John Augustus

John Augustus

John Augustus (1785-June 21, 1859) was a Boston boot maker who is called the "Father of Probation" in the United States because of his pioneering efforts to campaign for more lenient sentences for convicted criminals based on their backgrounds.

Augustus' efforts are credited with the establishment of the Presentence Investigation.

Augustus was born in Woburn, Massachusetts.

Only one manuscript is attributed to him: "The Report of the Labors of John Augustus"

He wrote in a letter:

:"Time has not been spent in getting out books, but in getting persons out of jail."

At his death, it was noted that of the 2,000 people he helped only four proved unworthy (for which he forfeited bail) [ [http://www.uscourts.gov/fedprob/June_2006/augustus.html John Augustus, Father of Probation, and the Anonymous Letter - Federal Probation; A Journal of Correctional Philosophy and Practice - Vol. 70 Number 1] ]

Traces of probation date back to 437 B.C. However courts in the 1800s had been giving out sentences regardless of background of the defendant.

Augustus coined the word “probation” which he derived from the Latin word “probare” which means “to prove, to test”.

Augustus was an active member of the Washington Total Abstinence Society. Augustus was concerned that poor drunks and offenders of petty crimes were receiving mandatory sentences that were not warranted by their backgrounds. He felt that first time offenders could best be rehabilitated if spared the crime hardening experience of a prison sentence.

In 1841, Augustus approached the Boston, Massachusetts police court and persuaded them to let a “common drunkard” be left in his care instead of going to prison. The conditions were that a fine needed to be paid and the offender must return before the court in three weeks, the fine was levied at one cent plus court costs, which came to the total of $3.76.

After three weeks of being in Augustus' care, in which Augustus found him a job and made him sign a pledge to stop drinking, the offender and Augustus returned to astonish the court. The offender was completely sober and his appearance and demeanor had drastically improved.

The court allowed Augustus to take more and more offenders into his custody. Of course he didn't try to take all the cases, he would select prospective probationers based on age, character and the people places and things apt to influence them to make his decision. His practice assumed that most offenders are not dangerous and will respond well to treatment, we know that that line of thinking has changed a lot by now.

In 1843 Augustus turned his attention toward helping children. He took eleven children into his care, all accused of stealing. The children included ten girls ages eight and ten and an eleven year-old boy. Three years later this number had grown to thirty children ranging nine to sixteen years old. The process was such that the children's cases were continued for period of several months as a term of probation. At the calling of the docket each month, Augustus would appear to make his report and the cases would pass on for 5-6 months. Then, at the end of the term he would appear with some of the children, and as with his first success their appearance had drastically improved from the time of their arraignment. With this and the paying of a ten cent fine per person, the judge would declare that the object of the law was accomplished, thanks to Augustus' plan to save and reform.

Augustus' success rate could rival and possibly surpass the success rate of any rehabilitation program available to today. His work brought him the devotion and aid of many Boston philanthropists and organizations.

Augustus' first success had started him on an 18 year run as the first probation officer ever.

After John Augustus

In 1878, Massachusetts authorized the Mayor of Boston to hire a probabation officer based upon the work of John Augustus. Two years later, every city in Massachusetts was using a probabation officer and by 1890, every court in the state had one.

References

External links

* [http://research.hrc.utexas.edu:8080/hrcxtf/view?docId=ead/00206.xml&query=augustus,%20john&query-join=and John Augustus Collection] at the Harry Ransom Center at the University of Texas at Austin


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