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Cork City Gaol


Cork City Gaol is a former prison, now a museum, located in Cork City, Ireland.

In 1806 an Act of Parliament was passed to allow the building of a new Cork City Gaol to replace the old Gaol at the Northgate Bridge (the old Gaol which was nearly 100 years was on a confined site and was overcrowded & unhygienic).

The first site chosen for the new prison was at distillery fields but this site was later deemed to be unsuitable because it was prone to flooding.

A site on Sunday's Well was eventually chosen, its altitude being seen as an advantage for containing "Gaol fever" (typhus).

The site, its approach roads and perimeters was commenced in 1816 and the building of the prison proper started in 1818.

The building was designed by William Robertson of Kilkenny and built by the Deane family.

The famous sculptor, John Hogan worked on the building as a draughtsman.

The new Cork City Gaol opened in 1824 & was reported as being "the finest in 3 kingdoms".

In 1870 the west wing was remodelled into a double sided cell wing.

When the prison opened in the 1820s it housed both male and female prisoners, whose crimes were committed within the city boundary. Anyone committing a crime outside that boundary were committed to the County Gaol, across the river from the City Gaol near University College Cork.

The Fenian Brian Dillon was remanded at Cork City Gaol when he was arrested in September 1865.

The 1878 General Prisons (Ireland) Act reorganised the prisons in Cork. The Cork City Gaol became a Women’s Gaol (for Cork City and Cork County) and the Cork County Gaol near UCC became the men’s gaol (for Cork City and Cork County). On the day the change came into effect male prisoners were marched out of the Sunday’s Well Prison and over to the Western Road Gaol, while the women were marched in the opposite direction.

Many of the prisoners in the late 19th Century were repeat offenders locked up for what would not today be imprisonable offences; for example, a woman named Mary Tucker from Rathmore in County Cork was imprisoned at least three times between 1849 and 1908, sometimes for offences such as 'Obscene Language' or 'Drunkenness'.

During the Irish War of Independence Republican women prisoners were imprisoned in the Gaol.


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