Apr

10

Weekend April 10-11, 2021 – A building that held no good memories for those who survived being incarcerated there

By admin

334th Edition

WEEKEND EDITION

APRIL 10-11,  2021

The Lost 1756 Debtors’

Prison – City Hall Park

FROM A DAYTONIAN IN MANHATTAN

In 1756 the population of New York City numbered 10,530.  There were about 2,000 buildings, nearly all of them below what is now City Hall Park.  By now Native Americans were essentially gone (a letter from the city that year mentioned “There are very few Indians on this island, all being either cut off by intestine wars or diseases.”), and parts of the upper portions of Manhattan were becoming cultivated into farmland.  Before long luxurious summer estates of the city’s wealthy merchants and British officers would begin dotting the upper reaches.
 Until now the growing city did not have, nor need, a dedicated jail building.  Law breakers were housed in the old City Hall.  But the arrangement was quickly growing insufficient.  According to “The Old Martyrs’ Prison” written in 1902, “the City was growing in wickedness as it grew in population, and it was decided to erect a New Gaol on the northeastern corner of the Common (or ‘The Fields,’ as it was then called), adjoining the High Road to Boston.” The Fields was the center of public activity in mid-18th century New York.  It remains today, somewhat altered, as City Hall Park.  The new jail would be erected off the northeast corner of the common; a site north of the hubbub of business and residences, but prominent to assemblies in The Field. The jail was completed either in 1756 or 1758; a square stone building about 60 by 75 feet and three stories tall.  The basement, which would be more appropriately termed a dungeon today, was a series of great brick arches, nine feet tall with walls two feet thick.  Heavy doors connected the dungeon spaces.

The handsome Georgian structure above ground was built of rough-cut stone.  A cupola surmounting the roof contained a bell used to give alarms of fire.  The location of the fire would be indicated at night by a lantern suspended from a pole in the direction of the fire. Costing $12,000, it was New York City’s first jail built expressly for that purpose.  “The Old Martyrs’ Prison” noted “It was an imposing edifice in its day, and, standing as it did the most conspicuous object to the traveler as he entered the town by the old Boston High Road, was a powerful admonition to all comers to lead a sober, righteous and upright life—and to pay their debts.” In 1759 an act was passed that removed all remaining prisoners from City Hall to the new jail.  The Fields was soon a visible object lesson in righteous living.  The Poor-House sat near the New Goal, approximately where City Hall now stands, had been erected in 1735 and in 1764 the whipping post, pillory, cage and stocks were transferred from Wall Street to an area in front of the jail. That year the jail received a surprising prisoner.  Major Rogers of His Majesty’s Army was a prominent figure in town and lived far beyond his means.  Finally, in January, his frustrated creditors had him arrested.   Rogers’ companions demanded his release, feeling his imprisonment was an insult to the Royal Army and a threat to the military authority.  The jailor rebuffed them. The soldiers descended on the jail, breaking into the doors with axes and muskets and releasing their Major.   The other prisoners had the chance to escape; but decided it best to remain in their cells.  The ensuing riot was finally squashed by the militia, but not before one of the British Sergeants was killed. Among the prisoners here were those who failed to made good on their debts.  By the American colonial legal system, based on the British Statute of Merchants of 1285, creditors could simply report a debtor to the sheriff who would arrest the offender and toss him into the jail.  Since the prisoners had no money, they were unable to pay their bail and relied on the charity of friends to bail them out. Prisoners with a view of the common watched the events of a growing revolution unfold.  The Sons of Liberty erected, time and again, a Liberty Pole; only to have it pulled down by the British.  King’s College student Alexander Hamilton began drilling his artillery company on the green.

The New-York Tribune would later describe conditions in the building. “There was no settled allowance in this jail for the prisoners, nor had they bedding. The Humane Society…and donations from friends and the public were all they could rely on.” Some diarists noted that inmates would dangle a bag or old shoe out the window from a pole hoping to a charitable passerby would drop a coin in.

By 1775 the New Goal was no longer sufficient for the rapidly growing city. That year the Bridewell was built—a prison that lined up with the jail and the Poor-House along the northern fringe of the common. Now the New Goal was used exclusively for debtors, earning its new name, The Debtors’ Prison.

Within the year the Debtors’ Prison would receive another, chilling, name: The Provost Prison. On August 27, 1776 the British took possession of the city. They found the Debtors’ Prison and the Bridewell sitting empty. Provost Marshall William Cunningham clearly remembered the humiliation he had received the year before at the foot of the Liberty Pole and he was out for revenge.

Cunningham took command of the Debtors’ Prison, reserving it for rebels and military personnel. “The Old Martyrs’ Prison” said “He was a corrupt, hard-hearted and cruel tyrant, who hesitated at nothing that would add to the miseries of his helpless victims or to his own wealth and comfort. His hatred for the Americans found vent in the application of torture with searing-irons and secret scourges to those of his charges who, for any reason, fell under the ban of his displeasure.”

A contemporary account added “The cruelty practiced toward the inmates of the Provost rivals all that may be found in the annals of Christendom. Not content with seeing them die a slow death from cold and starvation, he poisoned many by mingling a preparation of arsenic with their food, and is said to have boasted that he had thus killed more of the rebels with his own hand than had been slain by all the King’s forces in America.” Among those incarcerated here was Ethan Allen. In May, 1778 he was traded for Colonel Campbell of the British Army.

After the war the building returned to use as a debtors’ prison.  But slowly reform tempered the practice of imprisoning debtors.  The futility of the action was more and more obvious.   The New-York Tribune pointed out that “The consequence was that the last condition of the man was far worse than the first.  His family, unable to obtain money except by begging, which was also severely punished, were either driven to starvation or to greater depths of debt.”  In 1817 a law was enacted that prohibited incarceration for anyone whose debts were less than $25.  Finally in 1830 debtors’ prisons were essentially outlawed and a committee of the Common Council chose the old jail to house the public records. About $15,000 was spent in remodeling and refitting the structure, partly to make it look less jail-like.  The floors and windows were changed, the cupola and Georgian roof were removed and the building was lengthened at each end about seventeen feet by the addition of a portico and steps.  The handsome 18th century structure was now a Greek Revival temple—said to resemble the Doric Temple of Diana at Ephesus, one of the Seven Wonders of the World.

Remodeling stopped in 1832 when the city was overtaken by the cholera epidemic.  Residents fled northward to outlying villages and businesses were paralyzed.  Work on the old jail was suspended and it was temporarily used as a hospital. In the second half of the century the Tweed administration spent another $140,000 to remodel the structure—now a century old.  An architecturally-incongruous story was added above the entablature and pediments, and interior was enlarged by moving the front and back walls outward, so that the free-standing columns were now engaged, almost like pilasters.

As the turn of the century approached, pedestrians navigate around construction debris — photo NYPL Collection

As the 20th century crept closer, the New Gaol, turned Debtors’ Prison, turned Provost Prison, turned Hall of Records was endangered.  In 1894 Thomas A. Janvier wrote in his “In Old New York,” “That the remaining tenant has made exceedingly bad use of his exclusive property is patent to the eyes and nose of whoever ventures within its dirty precincts; nor will such adventurer question the tradition of the office that within it are recorded all the bad smells which have been known on this island from the earliest Dutch times…Fortunately this defilement of the interior of the Hall of Records has not affected its exterior, which essentially is unchanged since Recorder Riker took possession of his new quarters sixty years ago.” Few, however, shared Janvier’s appreciation of vintage architecture.  The new Hall of Records was in the course of construction in 1897 and the outdated building was termed by most an “eyesore.”   The National Historical Museum lobbied Mayor Strong to preserve the structure.  In December 1897 the Board of Aldermen voted to place it, when vacated, in the care of the Museum to be used as a public museum of historic relics.

Subway construction threatens the old building. — from the collection of the Museum of the City of New York

The American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society disagreed, protesting “The old revolutionary prison is a unique landmark. There is not another building with a like history in the United States. It is a monument to the patriotism and devotion of a generation of heroes, the benefits of whose sufferings and sacrifices we enjoy; and gratitude and pride alike dictate that in some form and in some place these historic stones should be preserved.”

The preservation of the “historic stones,” however, was not to be. Instead what The Sun called a “hideous example of the brown stone age, the old Hall of Records,” was demolished in 1903. The newspaper reported that “the axe and crowbar laid bare the cells in its cellar where Ethan Allen and other leaders of the Revolutionary forces were held in durance vile.”

Old City Hall (far left) sat across from the Debtors’ Prison — photo by Alice Lum

JOIN THE KIOSK STAFF

Mature person needed for paid work in RIHS Visitor Center kiosk. Must have good knowledge of the island and history. Flexible days of work for up to 5-6 hours a day, usually 1 or 2 days a week. Must be outgoing and personable and able to deal with busy days. References requested. Please send one page resume to rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com.

WEEKEND PHOTO OF THE DAY
SEND YOUR SUBMISSION TO:
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FRIDAY PHOTO OF THE DAY

CHAPEL OF THE GOOD SHEPHERD STAINED GLASS
WINDOW
ED LITCHER, NINA LUBLIN, ALEXIS VILLEFANE
GOT IT

Text by Judith Berdy
Thanks to Bobbie Slonevsky for her dedication to Blackwell’s Almanac and the RIHS
Thanks to Deborah Dorff for maintaining our website
Edited by Melanie Colter and Deborah Dorff


Sources
A DAYTONIAN IN MANHATTAN

FUNDING PROVIDED BY ROOSEVELT ISLAND OPERATING CORPORATION PUBLIC PURPOSE GRANTS CITY COUNCIL REPRESENTATIVE BEN KALLOS DISCRETIONARY FUNDING THRU DYCD

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rooseveltislandhistory@gmail.com

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