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Eastern State Penitentiary Historical Site

Eastern State Penitentiary Historical Site


Location (address): United States, Pennsylvania, Philadelphia
Longitude: -75° 10' 21"
Latitude: 39° 58' 5"
Date: 2007 July 06, 01:03
Views: 16119
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michael morris
the famous eastern state penitariary is the cooliest place to go if u like ghost and i am taking a trip there in march maybe april


2007 November 28, 11:15
Mitcheljohnston
The famous Chicago gangster Al Capone Stayed there because he was carrying a revolver. The government wanted to use him as an example to prove how good they were. But ironically he was treated with the best care of all the inmates of the Eastern State Penitentrium.
2007 May 10, 13:06
Mitcheljohnston
There was a guy who wouldn't shut up while his stay. So they used a tool called the Iron Gagg. It was a device that would be connected to your tongue. If you tried talking it would choke you. That is exactly what happened to that man. Eventually he died. Investigators searched into it later and said he got what he deserved.
2007 May 10, 13:35
Jennifer KIrkham
As a child growing up in Philadelphia I had to walk by this building everyday on my way to my fathers work. Every day that I passed I would hear voices and terrible noices comming from this building. It got to the point tthat I would go with out snack money because I was so scared of hearing the voices and the noices that came from with in this very scary place. As an adult I tried again to walk by the prison and still to this day I hear the same thing
2006 January 05, 02:30
the h man
They also kept the bags over the inmates faces so that their time in Eastern state Penitentiary, all they would remember was the inside of their prison cells and nothing else.
2005 November 21, 01:56
Less
Eastern State Penitentiary is located at the corner of Fairmount Avenue and 22nd Street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 3 1/2 blocks east of the Philadelphia Museum of Art. It opened in 1829. The penitentiary was originally based on the idea of the Pennsylvania System, which encouraged solitary confinement as a form of rehabilitation. It was opposed contemporaneously by the New York System, which held that prisoners should be forced to work together in silence, and could be subjected to physical punishment. (Sing Sing prison was an examplar of the New York system).

Eastern State was viewed as a progressive reform in that it eliminated many of the excesses of physical punishment in colonial America. Despite this, it was widely believed (then and now) to have caused significant mental illness among its prisoners due to its solitary confinement. The system eventually collapsed due to overcrowding problems and the prison used a more conventional style of incarceration until it closed in 1970.

The prison was one of the largest public-works projects of the early republic, and was a tourist destination in the 19th century. Notable visitors included Charles Dickens and Alexis de Tocqueville while notable inmates included Willie Sutton and Al Capone.

Eastern State is currently open as an historic site, but closed in the winter.

Initially, the Eastern State Penitentiary was as the name indicates a place for penitence. New inmates entered the prison wearing a bag over their heads so as not to be recognized by other prisoners. They were then placed in isolation, which they never left as each cell had its very own exercise yard. Their only pastime was reading the Bible provided in each cell. Essentially, during their stay at the Penitentiary, inmates never saw anyone other than the wardens.

Later however, as the prison began to admit increasingly more prisoners, the isolation system ceased to function and prisoners were allowed to see other inmates and leave their individual cells.

The prison was well known for its medical wing. The nearby University of Pennsylvania Medical School often visited the wing to "practice" plastic surgery and other procedures on the prisoners.

In 1945, a major prison escape was carried out as a few prisoners, including the infamous Willie Sutton, dug a tunnel under one of the cells and then under the prison wall to freedom.

After being abandoned in 1971, the prison was left uncared for. The City of Philadelphia had plans to demolish the penitentiary and turn it into luxury apartments. The Historical Society stepped in however, deeming it a historical site, and thereby saving it.

Today, the Eastern State Penitentiary hold events such as Bastille Day, to commemorate the famous night of the French Revolution as well as a special Halloween Haunted House visit. It is currently under restoration.

Due to Eastern State's ominious apperance, gloomy atmosphere and long history, two different television dramas explored the supernatural at Eastern State- the Sci Fi channel's Ghost Hunters and MTV's Fear.
2005 November 10, 21:50

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