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.