wyoming territorial prison museum
This one was on the original Dirty 30 list (and the whole reason behind the birth of this blog) and I finally got it crossed off the list!
I was presently surprised at the museum. Its a very interesting piece of Wyoming history and our tour guide was very knowledgeable. Its in Rawlins and its not expensive to visit. And because I can't remember everything they told me, I copied a little history about the prison from their website for you.
I was presently surprised at the museum. Its a very interesting piece of Wyoming history and our tour guide was very knowledgeable. Its in Rawlins and its not expensive to visit. And because I can't remember everything they told me, I copied a little history about the prison from their website for you.
The eighty year history of Wyoming’s first state
penitentiary, now known as the Wyoming Frontier Prison, is as colorful
and elaborate as the plot of a classic western movie. The cornerstone of
the prison was laid in 1888, but due to funding issues and Wyoming’s
notorious weather, the doors wouldn’t open for thirteen years. In
December of 1901, the prison opened and consisted of 104 cells (Cell
Block A), no electricity or running water, and very inadequate heating.
Throughout the prison’s operation,
approximately 13,500 people were incarcerated, including eleven women.
Overcrowding was an almost constant concern, and the first of several
additions to the penitentiary was completed in 1904, adding 32 cells to
the west end of the original cell block (Cell Block A). Women were
housed in the prison until 1909, until the last woman was transferred to
Colorado. The addition of the second cell block (Cell Block B) in 1950
temporarily relieved the overcrowding, and also included solitary
confinement cells, a much more efficient heating system, and hot running
water which wouldn’t be installed in the original cell block for
another twenty-eight years. A maximum security addition (Cell Block C)
was completed in 1966, but the addition only included thirty-six cells
and was reserved for serious discipline cases.
The prison was equipped with several different means of disciplining inmates throughout its operation, including a dungeon, several variations of solitary confinement and a “punishment pole” to which men were handcuffed and whipped with rubber hoses.
The prison was equipped with several different means of disciplining inmates throughout its operation, including a dungeon, several variations of solitary confinement and a “punishment pole” to which men were handcuffed and whipped with rubber hoses.
The prison also used different execution
methods.. The first two executions were carried out using the
“traveling” Julien Gallows which were used to hang Tom Horn in Cheyenne
in 1903. In 1916, the penitentiary completed the addition of a “death
house” which consisted of six cells to house inmates on death row, and a
unique indoor version of the Julien Gallows. The building also housed
the gas chamber when it was chosen to replace hanging as Wyoming’s
execution method of choice in 1936. Ultimately 14 death sentences were
carried out; nine men were hanged, and five were executed in the gas
chamber by the use of hydrocyanic acid gas.
The Wyoming Frontier Prison is a remnant
of the grizzly past of the old west, but not every aspect of prison life
was so off-putting. Over the 80-year operation, the prison produced
goods to meet demands of four major industries. From 1901 through 1917
the prison had a broom factory, but inmates burned it down during a
riot. The factory was rebuilt and operated as a shirt factory which
brought in twice the revenue to the state. In 1934, a federal law was
passed to prohibit the sale and transportation of prison manufactured
goods from one state to another, which resulted in the loss of
significant revenue when the factory closed. In 1935, the factory began
operating as a woolen mill which won the “Navy E” in 1942 for the
superior quality blankets produced by the prison for the military during
World War II. In 1949 the prison changed production one last time,
producing license plates until the penitentiary closed in 1981.
After serving the state for eighty years,
the prison closed its doors, and sat abandoned until 1987 when a low
budget movie titled “Prison” was filmed on location. The movie was one
of Viggo Mortensen’s first and featured several other well known actors.
Significant damage was done to the prison grounds during filming
because it had yet to be considered a historic site. In 1988, a joint
powers board assumed ownership of the penitentiary, dubbed it The
Wyoming Frontier Prison, and established it as a museum. The Wyoming
Frontier Prison has since been listed on The National Registry of
Historic Places, and offers tours to approximately 15,000 visitors
annually.
This is really interesting, I love old prisons! I've been to Alcatraz probably 25 times and it always fascinates me!
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