Penitentiary continued to be designated

as a Board of Inspectors until the passing of a law of

March, 1831, which provided for a Board of three

Directors whose duties were virtually those of the Board

of Inspectors.7

The law of 1815 provided that the Keeper be elected

annually.8 Four years later, 1819, the law was changed

and his term of office was extended to three years, and

he was to be elected directly by the Legislature instead

of by the Board of Inspectors. By this same law, how-

ever, the Inspectors were given the power with consent

of the Governor to remove the Keeper at any time. In

case the Keeper died during his term of office the Gov-

ernor appointed his successor.9 In 1821 the law restored

the provision for annual elections and this law continued

in operation until the office of Keeper was changed to

that of Warden in October, 1834.10

 

5 Laws of Ohio, 1815, 120-127.

6 Chase, Statutes of Ohio, 1056, passed January 28, 1819.

7 Laws of Ohio, XXIX, 227, 228--Act passed March 12, 1831.

8 Laws of Ohio, 1815, 122.

9 Chase, Statutes of Ohio, 1058.

10 Chase, Statutes of Ohio, 1179.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 385

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio    385

The salary and duties of the Keeper varied somewhat

from time to time. The law of 181511 provided that his

salary be $700 per year; in 181912 his salary was fixed

at $600 plus 3% of the sale value of articles manufac-

tured in the Penitentiary. His salary was again changed

in 1821,13 when the keeper was to be given $600 plus

2% of the income derived from the sale of all manufac-

tured articles, but his salary was not to exceed $1000.

By the law of 182214 the Keeper's salary was fixed at

$1000, but from this amount he was also to pay his

clerk. The salary remained at this figure until the in-

stallation of a Warden, in 1834.15

It was the duty of the Keeper, with the approval

of any two inspectors, to contract and purchase tools

and clothing for the prisoners, to keep separate ac-

counts relating to the maintenance of prisoners, to the

articles manufactured and sold, and to materials and

stock on hands; to provide coarse and wholesome food

for the prisoners, to punish convicts by confinement in

solitary cells and to pay all prison debts.16

The office of the State Agent was created in January,

1819.17 He was elected18 by the Legislature for a term

of three years, at a salary of $600 per year, plus 2%

of the money paid by him into the treasury. The salary

was not to exceed $1000, however. The duties of the

State Agent were to sell articles manufactured in the

 

11 Laws of Ohio, 1815, 124.

12 Chase, Statutes of Ohio, 1057.

13 Ibid., 1180.

14 Ibid., 1182.

15 Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 369.

16 Laws of Ohio, 1815, 120-124.

17 Chase, Statutes of Ohio, 1058.

18 Ibid., 1181--the act of 1821 provided that the Agent be elected

annually and at a salary of $500 plus 3% on all money deposited by him

in the treasury; Howe, Historical Collections of Ohio, I, 643.

Vol. XXXIII--25.



386 Ohio Arch

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Penitentiary for cash or on credit at his discretion, but

no accounts were to run for more than six months. The

latter precaution seemed necessary because purchasers

were frequently tempted to take advantage of the Peni-

tentiary credit system.19 It was also the duty of the

Agent to deposit in the treasury each week the amount

of money received from sales and collections during the

preceding week, together with a statement from whom

received; to keep a careful account with the State; to

call on the Keeper each Saturday night and receive

from him all articles manufactured in the Penitentiary

during the week, together with a list of prices at which

the Keeper decided the manufactured articles should be

sold; and to deposit such goods in a store-house con-

tiguous to the prison.20 Pursuant to this law the former

clerk,21 Colonel Griffith Thomas, was elected agent. He

performed his duties faithfully until the office of agent

was abolished by law in 1822.22

The law of 1821 provided that a Director be ap-

pointed by the Legislature at a salary of $500 per year.

He was to make application in writing at the beginning

of each quarter for money to purchase materials and

clothing to be used in the Penitentiary. It was also

 

19 The following quotation which refers to this subject is found in

Lee, History of the City of Columbus, II, 579: "A considerable propor-

tion of prison-made goods seems to have been disposed of on credit.

On February 20, 1817, James Kooken, Keeper, O. P., made the following

appeal: 'The time has arrived when the subscriber finds himself under

the necessity of calling all those who are indebted to him for articles

purchased from the Penitentiary to immediate payment. His indulgence

to them has been at his own risk and injury and he now has express

orders from the board of inspectors to put all notes and accounts in

suit, which shall remain unpaid on the tenth day of March next'."

20 Chase, Statutes of Ohio, 1058.

21 Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 371. "The successive clerks, after the

office of agent was abolished in 1822, and until their removal were

Cyrus Fay, Henry Matthews, George Whitmore, W. T. Martin, Nelson

Talmage, Timothy Griffith and Uriah Lathrop.

22 Ibid., 371.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 387

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio    387

his duty to relieve the Keeper of the payment of prison

expense, to instruct the Keeper in regard to what articles

should be manufactured and the quantity thereof, and

to direct the agent to make contracts with merchants

for the sale of manufactured articles in exchange for

such materials or produce as could be used in the Peni-

tentiary.23

A Mr. H. Brown held this office for one year when

the duties of Director were transferred to the Agent.

After the abolishment of the office of Agent in 1822 the

duties of both Agent and Director were assumed by the

Keeper and Clerk.24

The first provision for the employment of a Physi-

cian for the Penitentiary is found in a law of January

29,1821, giving the Director the power of appointment.

This law provided that the compensation paid such

Physician for attendance and medicine for any one year

should not exceed $200. According to the Report of

Director Brown made December 3, 1821, the expense

for medical attention for the Penitentiary was saved

during that year by making use of one of the convicts

who was a physician.25

Such were the duties of the corps of officers who

assumed the management of the Ohio Penitentiary.

Their aims and policies were sometimes at variance with

the real purposes of a prison system as defined by Gov-

ernor Meigs in his Annual Message of 1811. In this

he had suggested that the first result to be secured by a

Penitentiary should be the safety of the public, and the

 

23 Chase, Statutes of Ohio, 1180, 1181. The following statement in

regard to such exchange is found in Lee, History of the City of Colum-

bus, II, 579. "An advertisement of 1826 stated that pork would be re-

ceived at prison in exchange for manufactured articles."

24 Chase, Statutes of Ohio, 1180; House Journal, 1821-22, 66, 67.

25 Chase, Statutes of Ohio, 1183; House Journal, 1821-22, 67.



388 Ohio Arch

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second, the reformation of the convict and his eventual

restoration to society.26 In contrast with these aims, a

careful inspection of the annual reports of the officers

of the Penitentiary from year to year (1816-1834) re-

veals the fact that the idea of making "the Penitentiary

pay," of making it produce a revenue to the State, was

paramount in the minds of the administrative officers,

and the desire to reform the convict was only a secon-

dary, or even incidental consideration. As early as

December 8, 1817, Jeremiah McLene, President of the

Board of Inspectors, deplored the fact that the institu-

tion had not been so productive from a financial point

of view as had been desired. He attributed this failure

to the lack of room to properly employ the convicts.27

Discipline in the early years of the history of the

Penitentiary was necessarily exceedingly lax. The build-

ings from 1815 to 1834 were always too small to care

adequately for the convicts. Housing facilities were

poor, and the equipment was inadequate both for the

punishment and also the reformation28 of the prisoners.

Very early during the administration of Keeper Kooken

there were few convicts in the Prison. The Keeper was

a kind-hearted man and at times when work for the

prisoners was slack, much freedom was given to them.29

Kooken was succeeded by Barzillai Wright whose elec-

 

26 Senate Journal, 1812, 8.

27 House Journal, 1818, 70-72.

28 Boston Prison Discipline Reports, 1826-32, Annual Report, June

1, 1827, 84.

29 Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 370--states the following, "There being

at times but little work for the prisoners, they were allowed to amuse

themselves in various ways. One was to play ball against the west end

of the north wing of the building. They had a dog in the yard so trained

that when the ball fell over the wall, he would go to the main door of

the front building, summon the guard, pass out, get the ball, and return

it to the prisoners."



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 389

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio  389

tion in 1822 was the occasion of much opposition. This

arose from the fact that Wright had only been a resi-

dent of the State for three months and was thought to

be ineligible according to the Constitution of Ohio, which

provided that office holders in any county must have

been residents of the State for one year previous to

election. The friends of Kooken also felt that he should

have been retained because of his seven years of faith-

ful and acceptable service. Since the office of Keeper

was a state position and not mentioned in the Constitu-

tion, Wright30 was finally allowed to enter upon his term

of office. His death occurred in the summer of 1823

after less than two years of service and Nathaniel Mc-

Lean was named by Governor Morrow to serve out his

unexpired term. He remained as the Keeper of the

Penitentiary until 1830. For the next two years the

office was filled by Byram Leonard of Knox County.

The last Keeper was W. W. Gault who held the office

from the spring of 1832 until the official title of Keeper

was changed to that of Warden when the prisoners were

removed to the New Penitentiary in 1834.31

An account of the management during the first

period of the Ohio Penitentiary's existence would be

incomplete without some reference to the methods of

punishment employed and the slight attention paid to

the reformation of those confined within its walls. The

only provision relating to the discipline of the Ohio

Penitentiary specified by law prior to 1834 was for con-

finement in solitary cells and deprivation of tobacco and

other privileges. The former appears to have served as

 

30 House Journal, 1821-22, 323-329.

31 Cf. Martin, History of Franklin County, 350; Studer, Columbus,

Ohio, 370.



390 Ohio Arch

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punishment for almost any misdemeanor of the pris-

oners. Section 15 of the law of 1815 gives the Keeper

power to punish prisoners guilty of assault and battery,

cursing and swearing, idleness, negligence in work, wil-

ful mismanagement of it or disobedience, by confinement

in the gruesome solitary cells or dungeons. During this

confinement, which was not to exceed five days, pris-

oners were to be fed only bread and water. The law

also provided that prisoners guilty of any other crime

not named in Section 15, upon advice of the inspectors

might be sentenced by the Keeper to thirty days in

these cold, dark, unsanitary cells. Upon commitment to

the prison the courts also sentenced prisoners to short

periods of confinement in the solitary cells as well as to

imprisonment at hard labor.32 Keeper McLean in his

annual Report of November 15, 1823 suggested the

adoption of the Stepping Mill as an additional and most

effectual method of punishment. He quoted writers on

the subject to the effect that officials seldom found it

necessary to inflict this punishment twice.33 No account

has been found to show whether or not the Stepping

Mill was ever put in use. Just how often and with what

severity these modes of punishment were inflicted can-

not be determined from the Annual Reports of the

various Keepers.

As evidence of some real need for moral reforma-

tion among the convicts of the Ohio Penitentiary a law

passed in 1821 provided that each convict be furnished

with a Bible by the Director, the cost of such Bibles to

be paid out of the State treasury. It also provided that

the Director should permit, as often as he thought

 

32 Laws of Ohio, 1815, 120-124.

33 House Journal, 1824, 32-40.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 391

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio           391

proper, a regular minister of the Gospel to preach to

convicts.34 This is the first law found relating to re-

ligious help and instruction. Keeper Wright suggested

in his annual Report of November 15, 1822, that min-

isters of different denominations be requested to preach

to the prisoners.35 In 182636 Keeper McLean reported

that the need for religious instruction was greatly felt

and he was disappointed in the hope he had entertained

that the Prison Discipline Society, newly organized in

Boston, Massachusetts, would send under their patron-

age a minister to the Ohio Penitentiary. The Rev.

James Chute, who served as chaplain in 1828, was ap-

pointed by the Synod of the Presbyterian Church at a

salary of $30 per month. This was made possible by

personal subscriptions of the Presbyterian Ministers re-

siding in that region.37 Religious services were held

under his direction almost every Sabbath, with some

profit to the convicts. Governor Trimble in his annual

message expressed appreciation for the service rendered

by the Synod in furnishing a temporary chaplain for

the Penitentiary.38 No definite provision was made

34  Chase, Statutes of Ohio, 1183.

35 Ibid., 1221.

36  House Journal, 1827, 38-42.

37 House Journal, 1829, 13-15; Lewis, The Development of American

Prisons and Prison Customs, 262.

38 House Journal, 1827-28, 19, 20--In regard to conditions of

reformation and punishment, he continues, "The utter inability of the

Penitentiary to meet the constantly accumulating charges upon it, and

failure to produce reformation on convicts has given rise to prejudice

against the system and to the opinions favorable to a, more summary,

severe, and less expensive mode of punishment. That there is something

appertaining to the institution radically wrong requires no proof, it is

obvious to all . . . . it is the old building rather than the manage-

ment--And is it not equally unreasonable to expect the present mode

of discipline to effect reformation? Our prison with such a community

as we find within its walls, crowded in workshops during the day, and

in lodging rooms at night, the old hardened and accomplished villains,

indiscriminately mingling with the young and comparatively innocent,

would more properly be called a school of vice than a place of probation

for civil society--the plan of hard labor by day and solitary confinement

by night is advisable."



392 Ohio Arch

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by law for a regular employment of a religious instruc-

tor or chaplain for the Ohio Penitentiary with salary

paid by the State prior to the year 1834.

According to laws passed regulating their employ-

ment, the inmates of the Penitentiary were to work

every day of the week except Sunday and for as many

hours each day as the seasons of the year and the kind

of work, on which they were employed, would permit.39

They were in the main employed in manufacturing or

working on State account until 1834. The materials

and machinery were furnished by the Officers of the

Penitentiary who also used or sold their products. Their

chief employment was work in the prison at various

trades, for instance, in coopering, blacksmithing, tailor-

ing and shoemaking.40 As different forms of employment

were found to be successful and remunerative, they were

introduced and encouraged. Care had to be taken at all

times not to produce an article beyond the demand for

its use and so overstock the store house41 and produce

idle capital. It was also necessary to manufacture

articles the raw materials for which were cheap. The

spinning and weaving42 business were carried on with

profit. A storehouse was kept for reception and dis-

posal of the manufactured articles of the Prison and a

system of barter was carried on.43

 

39 Laws of Ohio, 1815, 118; Chase, Statutes of Ohio, 1057, 1058, 1179.

40 Contract Labor System. Report of Commission, 84.

41 A brick store-house was erected for the purposes in 1823--See

Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 371.

42 In Lee, History of Columbus, II, 579 is found the following ref-

erence to carpets woven in the Penitentiary, "Mrs. Emily Steward in-

forms the writer that her mother had her carpets woven in the prison,

and that when she delivered the raw material she always took with her

a large basket filled with cakes, pies, and doughnuts, which she gave to

the prisoners to insure good work."

43 Ibid., 579.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 393

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio      393

Prison labor was apportioned according to the

adaptability of the prisoners to certain lines of work.

In the year 1822 among the one hundred and fourteen

prisoners employed were found four blacksmiths, four

blowers and strikers, twelve spinners, six quillers and

warpers, three wagon makers, three lathe turners, two

tinners, five wood and iron turners, two tailors, two

flax and hemp dressers, one butcher, one baker, one

soapmaker, three chair makers, eight coopers and

twenty-one shoemakers.44

The following table (for the year 1826) illustrates

the results gained by the systematic manufacture of

articles found to bring fair profits.45

Raw materials Manufactured     Profits

and repairs                 articles

Blacksmiths .......... $2,913.44      $ 3,783.93         $ 875.49

Coopers .............. 1,051.74          1,473.96            422.22

Wheelwrights .........  676.79         1,343.37            666.58

Shoemakers .......... 2,722.18           4,838.09            2,115.91

Cabinetmakers ........                      913.91               1,681.76                 767.85

Gunsmiths ............                        431.11                   967.62                                 536.51

Turners .............                           90.18                     299.87 1/2           209.69 1/2

Weavers .............                          341.92               1,170.62                 828.70

Tailors ...............                           13.02                                   818.50                 805.48

Combmakers ..........                       149.47                   421.32                 271.85

Ploughmakers .........                      30.00                     51.50                                   21.50

-----------  --------------                   -------------

$9,433.76  $16,350.54 1/2  $7,521 78 1/2

In addition to the employment of convicts within

the prison walls, prisoners aided in 1818 in the con-

struction of the new prison building.46 In 1827-28 in

accordance with a law passed by the Legislature in 1826

44 House Journal, 1823, 6, 7.--Report made by B. Wright, K. O.

Penitentiary.

45 House Journal, 1827, 120-121, Report made December 26, 1826, by

Keeper McLean.

46 House Journal, 1819, 121-124, a Report of Board of Inspectors,

December 18, 1818, in regard to the enlarging of the penitentiary.



394 Ohio Arch

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commuting punishment of certain convicts for labor

on the Columbus Feeder of the Ohio Canal, seventy-

nine prisoners were employed in this public work. The

prisoners selected were only those whose record gave

them some claim to a pardon, and who would probably

from necessity have been discharged from the prison

during the season to make room for new convicts. $3000

thus earned during the year 1827 was regarded as clear

profit to the State as those who earned it would have

remained idle in the Prison for want of room to work.47

Prison labor was also employed in the construction

of the new Penitentiary building. Brick making, and

stone cutting, as well as such mechanical labor as the

making of locks, doors and grates was performed by

the convicts. They were also engaged in the actual

construction of the building, a resolution having been

passed by the General Assembly in 1832 which author-

ized the Commutation of sentence48 for this purpose.

Governor Lucas' comments (December 3, 1833) are

significant, "from fifty to eighty persons were employed

in the early part of the season; but a small portion of

the mechanical work at the new Prison could be done

by the prisoners. They had first to learn the trades;

many of them were found to be ingenious and mani-

fested a desire to learn and make themselves useful.

This happy result may in a great measure be attributed

to the effects of the resolution of the last General As-

sembly, authorizing the commutation of the sentence.

The proposition was made to the prisoners generally,

and on condition of continued obedience and good con-

 

47 House Journal, 1827-28, 19.

48 Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 370.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 395

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio  395

duct.  .  .   . The effect of said resolution may be

easily seen, when it is known that upwards of a hundred

able-bodied persons have, the latter part of the season,

been kept at work at the new prison through the day,

and marched in perfect order to and from the old

prison, mornings and evenings, with from six to eight

guards, and without an escape."49

In spite of the efforts of Prison Managers to make

the Ohio Penitentiary a source of revenue to the State

it proved to be a liability rather than an asset. No doubt

the old prison building which was inadequate for the

employment of all the convicts contributed to this finan-

cial failure. Then, too, the costs of conducting prosecu-

tions in the counties in which the prisoners were con-

victed and the expenses of their transportation to the

Prison were charged to the Penitentiary treasury and

were a constant drain upon its resources. During the

period from November 15, 1823 to November 15, 1829

the average expense for prosecution and transportation

amounted to $4,620.88. It was felt that this expense

should be charged to the various counties of the state

from which the convicts came.50

The general health of the prisoners was often im-

paired because of the unsanitary conditions existing in

the old building. The cells were damp and unheated.

According to a report of 1830 it was found necessary,

to economize with the covering, to put as many as four

convicts in each cell in the winter time. They slept

 

 

49 Senate Journal, 1834, 16, 17--Annual Message--; Ohio Annual

Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, 1, 2. Annual report of W. W. Gault,

K. O. Penitentiary, November 15, 1833.

50 Senate Journal, 1831, 493, 494.



396 Ohio Arch

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upon beds of straw on the floor.51 The year 182252 was

marked by a great deal of illness in the Prison and in

1833 a mild epidemic of cholera broke out among the

prisoners. Its cause was partly attributed to the un-

sanitary condition of the Prison, but the epidemic was

prevalent in the city of Columbus at the time time. Of

the two hundred and three convicts in prison at the time

very few escaped an attack. W. W. Gault, then Keeper

of the Ohio Penitentiary reported that during the month

of July, 1833, about one hundred were confined to the

hospital with premonitory symptoms, that forty had

perfect cholera and that eleven died. It was not until

early in September that the prisoners had recovered

from the epidemic sufficiently to enable them to resume

their work.53

This epidemic occurred just a year before the open-

ing of the new Penitentiary. It was earnestly hoped that

the new institution would correct the defects of the old

Penitentiary System, and make the institution not only

a profitable enterprise for the State treasury, but a

place for the reformation of the unfortunate inmates

as well.

 

THE SECOND PERIOD OF THE HISTORY OF THE

OHIO PENITENTIARY (1834-1850)

The second period of the history of the Ohio Peni-

tentiary begins with the removal of the convicts from

the old prison building to the new Penitentiary October

28 and 29, 1834. The number of convicts had grown

 

51 House Journal, 1830, 360-363.

52 House Journal, 1824, 32-40--Annual Report.

53 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Annual Report of

W. W. Gault, K. O. Penitentiary (November 15, 1833).



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 397

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio  397

from seven in 1815 to one hundred and eighty-nine.1

A complete reorganization took place with the opening

of this new building, which had been planned and con-

structed with a view to installing the Auburn system

of management.2

In accordance with a law for the erection of a new

Penitentiary and regulation of Prison discipline passed

February 8, 1832, the General Assembly made provision

for a Board of three Directors for the Penitentiary, to

be elected by joint ballot of the Legislature. It was the

duty of this board not only to direct the building of the

new Penitentiary but also to appoint a superintendent

of construction for the same, as well as to make rules and

regulations for the discipline of the Penitentiary, to in-

spect the Warden's accounts and to make reports to the

General Assembly. The members of the Board of Direc-

tors received a salary of $100 per month. The first

member elected was to hold his office for a term of three

years, the second for two years and the third for one

year.3 This change in tenure of office of the Board of

Directors indicates a step in advance in prison manage-

ment. It had been possible up to this time to have a

complete change in the membership of the board an-

nually. Politics could not play as active a part in the

affairs of the Prison when but one member of the Board

was changed each year. Such a provision was made

with the expectation that it would conserve the best

interest of the Penitentiary and the State.

 

 

1 Report of the Commission on Contract Labor System in the Ohio

Penitentiary, 1884, 12.

2 Lewis, The Development of American Prisons and Prison Customs,

260.

3 Laws of Ohio, XXX, 24, 25. February 8, 1832.



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As soon as the new Penitentiary was fitted for the

reception and employment of convicts the Directors were

authorized to appoint a Warden who was to hold his

office during their pleasure. His salary was to be $1000

per year. The Warden was to appoint his own assist-

ants (not to exceed twenty) whose salary should not

exceed $25 per month; to purchase raw material to be

manufactured in the Penitentiary, to attend to the sale

of all articles manufactured therein, to provide food

and clothing for the convicts, and to have general charge

of the operation of the institution. All moneys drawn

from the treasury for the use of the prison were to be

drawn on the order of the Warden, countersigned by at

least one of the Directors and under such rules and regu-

lations as should from time to time be prescribed by

law, or by the Directors. Such rules and regulations,

made by the directors, must, of course, be in accord with

law.4

Anticipating that upon the transfer of the prisoners

to the new Penitentiary their labor would necessarily be

applied for a year or two on the completion of the new

building, the Board of Directors decided to temporarily

unite the offices of Superintendent of Building and War-

den. Since it was found that Superintendent Nathaniel

Medbery had qualifications to fill the office of Warden,

the Board elected him the first Warden of the new Peni-

tentiary, October 27, 1834, and he entered upon his

duties at once.5

 

4 Laws of Ohio, XXX, 26-28; Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary)

1834-1850, 4. In Annual Report of Directors December 10, 1834; Studer,

Columbus, Ohio, 379.

5 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850. Annual Report of

Directors, December 10, 1835, 4, 5.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 399

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio   399

The election of Warden Medbery during the third

quarter of Keeper Gault's term considerably compli-

cated matters as regards Mr. Gault's salary. It was the

occasion for several investigating committees. Mr. Gault

had been duly elected to serve as Keeper for one year

beginning February 28, 1834. Upon removal of the

convicts to the new Penitentiary Mr. Gault continued

to remain in and to occupy the buildings of the old

prison until March 1, 1835, taking care of and super-

intending such property6 belonging to the state as had

been left there. Having given bond, he was liable for

neglect of duty at any period of the year for which he

was elected and he therefore remained until March 1st.

It was finally decided that the remainder of the year's

salary ($333.33) was due him and a resolution to the

effect that it be paid was passed by the Legislature Jan-

uary 28, 1839.7

Since the new Prison had been planned to prevent

the familiar intercourse among prisoners that had so

demoralized and corrupted the old prison, the Board of

Directors felt that the time was favorable for a real

experiment with a reformatory system of discipline.

The Board urged the Legislature to provide for a Chap-

lain who was expected to do individual work among the

convicts, visiting them in their cells and giving them ad-

vice. He was also to organize a Sunday School and act

as teacher. In accordance with these recommendations

Rev. Russell Bigelow was appointed Chaplain in 1835.8

 

6 Senate Journal, 1837, 538, 539. Two horses, one cow, fourteen

head of hogs besides some lumber and tools were left in his charge at

the old prison.

7 House Journal, 1835, 330-334, 855, 856; Ibid., 1837, 633, 634; Ibid.

1849, 45, 46; Senate Journal, 1837, 538, 539, 685, 686.

8 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850. Report of Direc-

tors, Dec. 10, 1834, 7.



400 Ohio Arch

400      Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications

The Board of Directors also advocated the appoint-

ment of a deputy Warden, to be named by the Warden

and to be responsible to him. He was to be called the

Principal Assistant. Isaac Cool was appointed to this

office March 5, 1835, at a salary of $500 per year. His

duties according to the new rules and regulations for

the Penitentiary, formulated by the Directors, included

a general inspection and superintendence over the entire

plant and the enforcement of the rules and regulations

of the institution. He was charged with the responsibil-

ity for the security of the Prison and the prisoners. In

case of absence of the Warden the deputy Warden was

to be in full charge.9

Provision was also made for a Physician for the

New Penitentiary who was to look after the general

health of the convicts and to act as medical adviser in

cases of illness.10 Dr. M. S. Wright was appointed

physician March 5, 1835 at a salary of $200 per year.

On the same day H. Z. Mills was appointed Clerk.11

It is a noteworthy fact that two of the Directors in

that early day visited most of the improved prisons of

the United States anxious to acquaint themselves with

the best and most modern methods of prison manage-

ment and discipline As a result of this tour of investi-

gation the Directors formulated a set of rules and regu-

lations12 for the management of the Penitentiary cover-

ing explicitly the duties of Warden, deputy Warden, the

 

9 Ibid., 7, 10; Martin, History of Franklin County, 360.

10 For other duties of Physician, see appendix.

11 Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 379.

12 On pages -- --- of the Appendix is to be found an exact copy of

these rules and regulations which accompanied the Report of the Direc-

tor, December 10, 1834. With the addition of the rules on pages VII,

IX of the Appendix they continued in force with slight modification

during the period from 1834-1850.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 401

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio  401

Assistants and the prisoners. The rules were very

severe.  They conformed to the Auburn13 system of

prison management and were put into operation at once,

and rigidly enforced. This system of management in-

cluded solitary confinement of prisoners by night, their

association at hard labor during the day, and absolutely

no communication among the prisoners. It continued

in force with some modifications from 1834 to 1850.14

The aims of management were similar to those fol-

lowed in the old Penitentiary. The ultimate ends desired

by the State and prison officials in this new building,

under this new system of management, were the ref-

ormation of the convicts and the use of prison labor

to yield revenue to the State. Far more attention was

given during this period to the reformation of the con-

vict, with the hope that upon leaving the Prison he

would be an asset rather than a liability to society. The

work of the Chaplain was greatly appreciated and

proved the wisdom of establishing such an officer. It

was indeed a source of great regret to the management15

that after less than two years the office was discontinued

by law and dependence for such assistance in the moral

reformation of the convicts was again undertaken by

leaders who voluntarily interested themselves in such

good works. A young Men's Prison Society of Colum-

bus was the first outside agency to undertake the sup-

port of a Minister of the Gospel (Chaplain) for the

new Penitentiary, after the law providing such an officer

 

13 Wines, Punishment and Reformation, 156.

14 Lewis, The Development of American Prisons and Prison Cus-

toms, 260; Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Report of

Directors, December 3, 1834, 8, 13.

15 House Journal, 1836, 222-225.

Vol. XXXIII--26.



402 Ohio Arch

402       Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications

had been repealed.16 Examination of Governors' mes-

sages, reports of the officers and Directors of the Peni-

tentiary and other sources of information reveals the

fact that the labors of a chaplain were most beneficial

not only in the religious reformation of the convicts

but also in matters of discipline. In further proof of

this fact it is to be noted that, in the absence of a law

providing for a Chaplain, the Directors and officers con-

stantly tried to find a method to provide payment for

such an instructor. For a time money for this purpose

was taken from a fund obtained by charging prison

visitors an admittance fee.17 There was a period, how-

ever, when the Directors themselves were indifferent

towards the moral reformation of the prisoners and

made no effort to secure the services of a Chaplain.

From 1840 to 1845, no provision being made for such

an officer, the Rev. Samuel F. Mills donated his serv-

ices18 for a portion of this time. Rev. J. B. Finley, who

was Chaplain from 1846-1848 inclusive, realized the

need for good reading matter for the prisoners, and in-

terested himself in enlarging the Penitentiary Library.

During his term of service he made appeals for books

to public spirited citizens, churches, and other benevo-

lent agencies. By this means the Library was increased

from three hundred to seven thousand volumes.19 The

 

16 Lee, History of the City of Columbus, II, 580.

17 Senate Journal, 1840, 3-6.

18 Report of the Commission on Contract Labor System in the Ohio

Penitentiary, 1884, 12; Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850,

Report of Directors, 7.

19 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850 -- Report of Moral

Instructor, December 11, 1846, 18; Ibid., Report of Warden Dewey, No-

vember 30, 1848, 9; Fornshell, The Historical and Illustrated Ohio Peni-

tentiary, 13, 14; Ohio Annual Reports, (Penitentiary), 1833-1850, Report of

Warden November 30, 1849, 14; also for a detailed account of Finley's

work see J. B. Finley, Prison Life, 3-354; Weekly Ohio State Journal,

September 8, 1847.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 403

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio     403

Board of Directors in 1846 became impressed with the

need for moral improvement among the female convicts,

and authorized the Warden to appoint a matron. Miss

Mary Williams of Guernsey County was the first woman

to serve in this capacity.20

After the New Penitentiary had been in operation

about one year under its new management, Governor

Lucas in his Annual Message of December 8, 1835,

commented at length on the success of its organization

and its methods of discipline. The main features of

this new discipline were solitary confinement at night,

and labor, in silence, by day.21 An examination by the

Board of Directors of the duties22 of the prisoners pro-

vided in the rules and regulations for the New Peni-

tentiary shows under what strict discipline the pris-

oners lived.   In them   provision was made for the

"odious" lock step and for corporal punishment for all

wilful violations of the rules.23 The "cat" sometimes

called the cat-o'-nine tails, or nine-tailed cat, said to

have been the "most terrible and degrading instrument

of human torture ever invented"24 appears to have been

one of the modes of punishment in vogue during this

 

 

20 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Report of Direc-

tors, 1846, 2.

21 Senate Journal, 1836; Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-

1850, Report of Warden Medbery, 15.

22 For a complete list of duties of the prisoners see Appendix, --

---- (Rules and Regulations of the new Penitentiary).

23 Ibid., 7; Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, for the

year 1834, 10-13.

24 Dyer, History of the Ohio Penitentiary, 10.



(404)



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 405

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio             405

period.25 According to Lee in his History of the City

of Columbus public sentiment in 184326 was against

such severity and may have influenced Warden Patter-

son to make some changes in the modes of punishment.

In his Annual Report27 of December 12, 1844, he states

that he has aimed to avoid all unnecessary severity and

to use the lash as sparingly as possible. Warden Pat-

terson constructed a shower bath as a substitute for

some of the cruel punishments that had been used and

said he found it most effective. His idea was that no

punishment should be inflicted hastily, that cases re-

quiring punishment should be most carefully considered,

and that all punishments should take place in his pres-

ence. He considered "eternal vigilance" on the part of

those in charge of convicts more effective by far as a

means of discipline than either the lash or the shower.28

 

25 Report of the Commission on the Contract Labor System in the

Ohio Penitentiary, 1884, 19. "A great improvement in discipline was

inaugurated by the law of 1856 when corporal punishment was forbidden,

and imprisonment in a cell upon bread and water alone substituted.

Before that time punishment by "the cat" and "shower bath" were com-

mon, and in 1852 the Warden, in his report elaborately defends corporal

punishment. Since 1856 the reports have continually spoken of the very

valuable effects of a discipline which did not brutalize the prisoners by

corporal punishment, but appealed rather to his manhood"; Historical

Sketches of Higher Educational Institutions and also of Benevolent and

Reformatory Institutions of the State of Ohio, 1876.

26 Lee, History of the City of Columbus, II, 582 quotes from the

Ohio State Journal of 1843. "If half we have heard on good authority

is true, the walls of the Ohio Penitentiary, could they speak would dis-

close 'prison house secrets' that would make the blood curdle. We are

against flogging in the army, navy, madhouse or Penitentiary. If it can

be dispensed with . . . . If the manager of that Institution (Ohio

Penitentiary) could substitute such a persuasive as cold water for cats

and other instruments of torture and blood-letting as heretofore em-

ployed, we are certain they would elicit an 'expression' of universal

commendation from   the community"; Ibid., 645, Martin, History of

Franklin County, 359, 360; Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 379.

27 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Report of Warden

Patterson, December 12, 1844, 5.

28 Ibid., 5, 6; also Annual Report, November 30, 1845, 9.



406 Ohio Arch

406      Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications

As the question of effective modes of discipline was

one of great concern to the management of the new

Penitentiary so also was the question of the satisfactory

employment of prison labor. The new building and the

prison work shops were not entirely finished in 1834

and so for a time part of the convict labor was employed

by them. Prior to that time the system had been that

of manufacturing or working on State account. In its

stead the contract labor system was introduced in the

new Penitentiary by which the convicts were hired to

contractors or large manufacturers who employed them

in the prison workshops. The old system of barter, and

the keeping of a prison store-house, were abolished

under this plan.29

The first contract for such labor was made with

Peter Hayden on June 10, 1835.30 The contract pro-

vided for the employment of from fifty to one hundred

convicts for five years in saddle-tree and hame making

and in the plating and manufacture of saddlery and

harness trimmings generally. In order that all prisoners

might be employed at work of some kind, applications

were also made in 1835 for other and similar contracts.31

Numerous contracts were closed from time to time. One

was made with M'Coy for shoemaking for a period of

three years, beginning December 1, 1837. It provided

for the employment of twenty-five men. A contract

with Johnson and Burdell for the labor of not more than

twenty men for tailoring was made June 15, 1837, for

 

29 Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 379; Ohio Centennial Celebration, 1903,

498.

30 Report of the Commission on Contract Labor System in the Ohio

Penitentiary, 1884, 12.

31 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Report of Direc-

tors, 1835, 8.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 407

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio  407

a term of five years. Another was made with J. O. B.

Renicks for making corn brooms for a term of five

years beginning June 6, 1838. Fifteen men were to be

employed in the making of brooms. The contract with

Hayden and Co., entered into on June 10, 1835, and to

continue for five years after October 1, 1835, was sup-

plemented on September 30, 1836 by a contract entered

into by the same parties increasing the number of con-

victs employed to two hundred and authorizing in ad-

dition to the manufacture of the articles mentioned in

the original contract, the production of sacks, shovels

and men's silk hats.32 The report of the Standing com-

mittee on the Penitentiary made by Mr. Stadden on

March 13, 1839 shows that shoe-making, tailoring,

coopering, bucket-making, saddle-tree making and the

making of corn brooms occupied the time of two hun-

dred and forty-five convicts at that date.33

32 Senate Journal, 1839. Report of Standing Committee on Peni-

tentiary by Mr. Stadden, 86.

33 Ibid., 86, 87.



408 Ohio Arch

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According to Mr. Stadden's report the labor of con-

victs was carefully selected to avoid to the greatest pos-

sible extent injurious competition with the free labor

of the State. The Penitentiary officials tried to compete

with "foreign markets" rather than to produce articles

that were manufactured in Ohio. For instance, in 1839

forty-nine convicts were employed in manufacturing

bridle bits, stirrup irons, etc. The chief supply of these

articles for home consumption being derived by im-

portation from foreign countries, it was felt that no

reasonable objection could be urged against their manu-

facture by prisoners.34 Mr. Stadden also stated that

while some complaints were made by would-be com-

petitors that the prison had not been able to supply

workers for all the contracts offered them, the revenue

to the State from such contract labor for the period

from November 30, 1837, to December 12, 1838, had

amounted to $23,449.12 1/2 35

From 1839 to 1850 there was growing hostility

toward the convict contract system. People were jeal-

ous of this system and, in 1839, the Legislature changed

the directors, and selected a new Board of Directors

which was believed to be hostile to the contract labor

system. Nevertheless, the system was continued, some-

times apologetically, through this period and the finan-

cial results continued to be favorable to the institution.36

The hostility of the Legislature to this system is

especially apparent during the years between 1846 and

1850. The Legislature insisted that the labor of con-

victs be employed in public works. Convict labor valued

 

34 Senate Journal, 1839, 86, 87.

35 Ibid., 87, 88.

36 Report of the Commission on the Contract Labor System in the

Ohio Penitentiary, 1884, 12.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 409

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio           409

at $25,000 was employed in the enlargement of the

Central Lunatic Asylum.37 The services of the pris-

oners on this job were valued at fifty cents per day.

This meant that the contract labor system and the in-

come to the Penitentiary were being sacrificed38 for the

interest of the State. The convicts were also employed

by the state in construction of a new State House and

in a stone quarry located two and one half miles west

of the Prison which had been purchased by the Board

of Directors (according to an act of March 12, 1845) to

furnish material for these state buildings. They also

furnished the labor to construct a railroad to this

quarry.39

A law was passed by the State Legislature in 1848

which forbade any contracts to be made, or renewed,

without being first submitted to that body for approval.40

Consequently there were now only two contracts in

existence in the institution in 1850, namely, one with

Mr. Hayden which provided employment for two hun-

dred convicts and would expire in October of that year,

and the other, a contract with Mr. Burdell for fifteen

men to be employed in the tailoring business.                The

 

37 Ibid., also Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Report

of Directors, 1847, 4.

38 In the Report of the Commission on the Contract Labor System in

the Ohio Penitentiary, 1884, 13, is the following quotation:  "The

unfriendliness of the legislature to the Penitentiary was shown, not only

in employing the labor unprofitably in the public buildings, but in neg-

lecting to provide that such labor should be paid for to the Penitentiary.

This proceeded so far that when a new Board of Directors was elected

in 1852, they protested most vigorously against the injustice of a system

which, for the sake of enabling the State to boast of its asylums and

splendid capitol, had impoverished the prisoners, reduced the prison to

want and destroyed the credit of the Institution."

39 Ibid., 12, 13; Studer, Columbus, Ohio, 379.

40 Report of the Commission on Contract Labor System in the Ohio

Penitentiary, 13.

41 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Report of the

Warden, November 30, 1850, 17.



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latter contained no renewal clause and would therefore

expire on April 1, 1853.41

Not only was the attitude of the Legislature hostile

to the contract labor system but the frequent change of

Directors and officers42 of the Penitentiary due to party

manipulation was detrimental to the management and

discipline of the institution.43 The change in Directors

was accompanied by a change in the administrative

officers of the Penitentiary.  In many cases a faithful,

upright and efficient Warden was removed in order

that so-called "political debts" might be paid.44 The

removal of Warden Stadden in 1842 is an example of

such political interference. The removals were made

in spite of a meeting of public spirited citizens to pro-

test against it.45

Another serious interruption in the discipline and

management of the Penitentiary was the Asiatic Cholera

epidemic of 1849 which proved to be a "reign of terror"

during the summer of that year. The epidemic had been

raging in the City of Columbus for a short time prior

to June 30, when the first cases occurred in the Peni-

tentiary. Two deaths were reported that day. By July

9 out of four hundred and twenty-three convicts three

hundred and ninety-six had cholera in some of its stages

and twenty-one died. Workshops were converted into

temporary hospitals in order that the suffering prisoners

 

42 In the Appendix, p. 421, 422, may be found a list of the officers of

the new Penitentiary from 1834 to 1850 taken from Martin, History of

Franklin County, 362-363, but verified by the author from Ohio Annual

Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, and the frequent change of officers,

especially that of Warden may be noted.

43 Lee, History of City of Columbus, II, 582, suggests that this change

was worse for the management and discipline of the Prison than the

cholera epidemic.

44 Lee, History of the City of Columbus, II, 582.

45 Ibid.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 411

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio   411

might be well cared for. On July 10 twenty-two deaths

occurred, the greatest mortality on record for any one

day.46 From that day the number of deaths diminished

regularly until July 30 when the last fatal case was

recorded. During August and September there were

twenty-three cases reported but none proved fatal. A

total of one hundred and sixteen prisoners died as a

result of the epidemic. Two physicians, Dr. H. Lathrop

and Dr. B. F. Gard, who had rendered faithful and

heroic service during the siege became victims of the

epidemic. Other doctors who aided during the epidemic

were Dr. Trevitt, Dr. T. Thompson, Dr. J. B. Thomp-

son, Dr. J. Morrison, Dr. Norman Gay and Dr. G. W.

Maris. The services of several medical students and

nurses were also employed.47

During the epidemic a number of panic-stricken

guards fled from the Penitentiary. The prisoners too

begged to be freed so that they might flee from the

scourge and as was to be expected, exhibited all grades

of character from "manlike heroism, and stoical indiffer-

ence to the most timid, sensitive, and shrinking agita-

tion."48 All business and labor of any kind was nec-

essarily suspended. The strict discipline of the prison

was relaxed. For sixteen days and sixteen nights no

key was turned upon a prisoner yet perfect order pre-

vailed and when the proper time came for resuming

prison discipline the convicts returned to their cells and

to the ordinary habits of prison life without complaint.49

 

46 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Report of Phy-

sician, November 30, 1849, 29. Also see Weekly Ohio State Journal, July

18, 1849.

47 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850. Report of War-

den Dewey, November 30, 1849, 11.

48 Ibid., 12.

49 Ibid., 12, 13.



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During the absence of Governor Ford from the city

in the early part of the epidemic, a supply of pardons

which had been left for cases of emergency with the

Secretary of State were soon exhausted. Upon being

notified of the fact, Governor Ford returned at once

to Columbus. He went to the prison and persuaded the

convicts that it would be best not to grant any more

pardons until the epidemic had subsided. He insisted

that even if freed they would be treated as a public

menace and that they could be better cared for in the

prison hospitals than at home. For good conduct and

assistance rendered by convicts among the sick prisoners

he promised pardons as soon as the epidemic was over.

As a result fifty-two convicts were pardoned that year.50

During the following summer (1850) the hospitals

were crowded with cholera patients but the siege was

much less serious and there were no fatalities reported.51

This account has now been carried down to the year

1850, which marks the end of the second period in the

history of the Ohio Penitentiary. This period saw the

realization of the hope, cherished by prison officials and

the Legislature that after the Penitentiary was recon-

structed according to the Auburn type52 it would be-

come a source of substantial income to the state. Gov-

ernor Vance in his Annual Message to the General As-

sembly December 4, 1838, said "Our Penitentiary was

never before in so flourishing a condition. The earn-

 

50 Ibid.; Executive Documents, 1849, I, Special Report of Warden

on Cholera, February 2, 1850, Executive Document No. 31.

51 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850, Report of Dr. J.

B. Thompson, November 30, 1850, 45-49.

52 Lewis, The Development of American Prisons and Prison Cus-

toms, 260, states "Ohio's State prison became after its transformation

into a prison of the Auburn type an exceptionally noteworthy money-

maker for the State -- and this is its chief characteristic in this period."



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 413

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio   413

ings and profits of the prison exceed all expenses by

$23,000."53 According to Lewis in The Development

of American Prisons and Prison Customs, the profits

of the prison for 1841 were $21,897, a larger profit

than that earned in any other American prison for

that year. Lewis reported that in the opinion of com-

petent judges who had visited the Ohio Penitentiary

and compared it with other institutions in other states

the Ohio institution was inferior to none.54 In 1850

the earnings amounted to $35,740.70.55

An examination of the Prison reports shows the

progress made in the reformation of the prisoners as

well. The separation of the convicts which was ac-

complished by the better planned and equipped building,

the influence of the moral instructor, and the installa-

tion of gas lights56 in 1848 making the more general

use of the new library possible, all contributed to the

moral uplift of those confined in the Penitentiary.

Laurin Dewey, Warden in 1850, realizing that the

youths in the prison ought not to be associated with old

and hardened criminals felt that the time had come when

the Legislature ought to consider the erection of a

"House of Refuge or Correction" for boys, in some

part of the State.57 That he was in advance of his day

in advocating this plan is evidenced by the fact that no

such provision was made for a number of years there-

after. The Boys' Industrial School was not authorized

 

53 Executive Documents, 1838, 15, 16.

54 Lewis, The Development of American Prisons and Prison Cus-

toms, 263.

55 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850. Report of Warden

Dewey, November 30, 1850, 19.

56 Daily Ohio Statesman, September 11, 1848.

57 Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850. Report of Warden

Dewey, 1850, 14.



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by the State Legislature until 1847. The Standing Com-

mittee on the Penitentiary in a report of 184858 also

revealed an interest in more progressive methods by

recommending the classification of prisoners according

to disposition, age and degree of crime thus placing all

young men under twenty-one years of age in shops by

themselves and at work which would prove beneficial

to them when discharged.59

The report submitted by Henry C. Noble, W. D.

Patterson and Henry Luskey concluded with the signifi-

cant statement -- "That the history of the prison makes

the impression on us that reformation, rather than

financial success, has never been made the first object

of any administration. Some officers and Wardens

have deeply sympathized with this feature of prison

management, but even under such men, the require-

ments of the contracts have been met at the expense of

classification, school instruction, and other reformatory

measures."60  For a number of years to come, the

policy of reforming prisoners remained subsidiary to

the policy of using the labor of these misfits of society

to yield financial returns to the state.

 

APPENDIX

RULES AND REGULATIONS OF THE NEW PENITENTIARY

(From Ohio Annual Reports (Penitentiary) 1833-1850

Year 1834, 9-13).

The following Rules and Regulations have been

adopted for the government of the New Penitentiary:

 

58 House Journal, 1848--Appendix 19-24 in the report of Mr.

Anthony, January 3, 1848.

59 Report of the Commission on Contract Labor System in the Ohio

Penitentiary, 1884, 20, shows that in Sec. 7 of an act passed in 1854 such

provision for classification of prisoners was made.

60 Ibid., 15.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 415

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio      415

 

It shall be the duty of the Warden to attend constantly at the

Prison, except when performing some other necessary duty con-

nected with his office. As soon as the building now being built, is

so far finished as to be comfortable, he shall remove to, and after-

wards constantly reside at the Prison. He shall keep a Register

in which he shall regularly enter the reception, the previous moral

character, habits and education, (as far as the same can be ascer-

tained), and the discharge, death, pardon or escape of any

prisoner; and also, the complaints that are made and the punish-

ments that are inflicted for breach of prison discipline, as they

occur; the visits of the Directors and of the Physician, and all

other occurrences of importance, that concern the Prison, except

the receipts and expenditures and other pecuniary transactions of

the Prison -- the account of which is to be kept as hereafter

directed.

The Warden shall examine daily into the state of the Prison,

and the health, conduct and safe keeping of the prisoners; and

for that purpose he shall visit every cell and apartment, and see

every prisoner under his care at least once in every day.

The Warden shall pay particular attention and constantly

use his best endeavors for the moral reformation and culture of

the convicts; and shall permit nothing to be done or said in the

presence of any of the prisoners under his charge, calculated to

interfere with so desirable an object. All his orders should be

given with mildness and dignity, and enforced with promptitude

and firmness; but he should carefully guard himself against per-

sonal and passionate resentment.

The Warden shall use proper means to furnish the prisoners

with constant employment, the most beneficial to the public --

having proper regard to their various capacities; and he shall

employ such prisoners as are not engaged in the building of the

Prison, in such manufacturing or mechanical business, as he may

find to be most proper.

It shall be the duty of the Warden to cause the books and

accounts to be kept in such a manner as clearly to exhibit the

state of the prisoners -- the number employed in each branch of

business, and their earnings -- the number in the hospital -- the

expenses of the Prison -- and all receipts and payments -- pur-

chases and sales -- and to exhibit the same to the Directors at

their quarterly meetings, and at any other time when required.

The Warden shall appoint a suitable person to act as his

Deputy, who shall be called the Principal Assistant; whose duty

it shall be to exercise under the direction of the Warden, a general

inspection and superintendence over the whole of the establish-

ment and all its concerns, and to see that the rules and regulations



416 Ohio Arch

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of the institution are enforced, and that every precaution is taken

for the security of the Prison and the prisoners; and in case of

the absence of the Warden or of his inability to perform his

duties, the Principal Assistant shall perform the duties of the

Warden, until the Warden shall resume his station.

As it is by law made the duty of the Directors, to see per-

sonally to the condition and treatment of the prisoners, no regula-

tion or order shall be made to prevent prisoners having ready

access to a Director, who may be present; nor shall any punish-

ment be inflicted upon them for speaking to a Director. In dis-

charging this part of their duty, the Directors will deem it proper

not to suffer a convict to hold any conversation with them in the

presence or hearing of other prisoners.

 

DUTIES OF ASSISTANT KEEPERS

Assistant Keepers are required to be at the Prison at all

times during Prison hours, unless prevented by sickness, or hav-

ing previously obtained leave of absence.

They are required, as they are bound by their oath of office,

to enforce rigidly every rule and regulation of the Prison.

The preservation and the effect of the whole system of dis-

cipline depends upon non-intercourse between convicts. They

will, therefore, make use of every exertion to prevent any com-

munication between them.

They are required to say nothing in the presence of any of

the convicts respecting the police of the Prison, unless it be for

the purpose of directing them in their duty.

They are to hold no unnecessary conversation with convicts,

nor allow them to speak unless it is absolutely necessary.

They are not to take one convict's word against another, nor

countenance in the least degree, one convict's complaining against

another, nor are they to allow any convict to speak lightly or dis-

respectfully of any officer of the Prison.

They are to require of convicts, labor in silence and striot

obedience.

They are required to report every convict under their imme-

diate direction and control, to the Warden or his Assistant, for

all wilful violations of discipline or duty; and all violations of

discipline or duty which Assistants discover in convicts who are

not under their immediate direction, they are required to report

to the Warden or Deputy Warden, with the name of the trans-

gressor.

When on duty, they are required to govern themselves in

strict conformity to the rules of the institution. They will avoid

all whistling, scuffling, loud laughter, and all acts which are un-

dignified, and in all their intercourse with each other, it is hoped



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 417

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio      417

 

they will exercise mutual respect and kindness, and cultivate a

desire to exalt the character and promote the interests of the

institution.

All Assistant Keepers, when within the precincts of the

Prison, are to consider themselves on duty, and govern themselves

accordingly.

As soon as the prisoners are locked up at night, each Assist-

ant having charge of a division, and those having charge of the

mess room, hospital, etc., must report immediately to the Deputy

Warden, the number they have locked up or have in charge re-

spectively.

All unnecessary talking or conversation on ordinary subjects

in the halls, is strictly forbidden. And all loud talking in the

Keeper's hall (or guard room), and all arguments on the subject

of politics or religion, which are calculated to excite and to prej-

udice, are to be avoided.

The deportment of Assistant Keepers towards convicts, in

all situations, should be manly and dignified, in order not only to

inspire the convicts with respect towards them, but also, to set the

example of good order and decorum.

Their deportment towards each other, in the presence of con-

victs, should be characterized by the most gentlemanly demeanor;

they are not to gather into groups for the purpose of conversa-

tion; and all conversation except such as is necessary in the dis-

charge of their official duties, should be avoided whilst on duty.

They are not to indulge any petulance toward each other,

nor indulge in levity of any description, and especially to avoid

the use of profane and vulgar language, in the presence of pris-

oners or about the Prison; and in short, to do nothing in this

respect, that they will not allow a convict to do.

They will require from convicts the greatest deference, and

never suffer them to approach but in the most respectful manner;

they are not to allow them the least degree of familiarity, nor

exercise any towards them; and finally, they should be extremely

careful to command as well as to compel their respect.

They are not to suffer any stranger or other person, (except

such as authorized by law), to hold any conversation with, or to

speak to any prisoner, without the consent of the Warden; nor

are they to suffer any paper, letter or writing of any kind, to pass

in or out of the Prison, without the inspection or knowledge of

the Warden.

If a prisoner is sick or from any cause unable to work, the

Assistant under whose charge he may be, will, (in the absence of

the Physician), take him to his cell or to the hospital, as his situa-

tion may seem to require, and immediately make out in writing,

Vol. XXXIII--27.



418 Ohio Arch

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the name of the prisoner or prisoners, complaining or disabled,

stating where he or they may be found, and deliver the same to

the Warden or to his Deputy.

 

DUTIES OF THE PRISONERS

They are to labor faithfully and diligently, to obey all orders

promptly, and to preserve unbroken silence.

They are not to exchange a word with each other, under any

pretence, not to communicate any intelligence to each other in

writing; they are not to exchange looks, winks, laugh with each

other, nor make use of any signs, except such as are necessary to

convey their wants to the waiters.

They must approach their Keepers in the most respectful

manner, and be brief in their communications. They are not to

speak to them on ordinary topics, nor address them except when

it becomes necessary in relation to their work or their wants.

They are not at any time, nor under any pretence, without

leave, to speak to any person who does not belong to the institu-

tion, nor receive from them any letter, paper, tobacco or other

thing whatever.

They are not to leave the place where they are put to work

nor the work they are set to do, without the special permission or

orders of the proper officer; they are not to suffer their attention

to be taken from their work to look at visitors, nor are they to

gaze or look at them when unemployed.

Their whole demeanor must be in accordance with the most

perfect order and in strict compliance with the rules and regula-

tions of the Prison.

No convict is wilfully or carelessly to injure his work, tools,

wearing apparel, bedding, or any other thing belonging to, or

being about the Prison; nor will any prisoner be suffered to mark,

injure or in any way deface the walls or any part of his cell or

night room, nor is he to execute his work badly, when he has the

ability to do it well.

The law provides "that no convict shall receive or transmit

any letter or paper, except under the inspection of the Keeper,

nor shall such convict hold any correspondence in or out of the

Penitentiary, nor converse with any person, except the Governor,

Heads of Departments, members of the General Assembly, Judges

of the Supreme and Common Pleas Courts and officers of the

Prison;" no violation of this provision of the law will be indulged.

Each prisoner, so far as is practicable, will occupy the same

cell every night; as they enter their respective cells, each prisoner

after setting down his room bucket and can, must draw the door

of his cell until it strikes the latch, and in this position stand,



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 419

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio      419

 

holding his door until the Turnkey approaches and enters the

key; the prisoner will then instantly close his door.

At the ringing of the bell, every prisoner must go to bed im-

mediately, (but they may go to bed previously if they choose,)

and a profound silence must be observed from that time until the

bell rings in the morning, at which time every prisoner must im-

mediately dress himself and prepare to march out.

They will always march in the lock step, and in such order

as may be designated by the officers in charge. While in their

cells and while marching, and at all other times, all unnecessary

noise must be avoided.

No prisoner will be suffered to sleep with his clothes on.

If a prisoner becomes sick or from any cause feels unable to

work, he will report himself to the officer under whose charge he

may be.

For all wilful violations of the above rules, corporal punish-

ment will certainly be inflicted.

 

RULES AND REGULATIONS FOR THE GOVERNMENT OF THE

INSTITUTION

(From Ohio Annual Reports, 1833-1850--Year 1847, 24-26)

DEPUTY WARDEN

It shall be the duty of the Deputy Warden to exercise, under

the direction of the Warden, a general inspection and super-

intendence over the whole of the establishment, and all its con-

cerns, and to see that all its rules and regulations are enforced,

and that every precaution is taken for the security of the prison

and the prisoners; and in case of the absence or inability of the

Warden to perform his duties, the Deputy shall act in his place

until the Warden shall resume his station.

 

PHYSICIAN

Shall visit the prison every morning, or in case of sickness

or necessary absence, procure the services of some other good

physician to perform his duty.

He shall examine any new prisoner or prisoners that may

have been received since his last visit, and report their condition

to the Warden.

He shall see that all proper medicine is administered to those

who are sick, and perform all surgical operations that may be

necessary; and if necessity require it, pay extra visits.

 

MORAL AND RELIGIOUS INSTRUCTOR

It shall be his duty to see that each convict that can read is

furnished with a Bible or Testament.



420 Ohio Arch

420       Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications

To preach to the prisoners every Sabbath, or when necessarily

absent, to engage some suitable person to fill his place.

To see that the Sabbath School is properly attended and sup-

plied, as far as practicable, with suitable teachers and books.

It shall be his duty, as far as practicable, to have prayers

with the prisoners every morning at the breakfast table, and to

visit those that are sick in the infirmary, and administer to their

spiritual wants.

To be present as far as he can, at all funerals of deceased

prisoners, and see that they are interred with proper religious

services.

He shall have the liberty of visiting any prisoner who wishes

to see him, and it shall be his duty to give them such advice as

they may seem to require.

He is to use his best exertions to promote the religious and

moral welfare of the prisoners, as well as the harmony and gen-

eral interests of the Institution.

All officers, contractors, agents and foremen, are required

not to hold any conversation with the prisoners, except in rela-

tion to their respective duties, and while in the prison will be

subject to all the rules and regulations established for its govern-

ment.



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 421

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio      421



422 Ohio Arch

422       Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications

 

NAMES OF OFFICERS OF THE OHIO PENITENTIARY

(1834-1850)

Year             Directors                 Warden

1834 Joseph Olds, Charles Anthony,

Samuel F. McCracken............. Nathaniel Medbery

1835 Joseph Olds, Charles Anthony,

Samuel F. McCracken............ Nathaniel Medbery

1836 Joseph Olds, S. F. McCracken,

Benjamin Allen................... Nathaniel Medbery

1837 Joseph Olds, S. F. McCracken,

Benjamin Allen.................. Nathaniel Medbery

1838 Joseph Olds, S. F. McCracken,

Benjamin Allen.................. Nathaniel Medbery

1839  Allen Latham, Joseph Olds,

John McElvain.................. W. B. VanHook

1840 John McElvain, Samuel Spangler,

William Spangler................. W. B. VanHook

1841  William Spencer, Samuel Spangler,

John McElvain.................. W. B. VanHook

1842 William Spencer, A. H. Patterson,

Andrew McElvain................ Richard Stadden

1843 Robert Lee, A. H. Patterson,

Andrew McElvain................ John Patterson

1844 Robert Lee, John Greenwood,

Andrew McElvain............... John Patterson

1845 B. F. Gard, Robert Lee,

John Greenwood................ John Patterson

1846  B. F. Gard, Horatio J. Cox,

J. Ridgway..................... Laurin Dewey

1847  B. F. Gard, Horatio J. Cox,

J. Ridgway................ Laurin Dewey

1848  Thomas Brown, Horatio J. Cox,

J. Ridgway...................... Laurin Dewey

1849  Thomas Brown, Matthias Martin,

J. Ridgway...................... Laurin Dewey

1850  D. Gregory, Matthias Martin,

Thomas Brown.............. Laurin Dewey



History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 423

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio      423

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424       Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications

 

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History of Penal Institutions in Ohio 425

History of Penal Institutions in Ohio     425

 

Channing, Edward, History of the United States, 5 Vols.

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426 Ohio Arch

426       Ohio Arch. and Hist. Society Publications

 

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