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Index

  • Abberly, Paul, 223
  • Adamson, Christopher, 40, 122, 124
  • Adler, Jeffrey, 112
  • admission procedures, 139–47
  • alcoholism, 101, 190
  • Alexandra Industrial School for Girls, 134
  • Archibald, W. P., 259
  • Auburn system (New York): collection of biographic details of prisoners at, 98–99
  • emphasis on contract labour, 28–29, 35–36, 280n19
  • expansion in the U.S., 26, 28
  • failures of system in North America, 42
  • as a model for Kingston Penitentiary, 32, 39, 42, 44, 56–57, 61, 99
  • principles and disciplinary practices of, 26–28, 42–44, 62, 64, 80, 147
  • Upper Canada’s adoption of, 31–32, 38–39, 63
  • Australiana (Maconochie), 76
  • banishment, 29
  • Baylis, William, 193
  • Beauché, Antoine (brother of Narcisse), 49–50
  • Beauché, Narcisse, 1–2
  • Beccarian notions of crime, 26, 280n16
  • Bedson, Samuel: disciplinary program for First Nation prisoners, 128–29
  • enforcing of rules and regulations, 126, 148–49
  • response to escaping prisoners, 162–64
  • staff discipline and treatment, 152, 233
  • standards for corporal punishment, 235, 244
  • use of labour for mental patients, 208, 211
  • use of numbers for prisoner identity, 145–46
  • Belter, Fred, 158–59
  • Big Bear, Chief, 127, 291n110
  • black people: prisoners, 15, 121–24, 194, 198, 251–52
  • slavery, 120–22
  • Booth, Charles, 112–13
  • Bourke, David, 245
  • Brace, Charles Loring, 111–12
  • Bridewells, 8, 22–23, 28
  • Bristow, William, 62–64
  • British Columbia Penitentiary: corporal punishment, 229, 240–41
  • elimination of communal meals, 169
  • financial corruption at, 177–78
  • First Nations prisoners, 198
  • founding date, 18
  • geographic isolation of, 271
  • hospital facilities, 185–86
  • intimidation and bullying at, 156–57
  • prisoner exploitation and cruelty at, 178–79
  • prisoner insubordination, 155
  • rule of silence at, 149
  • security measures, 160
  • Brockway, Z. R., 234–35
  • Brown Commission: investigations into abuse at Kingston Penitentiary, 1–2, 47–57, 116
  • members, 46, 282n65
  • recommendations for reforming Kingston Penitentiary, 61–70
  • reforms for corporal punishment, 10, 49, 227–28, 243
  • separate institution for female prisoners, 87
  • on treatment of children, 50, 132
  • Brown, George, 2, 4
  • editorial on corporal punishment, 45
  • proposals for penitentiary reform, 62–69, 71–73
  • solutions for childhood criminality, 132, 134. See also Brown Commission
  • Brown, Harry, 205
  • buffalo trade, 125, 290n97
  • Burgess, T.J.W., 209–10
  • California Penological Commission, 257–58
  • Campbell, James, 161
  • Canadian Freeman, 88
  • Canadian Medical and Surgical Journal (1882), 217
  • Canadian penitentiary board: administrative strife, 44
  • power relations, 45–46, 82–83, 85
  • prison reform program, 81, 88–89, 246
  • report on prostitution, 115
  • responsibilities of, 79
  • Canadian penitentiary system: Brown Commission influence on, 61–62
  • capitalist foundations of, 270
  • creation of, 18, 82–84
  • failures or shortcomings of, 90–91, 261–62, 269
  • fallacy on standard of punishment, 272
  • geographic isolation of penitentiaries, 223, 271
  • medical services to prisoners, 224
  • prisoner uniform scheme, 145–46
  • Canadian Temperance Advocate, 101, 111
  • capitalism: Calvinism and, 34
  • and class structure, 7
  • labour-power and, 223. See also industrial capitalism
  • capital punishment, 23, 26, 29
  • Carpenter, Mary: on dangerous classes, 110
  • on female criminals, 115
  • “reformatory prison discipline” term usage, 284n29
  • reformatory schools for juvenile delinquents, 133–34
  • visit to Kingston Penitentiary, 84, 93–94
  • Carter Cash, June, 272–73
  • Cartwright, C. E., 135
  • Cash, Johnny, 272–73, 275
  • cell blocks, 142–43
  • chaplaincy, 66, 68, 71–73, 98–101, 135
  • Charboneau, Peter, 49–50
  • Charlestown Penitentiary (Massachusetts), 64
  • Cherry Hill Penitentiary (Philadelphia), 63–64
  • Chevalier, Louis, 108–9
  • children: corporal punishment inflicted on, 1–2, 49–50, 228, 242–43
  • criminality and juvenile delinquency, 101, 131–32, 136–37
  • of dangerous classes, 110
  • reformatory schools and institutions for, 110, 133–35
  • reform discourse about, 135
  • residential schools for, 198–99
  • sexual assault on, 159–60
  • Child Savers, The (Platt), 134
  • Chinese people: immigration, 113
  • prisoners, 15, 157, 198
  • Christian canon law, 21
  • Christian salvation, 21–22
  • Chupik, Jessa, 219
  • class: capitalism and, 7
  • control, 3, 33, 186
  • criminal, 59, 108, 113, 190, 231
  • factor in youth imprisonment, 136
  • and inequality of social experience, 7
  • and mental illness, 209
  • middle class, 86, 94, 216
  • producing, 38–39
  • struggles, 4, 8, 10. See also dangerous classes; working class
  • classification: Belgian system of, 250–51
  • categories of mental illness, 200
  • in Crofton system of segregation, 80–81, 90, 246–47, 257
  • of dangerous classes, 110–11, 113
  • by degree of incorrigibility, 13
  • Foucault on, 14
  • individualism and, 98, 246
  • of the intellectually disabled, 220, 222
  • of juvenile delinquents, 133
  • by levels of criminality, 65, 70–71, 94–95, 104
  • medical, 60, 131, 182–83
  • by prisoner uniforms, 145–46
  • Colvin, Mark, 43
  • common law, 21, 43
  • communication: between criminologists and penal reformers, 97
  • for prisoners with outside world, 175–76
  • suppression of prisoner, 28, 43, 147–50
  • congregate system, 27, 65. See also Auburn system
  • Constantine, 20–21
  • constructions of criminality: associated with class and poverty, 15, 102, 113, 270
  • and claims to criminological knowledge, 268
  • corporal punishment and, 226, 232
  • created by the penitentiary, 267–68
  • and desperation of escaping prisoners, 164
  • and ideology of prison labour, 10
  • and incorrigibility, 12, 106, 231
  • individualistic understandings and, 102, 137
  • involving juvenile delinquents, 131, 135
  • key constructions of, 95
  • in post-Confederation Canada, 97
  • racialized, 120, 124, 128. See also criminality
  • contracts: at Auburn Penitentiary, 27–28
  • at Kingston Penitentiary, 40–42, 57
  • legislation on, 36–37
  • at St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary, 173–74
  • contractual penal servitude: adopted in Upper Canada, 29, 31, 35, 42
  • in Auburn system, 27, 280n19
  • and capitalist systems of production, 28–29
  • failure of, 270
  • opposition to, 36–38
  • as a replacement for slavery, 122. See also prison labour
  • Cork, Leslie, 162–63
  • corporal punishment: in Auburn system of discipline, 28, 44
  • at British Columbia Penitentiary, 229, 240–41
  • curtailment or reductions in, 12, 227–29
  • emotional nature of, 233–35, 242
  • of female prisoners, 48–49, 228
  • inflicted on children and youth, 1–2, 49–50, 228, 242–43
  • isolation as an alternative, 5, 12, 226, 245–46
  • legitimacy of, 236
  • to maintain order and authority, 239–40
  • at Manitoba Penitentiary, 229, 243–44
  • in military discipline, 229, 244
  • origins in ancient times, 20–21
  • performed in front of prison population, 177
  • public responses to, 236–37
  • in public schools, 229–30, 242
  • rates and incidences at Kingston Penitentiary, 46–53, 167, 228, 241–43
  • rationalizations for, 230–33, 242
  • reform ideas and humane approaches to, 10–11, 225–26, 230
  • as a response to incorrigibility, 12, 105, 164, 228, 231, 238–41
  • as a response to mutiny attempts, 168
  • at St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary, 229, 238–39, 243
  • subjective nature of, 240–41
  • survival or sustainability of, 11–12, 230–31
  • corruption: at British Columbia Penitentiary, 177–79
  • of children and youth prisoners, 101, 158
  • at Kingston Penitentiary, 2, 45–46, 51–53, 56, 179
  • at St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary, 170–77, 229
  • Costen, Thomas, 50
  • Coverdale, William, 53
  • Cox, Julia, 52
  • Cree political leaders, 127
  • Creighton, John: appointment to Kingston Penitentiary, 83–84, 88
  • on placing trust in prisoners, 157–58
  • views on punishment, 230–31, 239, 241
  • Crime and Punishment (Maconochie), 76–77
  • criminality: causes of, 97–102
  • classification levels, 65, 70–71, 94–95, 104
  • and dangerous classes, 111–13
  • discourses on corporal punishment and, 226, 232, 238
  • feminine, 86–87, 114–19
  • of First Nations people, 15, 124–31
  • of habitual offenders, 103–7
  • individuality and, 14–16, 96–98, 168–69, 248–49, 257
  • intellectual disability and, 220
  • of juvenile delinquents or youth, 101, 131–37
  • link between intemperance and, 101
  • and mental illness, 201
  • penitentiary’s role in creating, 267–69
  • poor health and, 190
  • positivist views on, 96–98
  • poverty and, 108–10
  • race associations and, 15, 121–24
  • reformation and, 13–16, 89
  • social perceptions of, 16
  • Victorian penal responses to, 98
  • and working-class associations, 15, 102–3, 108
  • criminology/criminological science, 96–97, 247, 250, 268
  • Crofton system, 79, 284n29
  • classification of prisoners, 90, 246–47, 257
  • principles of, 80–81, 83
  • Crofton, Walter, 13, 78–79, 105, 225–26, 284n26. See also Crofton system
  • Cultures of Darkness (Palmer), 17
  • curability and incurability, 201–2, 206, 214, 222
  • customary rights, 43
  • dangerous classes: children as, 110, 133, 136
  • First Nations people labelled as, 113, 125, 197
  • potential threat of, 112, 169, 177
  • reform and solutions for, 111–12
  • tied to poverty and labouring classes, 103, 108–113, 115, 191
  • Dangerous Classes of New York (Brace), 111–12
  • Darby, Robert, 214
  • death penalty, 23, 26, 29
  • Department of Indian Affairs, 124–25, 195
  • Department of Justice, 175, 177–78, 212, 238, 258
  • creation of national penitentiary system, 82, 89
  • penitentiary board influence on, 79, 81–82
  • stance on shooting of prisoners, 166
  • Deragon, J. B., 166–67
  • Dewdney, Edgar, 128
  • Dickson, Andrew, 69–70, 74
  • Digby, Anne, 203, 220, 222
  • Discipline and Punish (Foucault), 3, 274
  • discourses: on class, 10
  • on corporal punishment, 226, 232–33
  • of criminality, 10, 95, 238
  • of degeneration, 197–98
  • on feminine criminality, 116–17
  • medical, 182–83, 194
  • racial, 194
  • reform, 11–12, 179, 230, 234, 242–43
  • domesticity, 86
  • Donnelly, John, 252–53
  • Dorchester Penitentiary (New Brunswick): female labour at, 119
  • founding date, 18
  • hospital facilities, 185–86
  • medical care at, 188, 218
  • security measures, 160
  • transfer of Halifax and Saint John prisoners to, 82–83
  • youth incarceration at, 137, 243
  • Douglas, Mary, 117
  • Duchesneau, L. A., 238
  • Dunsterville, George, 213–14
  • Dwight, Louis, 4, 72
  • Dwight, Theodore, 81
  • Dziekański, Robert, 268
  • economic crisis (1875), 57, 103
  • Eddy, Charles, 134, 227
  • Eddy, Thomas, 33–35
  • education: compulsory, 134, 220
  • corporal punishment in primary, 229–30
  • deficiency in convicts, 99–100
  • moral reformation through, 14, 65–66, 68, 97, 102, 129, 264
  • penitentiary staff reluctance toward, 73–74
  • of slaves, 121
  • elderly prisoners, 191–92
  • Elgin, Adelaide, 212
  • Engels, Friedrich, 112, 223
  • English prison system, 22–24, 97–98
  • penal colonies, 75–76
  • reform and reformers, 25–26, 30, 34, 77–78, 109
  • “fallen woman,” 114–15
  • female prisoners: abuse or assault of, 46, 116–17, 160
  • asylums in Lower Canada for, 87–88
  • black, 120
  • corporal punishment for, 48–49, 228
  • crimes committed by, 118–19
  • labour duties, 119
  • limited evidence on, 141
  • loneliness of, 149–50
  • with mental illness, 207, 210–11
  • reform movement for, 85–87, 110
  • separate accommodations for, 87
  • feminine criminality, 86–87, 114–19. See also female prisoners
  • Fenian Brotherhood, 167–69, 297n79
  • Ferres, J. M., 83, 304n1
  • Fielding, Henry, 23
  • First Nations people: “civilization” of prisoners, 129–30
  • constructions of criminality surrounding, 15, 124
  • illness and mortality rates of prisoners, 194–99
  • labelled as dangerous classes, 113, 125, 197
  • prisoners at Manitoba Penitentiary, 125–31
  • residential schools, 198
  • treaties with Canadian government, 125, 290n97
  • Fitzsimmons, James, 177–79
  • Flanigan, John, 225, 304n1
  • Fortier, L. A., 193, 207, 221
  • Foster, Charles, 176–77
  • Foster, John, 58, 107, 179
  • Foucault, Michel: creation of Groupe d’Information sur les Prisons (GIP), 274
  • on desire to “know the criminal,” 94
  • on dividing practices in the penitentiary, 14, 186
  • on labour and sexuality, 215
  • on the penitentiary as a new mode of punishment, 11
  • on power relations, 16–17
  • on reform of the modern penitentiary, 3
  • Foy, John, 123, 251
  • Freeland, John H., 48
  • Fry, Elizabeth, 4, 30, 85–86
  • Fuller, Margaret, 85–86
  • Gabbett, Joseph, 166
  • Gagné, Oscar, 221–22
  • Gallagher, John, 168
  • gaols: in England, 21, 24
  • in Upper Canada, 29–30, 183, 280n26
  • Garland, David, 14, 98, 234, 269
  • gender divisions: in constructions of criminality, 15, 114–16, 268
  • in medical care, 210–12
  • in treatment of mental illness, 207, 209–10
  • Globe, The: articles on corporal punishment, 46, 236–37, 242
  • on death of George Hewell, 256
  • on murder of Thomas Salter, 158
  • on prisoner protest at St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary, 176
  • story on prisoner anxieties in requesting medical assistance, 189
  • story on prisoner loneliness, 149–50
  • on treatment of First Nations people, 128
  • Grant, Allan, 167–68
  • Groupe d’Information sur les Prisons (GIP), 274
  • Grünhut, Max, 22, 98
  • Habitual Criminals Act: in England, 105, 248
  • in Ohio, 248
  • Hagerman, Christopher, 38
  • Hay, Douglas, 4
  • Hayvern, Hugh, 158, 256
  • Herchmer, W. M., 121
  • Hewell, George, 155, 167, 251–56, 268
  • Hill, Gary, 245–46
  • Himmelfarb, Gertrude, 10, 109
  • History of Sexuality, The (Foucault), 186, 215
  • Hooper, Thomas, 50
  • horse stealing, 125–27, 195, 197
  • House of Assembly, 29, 37, 45, 120
  • House of Refuge, 132, 134
  • Howard, John, 23–26, 34, 65, 85
  • Hughes, William, 253–56
  • Hugo, Victor, 108–9
  • human agency, 4, 17, 265
  • humanitarian reform movement, 2, 5, 33–35, 262–66, 270
  • hygiene, 25, 113, 146, 183
  • identity, 143–47
  • ideology: bourgeois, 34
  • capitalist, 270
  • colonial, 128
  • of contractual penal servitude, 42
  • contrasts between reform and punishment, 264–65
  • labour, 19, 33–36, 38–39, 209
  • and origins of punishment, 274
  • producer, 38–39
  • reform and reformers, 15–16, 249, 259
  • transnational, 223
  • “idiocy” concept, 219
  • idleness, 8–10, 22–23, 33–34, 224
  • Ignatieff, Michael, 11, 24, 186, 274
  • incorrigibility: and constructions of criminality, 12, 106, 168–69, 231
  • degrees of, 13, 238
  • fear and potential threat of, 169
  • of habitual offenders, 105–8
  • isolation and segregation as punishment for, 226, 245–46, 249–57
  • perception of black prisoners, 122–23
  • violence and corporal punishment as responses to, 12, 105, 164, 228, 231, 238–41
  • individual criminality, 14–16, 102, 108, 137
  • isolation system to address, 246–49, 257
  • and prisoner identity, 145–46
  • role in prison history, 267–69
  • in the Victorian era, 96–98
  • individual reformation, 14–16, 34, 68, 80, 246, 264–65
  • and rehabilitation of women offenders, 86–87
  • industrial capitalism, 24, 28–29, 263
  • Canada’s transition to, 6, 8, 269
  • industrialization, 9, 28, 96, 111
  • Industrial Revolution, 6, 24
  • intellectual disability, 182, 219–23
  • International Prison Congress (Cincinnati, 1870), 81, 90
  • Irish penal system, 78–79, 90, 284n26
  • Irvine, Ann, 117
  • Irvine, William, 213–14, 244
  • isolation: Belgian system of, 250–51
  • geographic, 207, 213, 223–24
  • historical origins, 21
  • methods in the separate system, 27, 98
  • of new convicts, 81, 246
  • as punishment for incorrigible offenders, 12, 226, 245–46, 249–57
  • Quaker constructions of, 34. See also Prison of Isolation, Kingston Penitentiary
  • Jackson, Frank, 205–6
  • Jackson, George, 274–75
  • Jamieson, Robert, 101
  • Jebb, Joshua, 72, 74–76, 78
  • Joyal, Levi, 161
  • juvenile delinquents, 131–32
  • reformatory schools and institutions for, 133–35
  • keepers and guards: abuse received by, 51–52
  • charges against, 45
  • emotional effects of inflicting corporal punishment, 234–35
  • exchanges and communication with prisoners, 154–55
  • favouritism, 157–58
  • power relations with prisoners, 139–40, 172, 252–53
  • resistance and transgression of, 17–18
  • split loyalties among, 171, 177
  • staff discipline and living conditions, 152–53
  • starvation of prisoners, 53–54
  • testimonies in shooting of convict Hewell, 254–56
  • weaponry for protection, 164
  • Kelm, Mary-Ellen, 198
  • Kenney, John, 242
  • Kingston Chronicle and Gazette, 37, 99
  • Kingston Penitentiary: administration, 40, 66–69, 74
  • admission procedures, 141–43, 146–47
  • asylum and treatment of mentally ill, 201, 204–6, 218, 241
  • black prisoners, 121–23, 251–52
  • board members, 45–46
  • Brown Commission investigations, 1–2, 47–57, 116
  • child prisoners or juvenile delinquents, 1–2, 49–50, 131–32, 135, 292n132
  • contractual labour and productivity rates, 40–42, 57–58, 282n61, 283n77
  • corporal punishment rates and incidences, 46–53, 167, 228, 241–43
  • debt, 40
  • disciplinary regime, 42, 44–46
  • escape attempts, 161–65
  • female incarceration rates, 117–19
  • female labour, 119
  • founding date and length of operation, 18
  • incorrigible prisoners transferred to, 238–39
  • isolation and segregation practices, 226, 246, 249–57
  • mail and personal visitors, 151
  • Mary Carpenter’s visit to, 84, 93–94
  • medical practices, 183–85, 189, 192–93
  • as the model for the modern penitentiary, 271
  • mutiny at, 167–69, 239
  • planning and construction of, 32, 39–42, 61
  • prisoner insubordination, 155
  • recidivism rate, 104
  • reform at, 61–70, 81, 83–84
  • riots at, 274
  • separate institution for women, 87
  • sexual assault cases, 159–60
  • silent system, 147–50
  • starvation of prisoners, 53–56
  • Susanna Moodie’s visit to, 93–94
  • working-class prisoner rates, 103, 287n23
  • Kirchheimer, Otto, 9, 278n13
  • Knights of Labor, 113
  • labour. See prison labour
  • labour ideology, 19, 33–36, 38–39, 209
  • Labour Union, The, 142
  • Lafleur, Alexis, 49–50
  • Lallemand, Claude Francois, 216–17
  • Lavell, Michael, 190–91
  • Lavoilette, Godfrey, 171–72
  • legal reforms: in Upper Canada, 29
  • in U.S., 26–28
  • legislation: for increased authority to the warden (1846), 45
  • and power of penitentiary board, 79, 89
  • restrictions on prison labour (New York), 36–38
  • on rewards for escaped convicts, 166
  • on sentences for habitual offenders, 104–5, 248–49
  • “ticket of leave,” 249
  • Le Londe, George, 156
  • Lewis, W. David, 43, 104
  • liberal individualism, 61, 95, 108, 110–11, 246
  • Life in the Clearings Versus the Bush (Moodie), 93, 118
  • Linebaugh, Peter, 4, 17, 223
  • Little Pine, 127
  • Lockean notion of punishment, 61, 132, 164
  • London Labour and the London Poor (Mayhew), 110
  • Longbones, John, 125–26
  • Lower Fort Garry Penitentiary (Manitoba): asylum for the mentally ill, 208–10
  • First Nations prisoners, 125–26
  • original location of institution, 18, 82, 208. See also Manitoba Penitentiary
  • Lynds, Elam, 35, 42–43
  • Macaulay, Thomas, 31, 38, 42, 62
  • Macdonald, John A., 83, 88–89, 127, 290n97
  • stance on corporal punishment, 228, 231
  • MacDonell, Angus, 73, 117
  • Macdonell, D. A.: appointment as warden, 72–74, 80, 129, 168
  • comments on black prisoners, 122–23
  • corporal punishment rates under, 228
  • member of penitentiary board, 79
  • resistance to penitentiary reform, 73, 81–83
  • Mackenzie, Alexander, 89
  • Macleod, Roderick C., 127
  • Maconochie, Alexander: Norfolk penal colony experiments, 75–76, 227, 284n19
  • prison reform ideas, 13, 76–78, 145, 226, 284n26
  • Madness and Civilization (Foucault), 186
  • Magdalen Asylums (Montreal), 87
  • Making of the English Working Class, The (Thompson), 4
  • Manitoba Penitentiary: admission rituals, 146–47
  • asylum and treatment of mentally ill, 205–6, 208–14, 218
  • black prisoners, 123
  • corporal punishment at, 229, 235, 243–44
  • daily schedule of inmates, 143–44
  • escape attempts at, 161–64
  • First Nations prisoners, 125–31, 194–97, 199
  • founding date, 18
  • geographic isolation of, 271
  • isolation punishment, 245–46
  • mutiny at, 163
  • prisoner feuds, 157
  • prisoner health, 193–94
  • prisoner insubordination, 155–56
  • rule of silence, 148–49
  • security measures, 160
  • sexual assault cases, 158–59
  • staff discipline and living conditions, 152–54, 233
  • Marks, Grace, 93, 117–18
  • mark system, 75, 77, 81
  • Marx, Karl, 6, 112, 223
  • masculinity, 15, 232–33
  • Mason, Michael, 216
  • masturbation, 214–18
  • Mayberry, Bruce, 159
  • Mayhew, Henry, 110, 115
  • Maynard, Steven, 159
  • McBride, James, 178–79, 240–41
  • McCabe, James, 157–58
  • McCalla, Andrea, 128
  • McCarron, James, 164
  • McClintock, Anne, 197
  • McDermott, James, 117–18
  • McDonell, A. D. O., 252, 255
  • McGowen, Randall, 25
  • McLaren, Angus, 220
  • McLean, Ellen, 210–11
  • McLennan, Rebecca M., 36, 44, 270, 280n19
  • McMahan, Edward, 161
  • mechanics, 36–39, 42
  • medical power: and control of male sexuality, 214
  • Foucault on, 186
  • of penitentiary surgeons, 183, 186–89
  • medical practice: admission inspections, 146–47, 183
  • ailments and diseases, 184–85, 190, 196–98
  • early care at Kingston Penitentiary, 183–85
  • health of elderly inmates, 191–92
  • hospital facilities at federal penitentiaries, 185–86
  • prisoner requests for treatment, 188
  • race and disease susceptibility, 194–99
  • responses to non-labouring prisoners, 224
  • terminally ill prisoners, 192–93
  • treatment for spermatorrhea, 215–18. See also mental illness
  • medical reforms, 181–82
  • Men of Blood (Weiner), 229
  • mental illness: attributed to long-term solitary confinement, 247
  • categories of, 200
  • and control by penitentiary authorities, 213–14
  • corporal punishment and, 48–49, 241
  • curability and incurability of, 201–2
  • custodial to curative care movement, 202–3
  • experiences of female patients, 207, 209–11
  • gender divisions in care of, 211–12, 302n91
  • intellectual disability and, 219–23
  • Kingston Penitentiary asylum and treatment for, 201, 204–6, 301n76, 301n80
  • Manitoba Penitentiary asylum and treatment for, 205–6, 208–14
  • masturbation as a cause of, 215–18
  • physical labour as a cure for, 206–8
  • rates at Cherry Hill Penitentiary, 63–64
  • transferring of prisoners to provincial asylums, 200–203, 241
  • Mercer Reformatory (Toronto), 88
  • Meredith, E. A., 79–83, 254, 256
  • Metcalf, John, 252–54
  • middle class, 86, 94, 216
  • Mitchell, Robert, 135, 188, 192, 218
  • Mitchinson, Wendy, 209
  • modern penitentiary: based on the silent system, 147
  • economic basis of, 270–71
  • Foucault on, 3
  • historical effects of, 263, 265, 267
  • prison labour as the foundation for, 8, 19, 33
  • reform ideals of, 61, 272
  • and rise of industrial capitalism, 6, 8, 263, 269
  • Monastic discipline, 21
  • Moodie, Susanna, 93–94, 118
  • moral condition, 3, 100
  • morality: childhood criminality and, 133–35
  • of killing an escaping prisoner, 166
  • of poor and working classes, 109–10
  • moral reformation: in American penitentiaries, 62–64
  • based on optimistic views of criminality, 95
  • and desire for prisoner transformation, 264
  • and redemption through labour, 9, 59, 77–78, 224
  • and salvation of released prisoners, 258–59
  • term usage, 277n6
  • through religious and secular education, 65–66, 68, 71, 73
  • moral therapy, 203, 206–7, 300n68
  • Moylan, James G.: appointment as penitentiary inspector, 89
  • on child convicts, 136–37
  • complicity in corruption at St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary, 175
  • on corporal punishment, 232, 238–39, 242
  • on escaping prisoners, 160, 163, 166
  • on habitual offenders, 105–7, 287n32
  • on indeterminate sentencing, 248, 257–58
  • on intellectually disabled prisoners, 219–20
  • on masculinity, 232–33
  • as penitentiary board member, 88–89
  • on prison labour, 58–59, 129
  • on prison uniforms and identity, 145–46
  • recount of reformer visits to Kingston Penitentiary, 93–94
  • reform ideas and failures, 90–91
  • report on recreational grounds at Kingston Penitentiary, 204
  • on rule of silence, 148
  • on segregation and isolation of prisoners, 246–47, 249–50
  • on threat of prisoner outbreaks, 169
  • on working/living conditions of penitentiary staff, 152–53
  • Mulkins, Hannibal, 73, 99–100, 102
  • Munro, Alexander, 218
  • Murray, Christopher, 164–65
  • mutiny: at Kingston Penitentiary, 167–69, 239
  • at Manitoba Penitentiary, 163
  • neglect, 116–17, 209–11, 267
  • Nelson, Wolfred: background, 69–70
  • directive to prison doctors, 215
  • as member of penitentiary board, 79
  • praise for female asylums, 87
  • prison reform ideas, 70–74
  • Newgate Prison: London, England, 85
  • New York City, 33–35
  • New York City Draft Riots (1863), 112
  • New York Prison Association, 80–81, 86
  • New York Times, 111
  • Nietzsche, Friedrich, 234
  • North West Mounted Police (NWMP), 113, 123–27, 197, 212
  • Northwest Rebellion (1885), 124, 127–28, 195, 199
  • Observations in Visiting, Superintendence and Government of Female Prisoners (Fry), 85
  • O’Connor, Thomas, 240–41
  • O’Grady, William, 37
  • Oliver, Peter, 30, 73, 79, 282n70
  • One Arrow, Chief, 127, 196–97, 291n110
  • oppression, 91, 248, 261–63, 267, 275
  • organized labour, 58–59
  • Ouimet, Télesphore, 170–77, 179, 229
  • Our Convicts (Carpenter), 115, 284n29
  • Paget, James, 217
  • Palmer, Bryan, 17, 42
  • pardons, 192–93, 196–97
  • parole, 134, 226, 249, 259
  • penal colonies, 23, 75–76
  • Penetanguishene Reformatory, 101, 242
  • Penitentiary Act (Act for the Better Management of the Penitentiary): post-Confederation (1868), 82–83, 189
  • Upper Canada (1851), 66, 68–69, 71, 74, 165, 227
  • Penitentiary Act (England, 1779), 25
  • Penitentiary Commission, 254–56, 308n74
  • Pentland, H. Clare, 6, 58
  • Pentonville Penitentiary, 75, 78, 247
  • Petchesky, Rosalind, 28–29
  • Phelan, Daniel, 150–51, 190
  • Phelan, Maurice, 48
  • Platt, Anthony M., 134
  • political economy, 6–7, 9–10, 223, 269, 271
  • Poor Law, 109, 186
  • Poundmaker, Chief, 127, 197, 291n110
  • poverty: and crime connection, 8, 103, 108–13
  • European responses to, 24–25, 278n12
  • growth in London (England), 24
  • and juveniles or children, 133–35
  • as a moral issue, 10, 34, 102
  • in U.S. cities, 111–12
  • workhouses as a solution to, 22–24
  • power relations: between children and adult prisoners, 159–60
  • between prisoners and keepers, 139–40, 172, 179–80, 264
  • between surgeons and prisoners, 187–89
  • in corporal punishment, 233
  • Foucault on, 16–17
  • in medical practice, 183, 186
  • of new penal institutions, 263
  • of prison wardens, 170–71, 178
  • in social relationships, 16–17
  • Powers, William, 32–33, 38–39, 44–45
  • Priestley, Philip, 244
  • Prison Discipline Society, 63, 72
  • prison gate ministries, 258
  • prison history: constructions of criminality and, 268–69
  • human suffering and, 5, 266–67
  • ideology in, 16
  • importance of political economy in, 269–71
  • importance of prisoner relationships in, 4, 265
  • individuality and agency in, 265–67
  • legal innovation in, 8
  • prisoner transgression and, 17
  • prison labour: at Auburn Penitentiary, 27–28
  • contracts at Kingston Penitentiary, 40–42, 57
  • as core of early institutions, 8
  • as a cure for mental illness, 206–9
  • economic viability of, 58
  • feigning illness to avoid, 187–89
  • First Nations prisoners’ experiences, 129–30
  • historical connections to, 19–21, 270–71, 279n3
  • ideology of, 9–10, 19
  • industrial capitalism and, 28–29
  • intellectually disabled and, 222–23
  • legislation on, 36–37
  • lost productivity due to illness, 181–82
  • mark system and progressive stages of, 75, 77–78
  • as a method for moral reform, 9, 33, 58–59, 77–78, 224
  • opposition to, 36–38, 58–59
  • performed by women, 119
  • sexuality as a threat to, 215
  • underground economy at St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary, 173–74
  • U.S. legal reforms on, 27–28
  • working conditions, 193–94
  • prison life: admission procedures, 139–47
  • daily schedule, 143–44
  • diet, 54–56
  • escape attempts, 160–67, 296n59, 296n62
  • mail and personal visitors, 150–51, 175
  • murder incidences, 158
  • mutiny, 163, 167–69, 239
  • prisoner insubordination and refusal to work, 155–56
  • riots, 169–72, 176–77
  • rules and regulations, 16, 139–40, 143, 293n16
  • sexual assault cases, 158–60
  • silent system, 147–50
  • social relationships of, 265
  • staff favouritism, 157–58
  • warden contact in daily operations, 154, 283n1
  • weaponry and shootings, 164–67, 169. See also corporal punishment; medical practice; prison labour
  • Prison of Isolation, Kingston Penitentiary: construction and completion of, 149, 249–50
  • death of convict Hewell at, 251–56
  • reformatory effects of, 246, 256–57
  • transfer of prisoners to, 177
  • prison reform. See reformers; reform movement
  • prison rights movements, 274–75
  • producer ideology, 38–39
  • prostitution, 115, 119
  • Punishment and Social Structure (Rusche & Kirchheimer), 9
  • Punishment and Welfare (Garland), 14
  • punishment, forms of: cat-o’-nine tails (“the cats”), 47–49, 228, 240–43
  • Oregon boot, 244, 307n55
  • shackling or chaining, 243–44
  • “shot drill practice,” 244
  • “the box,” 48, 228, 243
  • whippings or floggings, 1–2, 43, 47–49, 229, 238, 241–43, 305n8. See also corporal punishment; isolation
  • Quaker reformers, 33–35
  • Quinn, Fenian Thomas, 167–68
  • race: constructions of criminality and, 15, 119–20, 131
  • convict ratios by, 122
  • health assumptions based on, 194, 198
  • recorded on prison records, 119. See also black people; First Nations people
  • Rasp House, 24–25
  • Reaume, Geoffrey, 206–7
  • recidivists or habitual offenders, 104–8, 191, 258, 287n32
  • habitual criminals acts, 105, 248
  • Reed, Hayter, 128
  • reformatories for children, 101, 110, 133–35
  • Reformatory Schools (Carpenter), 110
  • reformers: attitudes on corporal punishment, 10–11, 71, 227, 230, 234–36, 243–44
  • Brown’s recommendations for Kingston Penitentiary, 62–69
  • concerns with repeat offenders, 105–6
  • Crofton’s penal philosophy and system, 78–81, 90
  • on distinctions between working classes and dangerous classes, 109–11
  • failure of ideas, 16
  • for female prisons, 85–87
  • humanitarian, 264, 266, 270
  • and ideological importance of labour, 9, 33–35, 59
  • influence on prisoner power relations, 179–80
  • influential figures, 3–4, 13, 78
  • institutional solutions for children, 132–33
  • Maconochie’s ideas and mark system, 75–78
  • personal approaches to criminality, 13–14
  • positivists, 96–98
  • Quaker influence, 33–35
  • reports for Canadian penal system, 69–72
  • responses to youth criminality, 132–37
  • solutions to social problems, 110
  • views on isolation, 246, 249
  • reform movement: based on prisoner transformation, 12–13
  • in Canadian penitentiary system, 2–3, 61, 88–91, 261–65
  • charity for released prisoners, 258–59
  • for childhood criminality, 132–37
  • class and, 7
  • and contrasts with punishment, 263–65
  • and corporal punishment, 12, 29, 227–29
  • and disparities of the modern penitentiary, 272
  • in England, 23–26, 78
  • focus on individuality, 14, 34, 96–98
  • historical impact of, 3
  • humanitarian, 2, 5, 33–35, 262–66, 270
  • and human suffering, 5, 266
  • ideological developments of, 7–8
  • international, 89, 248
  • in Ireland, 78–79
  • isolation and segregation practices, 249–50
  • key priorities of, 5
  • at Kingston Penitentiary, 61–70, 81, 83–84
  • medical discourses, 183
  • in mental illness care, 202–4
  • prison rights movements and activists, 274–75
  • for released prisoners, 249, 257–59
  • as a theoretical construct, 16
  • in United States, 26–28, 33–36, 80–81
  • in Upper Canada, 13, 30–32, 81–82
  • women’s penal, 85–87, 118
  • Reform Party, 37
  • released or discharged prisoners: biographical details of, 99
  • halfway homes for, 86
  • pardons for terminally ill prisoners, 192–93, 196–97
  • police supervision of, 105
  • salvation and moral reform for, 249, 257–59
  • religious instruction: for First Nations prisoners, 129–30
  • moral reformation through, 65–67, 71, 247
  • remission of sentences, 13, 80–81, 189
  • residuum, 103, 108, 112
  • resistance, 17–18, 140, 155–56. See also mutiny; riots
  • revisionist history and historians, 11, 262, 274, 277n3
  • rewards, system of, 83, 139
  • riots: at Attica Prison (1971), 274
  • in British penal colonies, 75
  • at Kingston Penitentiary (1971), 274
  • New York City Draft Riots (1863), 112
  • at St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary, 169–72, 176–77
  • Robinson, Frederick, 64
  • Rockwood Criminal Lunatic Asylum, 201
  • Rogers, R. V., 49, 56, 121
  • Rollason, Heather, 127
  • Roman society, 20–21
  • Rothman, David, 26, 43, 98–99, 234, 274
  • Royal Commission, 170–72
  • rules and regulations, 16, 139–40, 143, 293n16
  • rule of silence, 147–50
  • Rusche, Georg, 9, 278n13
  • Salter, Thomas, 158, 256
  • Salvation Army, 249, 258–59
  • Sampson, James: charges against Frank Smith, 46, 51, 53
  • on detecting feigned illness, 187–88
  • medical treatment for prisoners, 48, 184, 203–4
  • on prisoner mortality rates, 194
  • San Quentin Prison, 272–74
  • Satzewich, Vic, 128
  • Scott, James C., 17, 140
  • sentencing: indeterminate, 13, 226, 248, 257–58
  • labour time in place of, 77
  • remission, 13, 80–81, 189
  • separate system, 27, 63, 78, 98, 147
  • used for habitual offenders, 106–7
  • sexual abuse: at Kingston Penitentiary, 2, 52, 117, 159–60
  • at Manitoba Penitentiary, 158–59
  • sexuality: between men and boys, 159
  • masturbation and treatment, 214–19
  • Victorian, 118, 215–16
  • women’s, 118
  • silent system, 28, 42, 63, 147–50
  • Sing, Ah, 240–41
  • Sing Sing (New York): contractual penal servitude, 36
  • disciplinary regime, 43
  • female inmates, 85–86
  • skilled labour, 37, 39–40, 58
  • slavery, 120–23, 289n78, 290n86
  • Smith, Angus, 208–10
  • Smith, Ashley, 268
  • Smith, Frank (son of Henry), 45–46, 50–54
  • Smith, Henry: appointment as warden, 32–33
  • Brown Commission inquiry into, 1, 47, 49–50, 53
  • relations with penitentiary board, 44–46, 51
  • on repeat offenders, 104
  • Smith, William, 54, 56
  • social divisions, 267–68
  • social experience, 7
  • Social Organization of Early Industrial Capitalism (Katz, Doucet & Stern), 7
  • social relationships, 16–17, 265
  • Spence, Alexander, 253–56
  • spermatorrhea, 215–19
  • Spierenburg, Pieter, 278n12
  • Splane, Richard, 79
  • statistics: admissions at Kingston Penitentiary asylum, 206
  • children and youth incarceration rates, 135
  • comparative criminality by race, 121–22
  • corporal punishment rate at Kingston Penitentiary, 47–49, 228
  • female crime and incarceration rates at Kingston Penitentiary, 117–19
  • medical requests for assistance, 188
  • mental illness rate at Cherry Hill Penitentiary, 63–64
  • on moral condition, 100–101
  • mortality rates for black and Aboriginal prisoners, 194
  • patients treated for spermatorrhea, 218
  • prisoner escape rates, 160–61
  • productivity rate at Kingston Penitentiary, 41, 119
  • prostitution rate in Ontario gaols, 115
  • recidivism rate at Kingston Penitentiary, 104
  • trades of committed convicts, 103, 287n23
  • Stedman Jones, Gareth, 110
  • stereotypes: of black prisoners, 123
  • on racial minorities, 15
  • of Victorian femininity, 114
  • on youth criminality, 114
  • Stewart, Douglas, 58, 102–4, 177, 244, 250
  • St. John Penitentiary, 164–65
  • Stony Mountain Penitentiary (Manitoba), 18, 82, 210. See also Manitoba Penitentiary
  • Strange, O. S., 188, 191, 205, 222
  • Strong-Boag, Veronica, 159
  • Sturdy, Louisa, 149–50
  • St. Vincent de Paul Penitentiary (Québec): corporal punishment at, 229, 238–39, 243
  • economic viability of, 271
  • elimination of cutlery, 169
  • escape attempts at, 161, 166–67
  • exploitation of prisoners, 175
  • founding of, 18, 82
  • handling of intellectually disabled prisoners, 221–22
  • hospital facilities, 185–86
  • murder of inmate Thomas Salter, 158
  • prisoners treated for spermatorrhea, 218
  • riots at, 169–72, 176–77
  • rule of silence, 148
  • underground economy at, 173–74
  • use of labour as therapy for mental illness, 207
  • working conditions, 193–94
  • Sullivan, J. M., 163
  • Sullivan, William, 255
  • Sutherland, W. R. D., 193–95, 197
  • Swainger, Jonathan, 82
  • Sykes, Gersham M., 139
  • Taylor, Ian, 96
  • Templeton, Eliza, 210–11
  • Thompson, E. P., 4
  • Thomson, H. C., 29–32, 38, 42, 62
  • Ticket of Leave Act (1899), 258
  • tobacco usage, 150–51, 155, 176, 294n25
  • Toronto Asylum, 118, 200–204, 209
  • Toronto Prison Congress, 234–35
  • Tory ruling, 35–38, 270
  • transgression: of black prisoners, 122
  • punishment for, 47, 96, 143
  • resistance and, 17, 140, 180
  • Treatise on Criminal Law (Gabbett), 166
  • Tuke, Daniel Hack (brother of James), 204
  • Tuke, James Hack (great-grandson of William), 202
  • Tuke, William, 207
  • uniform schemes, 144–47
  • Upper Canada: adoption of contractual penal servitude, 29, 35, 42
  • demographic instability in, 30, 35
  • development of modern penitentiary, 8, 32
  • gaols in, 29–30, 183, 280n26
  • industrialization in, 9
  • opposition to convict labour in, 36–37, 39
  • reformatories for children, 134–35
  • statute to transfer mentally ill prisoners, 200. See also Canadian penitentiary system
  • Utting, Edward, 45, 48, 50–51
  • Van Diemen’s Land colony, 75–76
  • Victoria Industrial School for Boys (Toronto), 134
  • Victorian era: anxieties about dangerous classes in, 112
  • classification of convicts, 104
  • notions of masculinity, 15, 232–33
  • prison reform in, 13–14
  • reformatories for youth, 132–34
  • responses to criminality, 98, 101, 137, 269
  • sexuality, 215–16
  • social reform, 201
  • stereotypes of femininity, 114–15
  • Victorian Prison Lives (Priestley), 244
  • violence: abolition of, 230
  • in death of convict Hewell, 251–56
  • to establish control and order, 139
  • isolation as an alternative to, 226
  • as a necessity in corporal punishment, 225, 227, 231–32, 236, 242
  • Nietzsche on, 234
  • persistence of, 11
  • practices at Auburn penitentiary, 42–44
  • practices at Sing Sing, 43
  • in prison life, 156–57, 159, 164
  • as a response to incorrigible offenders, 12, 226, 228
  • used in British penal colonies, 75–76. See also corporal punishment
  • Wallace, Alfred, 121
  • Walnut Street Prison (Philadelphia), 26, 34
  • Walsh, Edward, 159
  • Walton, Paul, 96
  • weaponry, 164, 169
  • Weapons of the Weak (Scott), 17
  • Weiner, Martin, 101, 105, 132, 229–30, 234
  • Wilson, Benjamin, 162
  • Wilson, Thomas, 157
  • Wines, E. C., 81, 90, 231, 235–36
  • Winks, Robin, 121, 290n86
  • women: gender divisions in labour, 15, 211–12
  • mental illness in, 207, 209–11, 302n91
  • penal reform movement for, 85–87, 118
  • slaves, 120
  • Victorian notions of femininity, 114–15. See also female prisoners
  • workhouses, 8, 22–24, 28, 35, 183, 222
  • working class: associations with criminality, 15, 102–3
  • associations with dangerous classes, 108–9, 112, 191
  • care for mentally ill, 209
  • children of, 50
  • health of, 186, 190
  • opposition to prison labour, 36–38
  • percentage of prison population, 102–3, 287n23
  • Workman, Joseph, 201
  • Wright, David, 219
  • Young, Jock, 96
  • youth criminality, 134–37. See also children
  • Zedner, Lucia, 86–87, 114
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