In the city of Salem, county seat of Marion County, and capital of the state of Oregon, near the eastern border of the city and at the terminus of the State street electric-car line is situated the Oregon state penitentiary. The buildings themselves are of brick, and the yard is of ample dimensions for the number of prisoners usually confined in the institution. Outside the walls of the prison property extends a farm of about 200 acres. The farm is operated by prisoners who have been advanced to the degree of trusties, men who have earned for themselves a better treatment and more of liberty, men whose time is almost expired and who are striving to obey the rules in order that their stay at the institution may be of as short duration as possible. The Oregon penitentiary employs thirty-three people to care for the prisoners confined to its keeping. On October first this number was 349, and on December 22 it had increased to 373. The smallest number received is during the summer months, and there is generally an increase during the fall and winter. Of the prisoners in the prison on October 1, 106 came from Multnomah county, thirty-eight from Umatilla county, one from Curry county, and Tillamook and Lincoln were unrepresented. The other counties were represented by from two to eighteen men each. There are at the present time but two female prisoners.
There have been during the past two years nine prisoners who have been able to escape from confinement, and one of these was caught and returned. But all of these escapes occurred while the prisoners were out on the roads working for the county and under county guards. The penitentiary guards have not lost a single man while under their care. Four deaths have occurred, one from brain fever and three from consumption, and seven are confined at the insane asylum. At the present time the prison hospital has but one patient. During the past two years the finances of the penitentiary has been very satisfactory. The convicts have earned for the state the sum of $38,062.46 divided as follows; From board of United State prisoners, $3,163.34; from convict labor in Northwestern Stove Foundry, $28,299.25; from miscellaneous convict labor not paid in cash, $5,783.80; from convict labor paid for in cash, $816.07. The labor of the third item was performed on county roads for the various counties of the states. The total appropriations from the legislature were $110,264.10 and the unexpended balance is $17,174.35. The larger number of prisoners are employed in the Northwestern Stove Foundry, which has leased the large shops of the penitentiary and conducts a large foundry at the institution. In addition to this and the farming, the men are also employed in tailoring, carpentry, shoemaking, harness making and other useful trades, supplying all the clothing, shoes, harnesses, repair work, etc., needed at the prison, and they also do the work in the kitchen. There is not an institution of a large hotel or restaurant in the state that has a better equipment for cooking than that to be found at the state prison.
The personnel of the prison administration is of a high standard. The list which ends this article gives the names of all the employers and their positions on December 1. There is perfect harmony in the operations of the force in the conduct of the prison, and this as much as anything else makes for the great success that has attended the administration of prison affairs. The guards and those whose work requires continued watchfulness are on duty for twelve hours each day, while the superintendent, warden and other executive officers are never off duty. "Constant vigilance is the price of safety," and no where is this more completely demonstrated than in the conduct of a large prison. While the majority of the prisoners desire to shorten their time and when they get away from the institution desire to stay away through obedience to the law, there are always a greater or less number of desperate men who will hesitate at nothing if a chance is given them to make a break for liberty, and were it not for this continued care and watchfulness the lives, even of the prison officials would be in constant danger. If the new electric light plant now proposed should be installed it would give additional security, enabling the management to protect the tops of the walls with heavy charged wires, thus making it practically impossible for anyone to scale the wall from either side. The Oregon State Penitentiary is doing good work in the care it throws around the men committed to its walls, and in the practical efforts at reform adopted. visitors wishing to go through the prison are admitted any day except Sundays and holidays, and will be courteously treated and the workings of the institution explained as they go from corridor to corridor, and see the men at their various occupations.
|
|
|
|
|