Eastern State Penitentiary

I hope you liked the last picture I posted from Seattle.  I’ll have more from that trip down the road.  Tonight, I have a photo from my trip to Philly last year.  During that trip, I spent an afternoon at Eastern State Penitentiary.  I took this photo in one of the prison wings.

To purchase a print or view the entire gallery, click the photo above.

To purchase a print or view the entire gallery, click the photo above.




Entrance To Maximum Security

I took this picture last year while touring the West Virginia State Penitentiary in Moundsville WV.  I posted some other pictures and information from this location in the past.  You can see that here:  http://brook-ward.com/blog/2013/6/15/walkin-the-line


This picture is the transition point from the normal prison population into the really, really bad boys held in Maximum Security.

To purchase a print or view the entire gallery, click the photo above.

To purchase a print or view the entire gallery, click the photo above.




Cell Block 3 – Hospital Department

In 1880, Eastern State Penitentiary’s Cell Block 3 was converted into the “Hospital Department” for the prison which included about 20 cells.  They tried to take care of all injuries and illness here to avoid transporting an inmate to a local hospital.  They had different types of physicians rotate through Cell Block 3 to perform a number of different surgeries, procedures and services.  Can you imagine having surgery in this environment???  You can see a picture of the surgery room below.  Cell Block 3 was in use for this purpose until the prison closed in 1970. 

By The Way, I appreciate everyone who faithfully views the blog.  I know you have many competing and important things in your life.  So the fact you take some time to read by little blog doesn’t go unnoticed by me.  Thanks.

To purchase a print or view the entire gallery, please click the photo above.

To purchase a print or view the entire gallery, please click the photo above.

Operating Room

Operating Room

Walkin' The Line

I had more time to kill by myself again this weekend, so I filled it with some photography.   Last weekend I toured the Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia.  This weekend, I toured the West Virginia State Penitentiary in Moundsville WV.   This retired, gothic style prison operated from 1876 to 1995.  This prison had a number of deadly riots and escapes through the years.  At its peak it held around 2,300 men, which like many prisons was more then it was designed to hold.  That meant three men to a 5-foot by 7-foot cell.  One guy had to sleep on the floor.  A 1986 ruling by the State’s Supreme Court sealed the fate of the prison when the court ruled the small cells were cruel and unusual punishment.          

This picture was taken in the maximum-security area of the prison for the most dangerous prisoners.  Notice the steel cell doors are even covered with mesh to prevent the prisoners from throwing options and/or assaulting the guards from within their cells.  Only a small slot was open to pass food trays inside to the convicts.  These men saw less then 30 minutes of daylight per day.  But compared to the “Hole”, these cells were like living in luxury.

Maximum Security Area - To purchase a print or view the entire gallery, please click the photo above.

Maximum Security Area - To purchase a print or view the entire gallery, please click the photo above.

Death Came In Many Ways

Although from what I learned, the size of the cells was the least of the prisoners concerns.  They had no heat in winter and no air conditioning in the summer.  The food was so contaminated with rats and cockroaches that inmates rioted in 1986.

This 5' x 7' cell belonged to Red, who was stabbed over 30 times within this space.  Prior to his murder here, he was known as the worst prisoner within the facility.

This 5' x 7' cell belonged to Red, who was stabbed over 30 times within this space.  Prior to his murder here, he was known as the worst prisoner within the facility.

There were 94 men legally executed by hanging and electrocution.  In the early years, legal execution was done by hanging and the public could buy a ticket to watch.  This was big business/money for the prison.  Electrocution was added in 1951 and was used until the State outlawed execution entirely in 1965.  Paul Glenn who was an inmate himself built old Sparky, the nickname of the electric chair.  Many of the prisoners didn’t like the fact that he built the chair, so the State was forced to transfer him to another prison. 

If that wasn’t bad enough, murder within the facility was an on going problem with an estimated 1,000 lives lost within the walls.  It was known as a “cons prison”, which meant that they had control and power of the facility.  Gang violence was common in the later years, along with torture and murder by guards in the early years.  It was weird standing in a number of the spots where the tour guide would describe a violent murder or murders that took place in that specific location as if it was nothing.  I wouldn’t call it spooky…more like a sense of being uncomfortable.  I guess it shouldn’t surprise me that the tour guides all believe the place is haunted and have all experienced super natural events.  It was as if you could feel the pain, evil, and torture that seeped out of the place.  It wasn’t as interesting as Eastern State Penitentiary from an architectural perspective, but it felt more evil.

 "Old Sparky"

 "Old Sparky"

Prison Life

I needed to be in the Philadelphia area Monday morning so I drove over Sunday.  That saved me driving 11 hours (over and back) all in one day.  MJ had to work all day anyway, so I left early in the morning so I could visit the Eastern State Penitentiary (ESP).  This is a site I’ve wanted to visit for some time.  

The prison opened in 1829 and was the first true prison built in the world.  Prior to this, all prisons where just large holding bays where the inmates were all grouped together (men, women, and children).  It was designed to not only punish, but to inspire the criminal toward spiritual reflection and change.  Every cell was intended to be solitary confinement.  They never wanted the inmate to have contact with another person, including guards during the criminals stay.  Inmates were hooded whenever they were outside their cells and exposed to complete silence.

The design and concept was so novel, that more then 300 prisons in South America, Europe, Russia, China, Japan and England were based on this design and operational plan.   Toward the end of its use, the old prison needed expensive repairs.  The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania closed the facility in 1971, 142 years after it accepted Charles Williams (Prisoner #1).  The facility sat abandoned for 20 years before the city turned it over to the Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site Inc..  Today thousands of visitors tour the site every year as a ruin and historical site. 

One of the famous inmates was Al “Scarface” Capone.  I may post a picture of his cell at a later day.  They have it restored to how it looked when he used it. 

You can learn more about this location at: http://www.easternstate.org/home

Today’s Photo:

I took this spooky photo using auto-bracketing to capture 7 exposures.  I merged them together in Photomatix Pro to get my base HDR image.  Then I edited it in Photoshop CS6 to finish the picture.  I’ve seen others post a picture of this room before in the past.  Something about that single barber’s chair in this dark room that makes this image feel evil.

Additional Note:

One of my photos will be featured on this website today:  http://worldisbeautiful.net/photo/2013/6/10/

To purchase a print or view the entire gallery, please click the picture above. 

To purchase a print or view the entire gallery, please click the picture above.