Missouri State Penitentiary

Missouri State Penitentiary

The Missouri State Penitentiary, also known as "The Walls", was a prison in Jefferson City, Missouri that operated from 1836-2004. It was a prison of the Missouri Department of Corrections. Before its closure it was named the Jefferson City Correctional Center (JCCC).[1] Before its closure it was the oldest operating penal facility west of the Mississippi River. It served as the State of Missouri's primary maximum security institution.[2] The current Jefferson City Correctional Center was opened on September 15, 2004, replacing the Missouri State Penitentiary.[3]

Contents

Early history

The Missouri State Penitentiary was constructed in the early 1830s to serve the newly admitted state of Missouri. Jefferson City had been designated the state capitol in 1822, and Governor John Miller suggested that the state's main prison be constructed there, to help the city maintain its somewhat tenuous status against other towns trying to obtain the capitol for themselves.[4] James Dunnica, a master stonemason who built the first Capitol building in Jefferson City in 1826, was appointed to oversee construction of the new prison, and $25,000 was allotted by the legislature for expenses.[4] The facility opened for business in March 1836, the same month as the fall of the Alamo in Texas.

Prisoners were employed during the 1830s in making bricks; the initial prison population consisted of one guard, one warden, fifteen prisoners, and a foreman for the brick-making operation with an assistant. Eleven of the fifteen prisoners were from St. Louis, and all were incarcerated for larceny except for one, who was imprisoned for stabbing a man during a drunken brawl.[5]

In 1868 Housing Unit 4, formally known as A-Hall, was finished. The building constructed entirely of stone quarried on site was built mainly with inmate labor. Warde Horace Swift was the architect of the structure. It is still standing today, and housed inmates until the day the prison was closed. A museum was to be set up in this housing unit but has since been canceled due to a lack of funding.

Warden Wyrick

Warden Donald "D.W." Wyrick was the youngest, longest tenured and last "official" Warden of the Missouri State Penitentiary, also known as "The Walls" and "The Big House." MSP was also infamously referred to as the "bloodiest 47 acres in America."

He was the only Warden to work his way up through the ranks. In less than fifteen years after beginning as a Guard, he became Warden of the Missouri State Penitentiary during the most turbulent time in its history.

Warden Wyrick was credited on many occasions for keeping the old penitentiary under control when events brought the penitentiary to a boiling point.

His extensive knowledge of prisons and extraordinary ability to communicate with convicts led to the capture of escaped convicts, contraband weapons being found and attempted escapes from happening.

Warden Wyrick was well known throughout the United States and other countries as being the most superlative Warden of any penitentiary. He was sought after by many states to oversee their penal systems.

Warden Wyrick is a legacy within the Missouri Department of Corrections.

A book titled, "Man of the Big House, Missouri State Penitentiary, A Warden's Warden" was published about Warden Wyrick.

Famous inmates

April 19, 1919, prisoner Kate Richards O'Hare was brought to M.S.P. to serve a five year sentence for an anti-war speech she had given in Bohman, North Dakota some months earlier. Kate O'Hare's prison sentence was commuted by President Woodrow Wilson in May, 1920. Later she was given a full pardon by President Calvin Coolidge.

Charles Arthur "Pretty Boy" Floyd entered M.S.P. on December 18, 1925 for a robbery.

In the fall of 1953, a young Kansas City boy was kidnapped and brutally murdered. A week later the murderers, Carl Austin Hall and Bonnie Heady, were arrested. They were tried and sentenced to death for their crimes. The Federal Government had no facilities to carry out the execution, so M.S.P. was selected to carry out their sentence.

In 1954 there was a riot at M.S.P.. The Highway Patrol and National Guard troops were called in to help quell the riot. When it was all over, four inmates had been killed, 29 injured and one attempted suicide. Four corrections officers had been injured. Several buildings had been burned; and damages were estimated to be 5 million dollars. No prisoners were able to escape during the incident.

In 1956, the towers were updated, and this was the last time they were updated before the prison was closed in 2004.

James Earl Ray was admitted to the penitentiary on March 17, 1960. On April 23, 1967, prisoner #00416 J.E. Ray escaped from the Missouri State Penitentiary in a bread box that was supposed to contain loaves of bread that was being transported from M.S.P. to the Renz prison. Somewhere during the trip, Ray escaped. Ray later was convicted of the assassination of Martin Luther King, Jr.

In 1974, Lillian Bonds became the first female Correctional Officer to work in a male correctional facility. This was also the year that the official job classification for custody staff was changed from "Guard" to "Correctional Officer".

The last execution at M.S.P. was on January 6, 1989. The inmate executed was George "Tiny" Mercer.

In 1991, the name Missouri State Penitentiary was changed to the Jefferson City Correctional Center. In 2003 it was changed back to Missouri State Penitentiary so there was no confusion between the old prison, and the new one that was being built.

In December 1999, Corrections Supervisor I (Captain) Saralyn McKenzie became the highest ranking female custody staff member. She was the only female Captain ever to work inside the Walls.

On October 22, 2003, a murder/escape attempt occurred at M.S.P. Inmate Toby Viles was murdered by two offenders that worked with him in the prison's ice plant. Inmate Shannon Phillips has pled guilty of the murder. Inmate Christopher Simms was also present in the Ice Plant during the time of the murder, but has yet to stand trial. Inmate Phillips and Simms were found 4 days later in a room that the inmates had prepared for an extended stay. The room was concealed from corrections staff until they began to punch holes in peg boards that covered the walls. The two staff members who found the concealed inmates were CSI Saralyn McKenzie and COI Chad Hovis, both members of the MSP E-Squad. The offenders were planning to wait until the closure of M.S.P. to escape. They were only off by about 11 months.

The Missouri State Penitentiary was closed on Sept. 15 2004 and the new Jefferson City Correctional Center was opened.

Most of the information is from a handout titled <"History of the Jefferson City Correctional Center"> produced somewhere around 2001. There is no author noted in the handout to credit with the information, however the handout was produced by the administration of J.C.C.C..

There is also a book called "Somewhere in Time", written by former Deputy Warden Mark Schreiber, which goes into great detail regarding MSP. Mr. Schrieber spent over 30 years working at MSP and is one of the most knowledgeable individual regarding the Missouri State Penitentiary. Although he is retired from the Department of Corrections, he currently is a tour guide for the Jefferson City Convention and Visitors Bureau, and frequently conducts tours of what remains of the old prison. Tours can be booked at www.missouripentours.com.

Death row

Before April 1989 the State of Missouri's male death row was located at JCCC. Death row prisoners were held in a below-ground unit and were isolated from other prisoners. Death row prisoners did not leave their special death row facility, and all services were brought into the unit. Each death row prisoner was allowed one hour of exercise per day in a fenced area next to the death row facility. MDOC said "With restrictions on movement and limited access to programs, conditions of confinement for death row inmates mirrored those found in other states" and "As with other states using prison facilities constructed before the turn of the century, conditions at JCCC were less than favorable for both death row inmates and staff." After a legal challenge, MDOC began to use an internal death row classification system with privileges awarded by behavior, changes in medical services delivery procedures, and a "privacy room" where death row prisoners could attend religious services.[2]

The Potosi Correctional Center (PCC) opened in 1989.[6] In April 1989 the state transferred its 70 death row inmates from JCCC to Potosi.[7]

References

  1. ^ "Jefferson City Correctional Center." Missouri Department of Corrections. August 14, 2003. Retrieved on September 18, 2010.
  2. ^ a b Lombardi, George, Richard D. Sluder, and Donald Wallace. "The Management of Death-Sentenced Inmates: Issues, Realities, and Innovative Strategies." Missouri Department of Corrections. 8. Retrieved on September 18, 2010.
  3. ^ "Jefferson City Correctional Center." Missouri Department of Corrections. May 7, 2006. Retrieved on September 18, 2010.
  4. ^ a b The History of MSP, from the website on the penitentiary operated by the Jefferson City Convention and Visitors Bureau. Retrieved on 2010-02-05.
  5. ^ Prison Problem in 1836, from the website on the penitentiary operated by the Jefferson City Convention and Visitors Bureau. Retrieved on 2010-02-05.
  6. ^ Lombardi, George, Richard D. Sluder, and Donald Wallace. "The Management of Death-Sentenced Inmates: Issues, Realities, and Innovative Strategies." Missouri Department of Corrections. 8-9. Retrieved on September 18, 2010.
  7. ^ Lombardi, George, Richard D. Sluder, and Donald Wallace. "The Management of Death-Sentenced Inmates: Issues, Realities, and Innovative Strategies." Missouri Department of Corrections. 9. Retrieved on September 18, 2010.

External links

Coordinates: 38°34′24″N 92°09′38″W / 38.573409°N 92.160584°W / 38.573409; -92.160584


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