Albany Penitentiary
Albany Penitentiary was an American prison in Albany, New York that operated from 1848[1] until 1931. The prison was designed by Amos Pillsbury, also the first superintendent.[2] Until the American Civil War, the main type of for-profit prison labor done at the penitentiary was the "making of coarse boots and shoes for the Southern negroes."[2] After the closure of the Arsenal Penitentiary, Albany became the destination for prisoners of the District of Columbia.[3] In 1910 the state prison commission issued a report with "scathing criticism of existing conditions" in the penitentiary.[4] The prison was demolished in 1933, at which time demolition crews found "'dungeons' that were likely used to keep rule-breaking inmates in deep isolation."[5] The turn-of-the-century Bertillion-system mugshots from the penitentiary are kept in the Albany Hall of Records.[6] References
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