Location | Wethersfield, Connecticut |
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Coordinates | 41°43′12″N 72°39′31″W / 41.72000°N 72.65861°WCoordinates: 41°43′12″N 72°39′31″W / 41.72000°N 72.65861°W |
Status | Closed |
Capacity | 788 |
Opened | 21 October 1827 |
Closed | November, 1963 |
Managed by | Connecticut State Prison |
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Wethersfield State Prison was the second state prison in the state of Connecticut. Used between 1827 and 1963, it was later demolished and the site turned into a park on the banks of the Connecticut River.
Connecticut opened the Wethersfield State Prison in September 1827 as a replacement for the decrepit Old Newgate Prison, which had begun as a copper mine. Although the prisoners had no longer been housed in the former mine galleries by that point, the above-ground facilities were inadequate for the state's need. 127 inmates were shackled together and marched the 20 miles from East Granby to Wethersfield. The new prison was intended to be state of the art and was modeled after the Auburn State Prison in New York. Wethersfield State Prison not only followed the physical model of Auburn, but it also followed the harsh Auburn System of prisoner control until 1900. Prisoners were required to march in lockstep, forbidden from all talking, and expected to work to support the prison.
Until 1880, the cost of running the facility was met exclusively through prison labor. Both male and female inmates worked: men as blacksmiths, carpenters, coopers, and tailors and women as domestic workers and cigar-makers.
The prison was built on 44 acres at the edge of Wethersfield Cove and the grounds included the 1774 Solomon Welles House, used as the Warden's residence. Beginning as a single building, over the course of its 136-year history many more buildings and workshops were constructed until it became a "hodgepodge" of ill-matched structures within the surrounding walls.
All executions carried out by the state of Connecticut between 1893 and 1957 took place at this prison. A separate "execution house" was the site of 55 judicial hangings and 18 executions by electric chair. Warden Jabez L. Woodbridge was granted U.S. Patent 541,409 for the automatic gallows used in the prison, also known as the upright jerker. The upright jerker was never very efficient at breaking the condemned's neck and was withdrawn from use by the 1930s.