Sing Sing

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Image:Sing Sing (prison) with warden.jpg Image:Sing Sing (prison) - cell.jpg

Sing Sing Correctional Facility is a maximum security prison in Ossining, New York. It is located in Westchester County approximately 30 miles north of New York City on the edge of the Hudson River. The name comes from the original name of the village of Ossining, though the penitentiary was first called "Mount Pleasant" when it opened in 1828.

Today Sing Sing houses more than 1,700 prisoners. There are plans to convert the original 1825 cell block, which still stands, into a museum.

Contents

History

In 1825, the New York state legislature gave Elam Lynds the task of constructing a new, more modern correctional facility. Lynds spent months researching possible locations for the prison, considering Staten Island, the Bronx, and Silver Mine Farm, an area in the town of Mount Pleasant, located on the banks of the Hudson River. By May, he had finally settled on the Mt. Pleasant location and selected 100 convicts from the Auburn State Prison, where he was a warden. When the state appropriated $20,100 to purchase the 130 acre site, Lynds transported the 100 prisoners by barge along the Erie Canal to freighters down the Hudson River. They arrived in Sing Sing on May 14, "without a place to receive them or a wall to enclose them." Lynds' plan was to use prisoner labor to excavate marble from a nearby quarry and use it to construct the prison, a practice Lynds had seen used in New Hampshire and Massachusetts. Once the prison was built, the prisoners would continue excavating marble to be shipped down the Hudson to New York City. Beyond the initial sum required to purchase the land, the prison was to be self-supporting, not requiring taxpayer funding.

Another notable warden besides Lynds was Lewis E. Lawes. He was offered the position of warden—a position which had been filled by nine separate people in the last nine years, one only for three weeks—and accepted in 1920. What he found was a facility that had lost any semblance of order through decades of neglect and abuse. Records documented 795 male and 102 female prisoners at Sing Sing. A head count turned up only 762 and 82 actually present. "How these missing prisoners had left the prison or when, could not be ascertained," he said. Worse still, one prisoner, who had been incarcerated for five years, had no record of his admission or retention history. He was declared a "volunteer" and released on the spot. More than $30,000 in cash was missing from prison bank accounts when Lawes became warden, and there was no trace as to where the money went. Documented punishments were brutal and described a long history of abuse by both prison guards and wardens. Some punishments included freezing showers, the ball and chain, the yoke, an iron gag, and whipping with a cat of nine tails (often followed by a sponge, soaked in salt water, being dragged across the open wound). In addition to an end of the brutality, the facility was slowly modernized. In the 1920s, several new buildings were built, including a chapel, a mess hall, two administration centers, a hospital and a library.

Gangster movies helped make the prison a legend far beyond New York; they included The Big House (1930), Castle on the Hudson (1940), and 20,000 Years in Sing Sing (1932), the latter based on a book by Warden Lawes. The expression "sent up the river" refers to Sing Sing.

From 1914 until 1971, only the electric chair at Sing Sing was used for executions. The last execution at Sing Sing was in August 1963, two years before New York first abolished capital punishment.

On January 8, 1983, a riot began with 600-plus inmates in B-block taking 17 correction officers hostage. The riot ended after 53 hours.

In 1997, author and journalist Ted Conover became a New York State correctional officer because he found it the only way he could write about being one. He was assigned to Sing Sing and worked there for ten months. The resulting book, Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing, was published in 2000 to critical acclaim, winning the National Book Critics Circle Award and becoming a finalist for the Pulitzer Prize. The state's Department of Correctional Services soon declared it contraband, requiring that several pages be redacted from any version sent to inmates.

Notable prisoners

See also

Resources

Further reading

  • The Rose Man of Sing Sing: A True Tale of Life, Murder, and Redemption in the Age of Yellow Journalism by James McGrath Morris (2003)
  • Crash Out : The True Tale of a Hell's Kitchen Kid and the Bloodiest Escape in Sing Sing History by David Goewey (2005)
  • Miracle at Sing Sing : How One Man Transformed the Lives of America's Most Dangerous Prisoners by Ralph Blumenthal (2005)
  • Sing Sing: The Inside Story of a Notorious Prison by Denis Brian (2005)
  • Condemned: Inside the Sing Sing Death House by Scott Christianson (2000)
  • Newjack: Guarding Sing Sing by Ted Conover (2000), ISBN 0375501770de:Sing Sing (Gefängnis)

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