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Coldbath Fields Prison
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Coldbath Fields Prison, also formerly known as the Middlesex House of Correction and Clerkenwell Gaol and informally known as the Steel,[1][2] was a prison in the Mount Pleasant area of Clerkenwell, London. Founded in the reign of James I (1603–1625) it was completely rebuilt in 1794 and extended in 1850.[3] It housed prisoners on short sentences of up to two years. Blocks emerged to segregate felons, misdemeanants and vagrants. The prison closed in 1885.
Key Information
History
[edit]Coldbath Fields Prison (also known as the Middlesex House of Correction) was originally a prison run by local magistrates and where most prisoners served short sentences. Coldbath Fields also served as a debtor's prison. It took its name from Cold Bath Spring, a medicinal spring discovered in 1697.[4] The prison housed men, women and children until 1850, when the women and children moved to Tothill Fields Bridewell in Victoria (Westminster) leaving only male offenders over the age of 17. Despite its aspirations to be more humanitarian (its redesign was by John Howard), it became notorious for its strict regime of silence[5] and its use of the treadmill.
Since 1793 Britain had been at war with France, and William Pitt’s government became increasingly drawn into attempts to restrain the growth of radical republican societies, such as the London Corresponding Society, especially in the East End of London. The Middlesex magistrates and police offices were a key part of this strategy.
In 1798 the magistrates, including Joseph Merceron, the corrupt 'Boss of Bethnal Green', became embroiled in a scandal over the conditions at Coldbath Fields, where several radical (also known as reformist) party sympathisers, including Colonel Edward Despard, were being held without trial. The scandal was exposed in Parliament by the young radical MP Sir Francis Burdett, who used it as the basis of his campaign against the chair of the magistrates William Mainwaring and his son George in the 1802 and 1804 Middlesex parliamentary elections.[citation needed]
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Vagrants exercising and on the treadmill
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Prisoners picking oakum
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Two prisoners working the water engine in the prison, from Ackermann's Microcosm of London, 1808
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Detailed internal plan
During the early 19th century, the prison temporarily housed members of the Cato Street Conspiracy. In March 1877 a fire, which started in the bakehouse, destroyed the treadmill house; no prisoners were hurt but two firemen were injured.[6]
The prison closed in 1885.[7] The site was transferred to the Post Office in 1889 and its buildings were gradually replaced. The last sections were demolished in 1929 for an extension of the Letter Office. Today, the site is occupied by the Mount Pleasant sorting office.[8]
Famous inmates
[edit]- Edward Dando, thief and glutton in London
- Edward Despard, colonel and Superintendent of British Honduras, imprisoned for revolutionary activity, and later executed for his part in the Despard Plot
- John Gravener Henson, workers' leader and historian of framework-knitters
- Owen Suffolk, bushranger
- Robert Wedderburn, ultra-radical leader and anti-slavery advocate
- Arthur Thistlewood English radical activist and conspirator in the Cato Street Conspiracy. In 1820 he together with the other Cato Street conspirators were lodged here, before being sent to the Tower.
- George Julian Harney English political activist, journalist, and Chartist leader.
- Johann Most German socialist, editor of Freiheit (Freedom)
- Poulett Somerset, captain Coldstream Guards, 10 days' imprisonment for horsewhipping a police constable on duty outside the Crystal Palace during the Great Exhibition.[9]
In literature
[edit]The Devil's Thoughts (1799), a poem attributed to Samuel Taylor Coleridge and Robert Southey (and others),[10] contains the stanza
As he went through Coldbath-fields, he saw
A solitary cell;
And the devil was pleased, for it gave him a hint
For improving his prisons in hell.
In Samuel Butler's semi-autobiographical novel 'The Way of All Flesh' the hero, Ernest Pontifex is sentenced to six months hard labour in Coldbath Fields prison: chapters 64-70.
References
[edit]- ^ A corruption of the French alike-sized Bastille in Cockney Slang. Oxford English Dictionary, "Steel, n. 2". Accessed 26 November 2013.
- ^ Dickens, Charles (1972). A London dictionary and guide book for 1879. Howard Baker Press. ISBN 978-0-7030-0018-7.
- ^ Philip Collins Dickens and crime Ch.III "The Silent System Coldbath Fields Prison"
- ^ "Early history: Cold Bath Fields Prison". The British Postal Museum & Archive. 2007. Archived from the original on 5 January 2011. Retrieved 13 September 2010.
- ^ "Coldbath Fields".
- ^ "CLERKENWELL HOUSE OF CORRECTION", The Penny Illustrated Paper and Illustrated Times (816), London: 204, 31 March 1877 Has some useful background information. The images have not come out brilliantly on the British Library site but can be found in higher quality on pay sites.
- ^ Weinreb, Ben; Hibbert, Christopher (1983). The London Encyclopaedia. London: Macmillan. p. 187. ISBN 0-333-45817-6.
- ^ "London for free – Historic Prisons – Details". Archived from the original on 19 June 2008.
- ^ ""An Officer of the Coldstream Guards sent to the House of Correction"". The Patriot. 15 May 1851.
- ^ Parolin, Christina (2010). "'Bastilles of despotism': radical resistance in the Coldbath Fields House of Correction, 1798–1830". Radical Spaces. ANU Press. pp. 49–82. ISBN 9781921862007. JSTOR j.ctt24hdhz.8., p.54
Further reading
[edit]- Mayhew, Henry; Binny, John (1862), The criminal prisons of London, and scenes of prison life Volume 3 of The great metropolis, Griffin, Bohn & Co, pp. 277–352 Comprehensive account of the prison in 1862
- Thornbury, George Walter; Walford, Edward (1878), "Coldbath Fields and Spa Fields", Old and New London: A Narrative of Its History, Its People, and Its Places, vol. 2, British History Online, retrieved 7 March 2017
Coldbath Fields Prison
View on GrokipediaOrigins and Construction
Founding in the Early 17th Century
The Middlesex House of Correction at Coldbath Fields traces its origins to 1615–1616, when a bridewell-style facility was constructed in Clerkenwell to serve as a house of correction for the county.[8] [9] This establishment formed part of a late Elizabethan and Jacobean initiative to institutionalize punishment and reformation of the disorderly poor, following the model of London's Bridewell Palace, which had been repurposed as the city's first house of correction in 1553 under royal charter.[8] The Middlesex institution, one of the earliest such facilities outside the capital's core, targeted vagrants, petty thieves, prostitutes, and other minor offenders deemed idle or disorderly, enforcing discipline through compulsory hard labor such as stone-breaking or spinning.[8] The site's location in Clerkenwell derived its name from the surrounding open fields and a notable cold spring—known as Cold Bath—whose mineral waters were believed to offer therapeutic benefits, drawing visitors for bathing and drinking as early as the 17th century.[10] [1] Construction occurred amid broader Poor Law reforms under James I, reflecting magistrates' efforts to curb urban vagrancy without resorting solely to corporal or capital punishments, though records indicate the facility quickly filled with inmates from Middlesex's growing population of migrants and laborers.[8] Early operations emphasized short-term confinement with moral correction, distinguishing it from gaols focused on untried prisoners, and it paralleled contemporaneous foundations like Westminster's house of correction in 1618.[8]Initial Purpose as a House of Correction
Coldbath Fields Prison originated as the Clerkenwell Bridewell, established in 1615 by the Middlesex Justices of the Peace as a house of correction, also known as the New Prison, to address overcrowding in existing City facilities like the original Bridewell.[7] This institution was built on former Bedingfield family garden plots in Clerkenwell, forming an L-shaped block with an associated yard accessible via New Prison Walk and Bridewell Walk.[7] Its creation responded to the growing numbers of vagrants and disorderly persons in early 17th-century London, where the City's Bridewell had become insufficient to handle the influx of vagabonds requiring corrective detention.[11] The primary purpose was punitive reform through enforced labor and discipline, targeting petty offenders, vagrants, beggars, and those convicted of minor moral or economic infractions such as idleness or petty theft, including men, women, and boys awaiting trial or sentenced to short terms.[8] [11] Houses of correction like this one embodied the era's causal understanding that poverty and crime stemmed from personal vice and laziness, which could be rectified by compulsory work, whipping, and isolation to instill habits of industry and obedience, rather than mere incarceration.[8] In practice, inmates were compelled to perform menial tasks aimed at self-sufficiency and moral improvement, distinguishing it from gaols focused on pre-trial holding.[1] Early operations emphasized separation and control, though the facility later faced challenges including inmate abuses like unauthorized smoking, drinking, and intermingling before later reforms.[11] This foundational role as a reformatory for the "sturdy beggar" and minor transgressor persisted until the site's complete rebuild in 1794, which retained the house of correction designation while expanding capacity.[1]Pre-Reform Developments
Coldbath Fields, originally established as a house of correction during the reign of James I (1603–1625), functioned primarily to detain vagrants, petty offenders, and those sentenced to short terms of imprisonment, typically up to two years, under the oversight of local Middlesex magistrates.[1][12] By the 18th century, the facility, also known as Clerkenwell Bridewell, had become overcrowded and dilapidated, accommodating an increasing number of inmates including men, women, and children convicted of misdemeanors such as theft, disorderly conduct, and vagrancy. Operations emphasized punitive labor, with prisoners subjected to extended workdays—up to 10 hours in summer—under constant supervision by turnkeys, who enforced discipline through irons, whipping, and solitary confinement.[13] Conditions deteriorated amid reports of corruption and abuse, including staff-prisoner alliances involving bribes and illicit loans, as documented in investigations such as the 1799 probe into Governor Thomas Aris's financial dealings with inmates.[13] Turnkeys, numbering around two dozen by the late 18th century and paid approximately 6 shillings per week in 1778, often lived onsite and faced complaints of delayed wages and favoritism toward certain prisoners, who received lighter duties or exemptions from labor.[13] Instances of violence, such as the 1797 assault on prisoner George Brooks by staff, highlighted systemic brutality, while broader neglect contributed to high mortality and disease, prompting calls for structural overhaul as the original buildings proved inadequate for growing demands.[13][14] These developments reflected wider 18th-century trends in English houses of correction, where initial aims of reformation through labor gave way to punitive overcrowding and mismanagement, particularly as urban crime rose and political unrest—exemplified by the use of the facility for radicals post-French Revolution—increased inmate numbers, ultimately necessitating a complete rebuild starting in 1788.[15][8]Reconstruction and Physical Layout
1794 Rebuild and Architectural Features
The Middlesex House of Correction at Coldbath Fields was completely rebuilt between 1788 and 1794, replacing the earlier facility founded in the early 17th century.[1] The reconstruction, spanning six years, was directed by architect Jacob Leroux, who devised the plans, potentially revising an initial scheme by Aaron Henry Hurst.[16] Advisors including Sir Robert Taylor and James Paine contributed to the design process, with construction overseen by Thomas Rogers as surveyor.[17] The new prison occupied an eight-acre site in Clerkenwell, enclosed by a tall, fortress-like brick perimeter wall spanning nine acres in total, which served both security and deterrent functions.[18] Its layout featured parallel rows of solitary cells arranged along wings, separated by exercise yards to enforce classification by sex and offense category.[19] Each cell measured 8 to 10 feet square, containing a wooden bench for sleeping, an iron-barred unglazed window for light and ventilation, and a shutter system to control airflow and isolation.[18] Yards for male and female inmates, typically 70 to 100 feet long by 50 feet wide, included colonnades for shelter during outdoor labor or exercise, promoting hygiene and preventing inter-prisoner communication.[18] The design incorporated reform-era principles, such as cellular confinement to foster penitence through solitude and reflection, while separate accommodations for felons, debtors, and misdemeanants minimized contamination.[8] Special state rooms provided relatively improved conditions for political prisoners.[18] Upon completion, the facility accommodated up to 384 inmates of both sexes, focusing on short-term sentences with emphasis on hard labor and moral rehabilitation.[19]1850 Expansion and Capacity Increases
In 1850, Coldbath Fields Prison underwent a significant extension to accommodate the growing number of short-term male convicts amid rising urban crime rates in mid-19th-century London.[20] This physical enlargement involved the addition of new wings and facilities, building on the original 1794 reconstruction, to enhance the institution's infrastructure for the separate system of imprisonment emphasizing isolation and hard labor.[21] Concurrently, the prison was redesignated exclusively for adult male prisoners aged 17 and over, with female and juvenile inmates transferred to facilities such as Tothill Fields Prison to enforce stricter sex-based and age-based classification under evolving penal reforms.[1] This policy shift, aligned with the Prison Act 1865's broader principles but anticipated earlier, optimized space utilization by eliminating mixed housing, which had previously strained resources and complicated discipline.[20] The expansion increased the prison's effective capacity, supporting a daily average of approximately 1,100 inmates by mid-century, primarily serving sentences of up to two years with a focus on deterrence through punitive labor like the treadmill and oakum-picking.[21] By the 1850s, the facility featured around 530 cells, often occupied by two prisoners each to handle overcrowding, reflecting the era's tension between reformist ideals of solitary confinement and practical demands of mass incarceration.[22] These modifications positioned Coldbath Fields as one of London's primary houses of correction for male petty offenders, though critics like William Hepworth Dixon noted persistent issues with sanitation and morale despite the upgrades.[7]Operational Regime
Daily Routine and Hard Labor Systems
The operational regime at Coldbath Fields Prison centered on hard labor intended as punishment rather than productive training, enforcing physical exertion alongside strict silence and separation to instill discipline.[23] Inmates faced eight hours of daily toil, with tasks designed to be repetitive and futile, such as powering machinery that often served no practical end.[20] Violations of rules, particularly against communication, were rampant, with the prison's punishment book logging 11,624 instances in a single year.[20] A typical day commenced at 6:25 a.m. with prisoners rising and cells unlocking by 6:30 a.m., followed by morning ablutions and a headcount before labor began at 7:00 a.m.[23] Breakfast and brief exercise occurred at 8:20 a.m., succeeded by chapel service at 9:30 a.m., after which work resumed at 10:00 a.m. until dinner and further exercise at 2:00 p.m.[23] Afternoon labor extended until supper at 5:30 p.m., culminating in lockup at 6:00 p.m. for overnight solitary confinement in one of 919 individual cells or shared dormitories accommodating up to 534.[23] This schedule allotted precisely eight hours and eight minutes to labor, one hour and thirty minutes to meals, and another hour and thirty minutes to non-treadwheel exercise, with school sessions running from 7:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. for rotating groups of 24 inmates.[23] Hard labor systems varied by prisoner class but prioritized unproductive exertion. The treadmill, a hallmark of the prison's punitive approach, featured six wheels—four for felons and two for vagrants—accommodating up to 12 men per wheel in 15-minute shifts for a total daily ascent of 7,200 feet, equivalent to roughly one mile and three furlongs.[23] [20] Participants endured cycles of 10 minutes on the wheel followed by five minutes rest, powering prison machinery in enforced isolation, though feigned illnesses numbered 3,972 in one reported year.[20] [23] Oakum picking, another core task, occurred in three dedicated rooms seating up to 500 men, where inmates unraveled old ropes to produce 3 to 6 pounds daily under hard labor conditions, yielding about 3.5 tons weekly valued at £17 10s.[23] Supplementary labors included crank turning—requiring 10,000 revolutions over eight hours and 20 minutes, often in solitary cells as punishment—shot drill involving cannonballs moved across a 30-foot square for 1.75 miles of walking, and limited productive work like tailoring for 80 prisoners daily.[23] In 1854, 4,511 of 7,743 inmates, or 58 percent, underwent hard labor, reflecting the prison's commitment to deterrence through bodily fatigue over reformation via skill acquisition.[23] Earlier regimes incorporated water engines for pumping, as depicted in 1808 illustrations, evolving into the treadmills by the mid-19th century.[23]Classification and Separation of Inmates
In Coldbath Fields Prison, inmates were classified and separated primarily by sex, offense category, and conviction status to minimize moral contamination and enforce discipline, in line with the Prison Act of 1823 (4 Geo. IV, c. 64), which mandated segregation in houses of correction. Categories included felons, those committed on suspicion of felony, misdemeanants, debtors, individuals held for safe custody by magistrates, and vagrants, with separate areas allocated for males and females to prevent intermingling.[24][19] The prison's layout facilitated this through eight distinct courtyards overseen by a central control keeper's house, enabling segregation of felons from petty criminals and debtors, alongside radial wings and 232 single cells for individual nighttime confinement.[19][19] Males occupied three-story wings, while females were housed in two-story sections, with specialized areas like separate oakum-picking rooms for misdemeanants and felons.[25][26] Under Governor George Laval Chesterton (1829–1854), the silent system—introduced as early as 1816—was strictly enforced, prohibiting all communication via word, gesture, or sign during daytime associated labor on tasks like the treadmill or oakum picking, while ensuring solitary cells at night to reinforce separation without the full isolation of the separate system.[25][24] This regime, which processed around 9,750 prisoners annually in the 1850s and issued 13,812 punishments for violations like talking in a single year, prioritized deterrence and reflection over industrial training.[24] Following the 1850 expansion, Coldbath Fields shifted to holding primarily adult male convicts serving terms up to two years, streamlining classification for correctional purposes while maintaining sex-based separation until female intake ceased.[23] Separate exercise yards further isolated classes during limited outdoor time, contributing to lower reported lunacy rates compared to fully separate-system prisons like Pentonville.[25]Health, Diet, and Medical Provisions
The dietary regime at Coldbath Fields Prison was structured according to prisoner classification, primarily determined by sentence length and labor requirements, with provisions scaled to provide minimal sustenance while enforcing discipline. Prisoners under 16 years of age or those serving sentences of 14 days or less (third class) received a basic allowance of 20 ounces of bread daily supplemented by gruel: one pint at breakfast, one pint at dinner, and half a pint at supper, with no meat, potatoes, or soup.[23] For sentences between 14 days and two months (second class), the allowance included 46⅔ ounces of bread weekly, daily gruel, and an option twice weekly for either 12 ounces of cooked meat or additional gruel, without potatoes or soup.[23] Those serving over two months with hard labor (first class, typically adults over 16) received 46⅔ ounces of bread weekly, 24 ounces of meat twice weekly, 32 ounces of potatoes twice weekly, and 1½ pints of soup three times weekly.[23]| Class | Sentence Length | Bread | Gruel | Meat | Potatoes | Soup |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Third | ≤14 days | 20 oz/day | 1 pint breakfast, 1 pint dinner, ½ pint supper | None | None | None |
| Second | 14 days–2 months | 46⅔ oz/week | 1 pint/day; or 12 oz meat twice weekly instead | 24 oz/week (optional) | None | None |
| First | >2 months, hard labor | 46⅔ oz/week | None | 48 oz/week | 64 oz/week | 4½ pints/week |

