The prison opened in 1917. It sits on land that was owned by the Mexican government until 1824. In the 1830s and 1840s, the land housed a plantation owned by John Darrington of Alabama. Slaves picked cotton and sugar cane there. Darrington did not live on the site, but the name Darrington Plantation stuck even after subsequent owners bought the land. The state of Texas kept the name of the plantation when they opened the prison, designating it the Darrington Unit.[5]
The song "Wasn't That a Mighty Storm" was first recorded by John A. Lomax in 1934 at Darrington, sung by "Sin-Killer" Griffin who claimed authorship.[6] In 1935 Darrington housed African American prisoners.[7]
In 1963, before racial desegregation occurred, the facility housed white second offenders.[8] In the late 1980s, Darrington housed a lot of leaders of prison gangs. In 1986 and 1987 a 12-foot (3.7 m) high gunwalk was built, overseeing 13 recreation yards; the walk allows prison guards to easily shoot and kill raging prisoners.[9]
In 2017 a judge ordered the installation of air conditioning.[4]
In January 2021, State Representative James White, chair of the Texas House Committee on Corrections, asked the Texas Board of Criminal Justice to rename the Darrington Unit and two other Texas prisons because the names were associated with slavery or convict leasing. White referred to John Darrington as a "plantation mega owner".[10] Later in the year, TDCJ changed the name of the prison to the Memorial Unit in honor of the agency's deceased employees.[5]
Operations
The Texas Legislature designated portions of Angleton ISD that by September 1, 1995 had not been annexed by Alvin Community College as in the Brazosport College zone.[11] As Darrington Unit is not in the maps of Alvin CC, it is in the Brazosport College zone.[12] There was a section of H.B. No. 2744,[13] filed on March 6, 2007,[14] which would have changed the boundary between Alvin CC and Brazosport CC to put the Darrington Unit in the Alvin CC service boundary.
Serving a sentence of 99 years, of which he would 126 years old when released, effectively making it a life sentence. However, he is eligible for parole in 2037.
Perpetrator of the 2007 Murder of Tynesha Stewart, his ex-girlfriend, which is notable for the unusual method of disposing her body in which Shepard cooked her on a barbeque grill to cover up his crime.[16][17][18]
^"H.B. No. 2744." Texas Legislature. Retrieved on March 11, 2011. "(3) the territory located in Brazoria County, situated to the west of the Alvin Community College District boundary as it existed on January 1, 2003, extending west to the eastern border of Fort Bend County, and south to County Roads 49, 34, and 255, including the City of Rosharon and the Darrington and Ramsey Units of the Texas Department of Criminal Justice."