Tothill Fields Bridewell (also known as Tothill Fields Prison and Westminster Bridewell) was a prison located in the Westminster area of central London between 1618 and 1884. It was named "Bridewell" after the Bridewell Palace, which during the 16th century had become one of the City of London's most important prisons. Tothill Fields later became the Westminster House of Correction.
Location | London |
---|---|
Coordinates | 51°29′46″N 0°08′23″W / 51.49611°N 0.13972°W |
Status | Closed |
Opened | 1791 |
Closed | 1853 |
Notable prisoners | |
History
editLike its City counterpart, the Westminster Bridewell was intended as a "house of correction" for the compulsory employment of able-bodied but indolent paupers. Built in 1618, it was enlarged in 1655, and during the reign of Queen Anne, its regime was extended to cover the incarceration of criminals.
In 1834 the original Bridewell was replaced by a larger prison, on a different site, 8 acres (32,000 m2) in area, south of Victoria Street and close to Vauxhall Bridge Road. The new prison, designed by Robert Abraham and costing £186,000, was circular in plan (following Jeremy Bentham's "panopticon"), so that warders could supervise prisoners from a central point, and had a capacity of 900 prisoners. After it was completed, the old prison was demolished. At the back of Middlesex Guildhall in Little Sanctuary is the 17th-century "Stone Gateway", positioned there by the Greater London Council in 1969. This is the only visible remnant of the prison.[1]
Originally the Bridewell comprised three separate gaols for untried male prisoners and debtors, male convicts, and women. Inmates were put to work oakum-picking and treading the treadmill, and it operated on the silent/separate system. However, due to poor management, the regime was changed in 1850 and the Bridewell then housed only women and convicted boys under the age of seventeen.
The second prison was closed in 1877, when prisoners were transferred to Millbank Prison, and was demolished in 1885. Westminster Cathedral, started in 1895, now stands on the site. The prison's foundations were re-used for the cathedral.
Notable inmates
edit- Edward Despard, convicted of high treason[2]
- Gregor MacGregor, accused of fraud by means of the Poyais emigration program.[3]
- James Tilly Matthews, apparently insane[4]
- John Trumbull, for alleged treason (1780–1781)[5]
- Samuel Drybutter, for attempted sodomy (1770–1771)[6]
- Ernest Charles Jones, Chartist leader (c.1860)[citation needed]
References
edit- ^ A Straight Line Walk Across London, by Paul K Lyons Archived 2006-10-08 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Edward Marcus DESPARD; Edward Law Earl of Ellenborough (1803). State Trials at large. Taken in short hand. The whole proceedings on the trials of Col. Despard, and the other state prisoners, before a special commission, at the New Sessions House, Horsemonger Lane, Southwark, Feb. 7 and 9, 1803 ... To which are prefixed original and authentic memoirs of Col. Despard, and Lord Ellenborough's eloquent charge to the Grand Jury. R. Bent & John Mudie. pp. 6–.
- ^ Vikas Khatri. World Famous Crooks & Con Men. Pustak Mahal. pp. 135–. ISBN 978-81-223-1206-5.
- ^ Trotter, David (2001). Paranoid Modernism: Literary Experiment, Psychosis, and the Professionalization of English Society. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-818755-6.
- ^ "Benjamin West and John Trumbull, by Kathryn Moore Heleniak".
- ^ "The Macaroni Club: Newspaper Items". rictornorton.co.uk.