翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Toronto International Teen Movie Festival
・ Toronto International Trap and Skeet Club
・ Toronto Internet Exchange
・ Toronto Board of Control
・ Toronto Board of Education
・ Toronto Board of Trade Building
・ Toronto Book Awards
・ Toronto Botanical Garden
・ Toronto Business Development Centre
・ Toronto Camera Club
・ Toronto Carrying-Place Trail
・ Toronto Cathedral
・ Toronto Catholic District School Board
・ Toronto CCMs
・ Toronto Central LHIN
Toronto Central Prison
・ Toronto Central Prison Chapel
・ Toronto Centre
・ Toronto Centre (provincial electoral district)
・ Toronto Centre for the Arts
・ Toronto Chamber Orchestra
・ Toronto Children's Chorus
・ Toronto Chinese Baptist Church
・ Toronto Chinese Lantern Festival
・ Toronto Choral Society
・ Toronto City
・ Toronto City Council
・ Toronto City Council 2010–2014
・ Toronto City Council 2014–2018
・ Toronto City Hall


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

Toronto Central Prison : ウィキペディア英語版
Toronto Central Prison

The Toronto Central Prison, also known as the Central Prison, Central Prison for Men, and more colloquially as The Toronto Jail (the third of four Toronto area jails to be given that nickname) was a prison in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It was a 336-bed facility located near the intersection of King Street and Strachan Avenue. It opened in 1873, when the area was still well away from any residential development. The prison was intended as an industrial facility and began with the manufacturing of railway cars for the Canada Car Company. Hard work and discipline were considered the best forms of rehabilitation and active industry would raise money for the prison.
The prison should have flourished as an example of modern penal facility of its time, but by the 1880s it had a well-deserved reputation for brutality. Its first warden, William Stratton Prince, was an alcoholic ex-military officer who resigned as chief of the Toronto Police to take the position. During his tenure he was accused of ordering extreme beatings, denying medical treatment and supporting clandestine, nighttime burials. Wardens that followed tried to adopt a less disciplinarian approach but the guards continued to brutalize the inmates.〔(The Archaeological Master Plan of the Central Waterfront, City of Toronto, Page 30 )〕 In 1911, Dr. J.T. Gilmour, one of the more reformist wardens, made news in the United States with his new outdoor work program, specifically one that allowed inmates to work without armed guards.〔(2 April 1911, New York Times - "No Locks on this Prison" )〕 Dr. Gilmour's reforms were not enough to overcome the prison's reputation. In 1915, the prison was abandoned as changing attitudes toward crime and punishment led to a revamping of the province’s correctional system and replaced by the Ontario Reformatory in Guelph. For the next five years, the facility was used as an army base and a processing centre for new immigrants.
In 1920, the main prison building was demolished and much of the land sold for use by the railroads. Remaining buildings ended up being used by Hobb's, Dr. Ballard's, and finally by the neighbouring John Inglis and Company Limited factory until 1981. During its operation the prison also had an out-camp with a shale and clay quarry on property in Mimico. That property and its buildings became part of what is now known as the Mimico Correctional Centre when the prison closed.
All that remains today is the Central Prison's Roman Catholic chapel on East Liberty Street (added to the main building in 1877) and a wall of the prison's paint shop. The chapel became part of the city’s inventory of heritage properties in 1985.〔(City of Toronto: King Liberty Village )〕 The wall is now part of the east wall of the A. R. Williams Company Liberty Storage Warehouse on Lynn Williams Street. The Williams company purchased the paint shop property after the closure of the prison and demolished the building. The Williams warehouse is itself now a listed heritage property.

Image:TorontoCentralPrisonChapelEast.jpg|East side of the Toronto Central Prison Chapel
Image:Toronto Central Prison - Salvage Room - 1917.jpg|The prison in use as the Aeroplane Repair Park in 1917 during WWI

== See also ==

* Toronto Central Prison Chapel
* List of correctional facilities in Ontario

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「Toronto Central Prison」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.