Crime and Punishment
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The nineteenth
century saw widespread prison reform. The Gaol Act of 1823 encouraged prisons
to be more healthy and to ensure that prisoners were separated according to
their sex and the sort of crime they had committed. However,
the lives of prisoners were still harsh, they led a very solitary existence
and were often employed in hard labour. This was often
pointless and repetitive work.
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People
were sentenced to hard labour for various crimes, some seemingly more deserving
than others. In 1790, for instance, both Elizabeth Hughes and Mary Jones were
given one years hard labour for giving birth to bastard children!
Hard
labour sometimes fulfilled a more constructive purpose. For instance, prisoners
were put to work on Montford Bridge which was built between 1790 and 1792. The
bridge was designed by Thomas Telford and was constructed at the same time that
he was working on Shrewsbury Prison.
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Prisoners were
provided with only simple and monotonous food and enjoyed rudimentary living
conditions. Rules for Shrewsbury prison, drawn up in 1850, show that diets varied
according to the crime committed, the length of sentence and the behaviour of
the prisoner. The lowest stages provided minimal amounts of food. Most prisoners
did not progress beyond this stage as the majority of sentences were short.
The majority of prisoners were therefore kept on a diet that amounted to near
starvation.
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Prison rules
had to be strictly adhered to, especially by the inmates. Punishments of unruly
prisoners were again severe and included being confined to a solitary cell and
being denied food. In 1879 John Heywood was whipped using the Cat o' nine tails
for barricading his cell door and breaking the windows. The Cat was a style
of whip made up of nine knotted lines. Sometimes steel balls or barbs of wires
would be added to the end of the lines to give them more striking force.
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