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United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth

The United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth (USP Leavenworth) [2] is a medium security U.S. penitentiary with an adjacent minimum security satellite camp in northeast Kansas. It is operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, a division of the United States Department of Justice. It also includes a satellite federal prison camp (FPC) for minimum-security male offenders.

United States Penitentiary, Leavenworth
Prison from the southwest
LocationLeavenworth, Kansas
Coordinates39°19′48″N 94°56′11″W / 39.33000°N 94.93639°W / 39.33000; -94.93639Coordinates: 39°19′48″N 94°56′11″W / 39.33000°N 94.93639°W / 39.33000; -94.93639[1]
StatusOperational
Security classMedium-security (with minimum-security satellite camp)
Population1,503 [1,261 at the USP, 242 in prison camp] (April 2022)
Opened1903
Managed byFederal Bureau of Prisons
WardenDonald Hudson

USP Leavenworth is located in Leavenworth, Kansas, which is 25 miles (40 km) northwest of Kansas City, Kansas.[3]

Background

USP Leavenworth, a civilian facility, is the oldest of three major prisons built on federal land in Leavenworth County, Kansas. It is separate from, but often confused with, the United States Disciplinary Barracks (USDB), a military facility located on the adjacent Fort Leavenworth army post. Located 4 miles (6.4 km) north of the USP, the USDB is the sole maximum-security penal facility for the entire United States Military.[4] Prisoners from the original USDB were used to build the civilian penitentiary. In addition, the military's medium-security Midwest Joint Regional Correctional Facility (JRCF), located southwest of the new USDB, opened in 2010. The USDB and JRCF operate independently from USP Leavenworth.

The prison was described by Pete Earley, the only writer at that time who had ever been granted unlimited access to the prison, in his book, The Hot House. The prison's history has also been covered in a pictorial history titled U.S. Penitentiary Leavenworth by Kenneth M. LaMaster, the retired Institution Historian.

USP Leavenworth was the largest maximum-security federal prison in the United States from 1903 until 2005 when it was downgraded to a medium-security facility.[5]

Design

USP Leavenworth was one of three first-generation federal prisons which were built in 1913. Prior to its construction, federal prisoners were held at state prisons. In 1895, Congress authorized the construction of the federal prison system.[6]

The other two were Atlanta and McNeil Island (although McNeil dates to the 1870s the major expansion did not occur until the early 1900s).[7]

The prison follows a format popularized at the Auburn Correctional Facility in New York where the cell blocks were in a large rectangular building. The rectangular building was focused on indoor group labor with a staff continually patrolling.[8]

The Auburn system was a marked difference from the earlier Pennsylvania plan popularized at Eastern State Penitentiary in which cell blocks radiated out from a central building and was the original design for the nearby Disciplinary Barracks before it was torn down and replaced by a totally new prison.[9]

The St. Louis, Missouri architecture firm of Eames and Young designed both Leavenworth and the United States Penitentiary, Atlanta.[10] Leavenworth's prison cells are back to back in the middle of the structure facing the walls. The prison's walls are 40 feet (12 m) high, 40 feet (12 m) below the surface and 3,030 feet (920 m) long and enclose 22.8 acres (92,000 m2). Its domed main building was nicknamed the "Big Top" or "Big House."[11] The domed Disciplinary Barracks two miles (3 km) to the north was nicknamed the "Little Top" until it was torn down in 2004 and replaced with a newer structure.

Historical timeline

  • 1827: Colonel Henry Leavenworth chose site for new fort.
  • 1875: Fort chosen as the site for a military prison. Within a year, Fort Leavenworth housed more than 300 prisoners in a remodeled, supply-depot building.
  • 1894: Secretary of War conceded to the House Appropriations Committee that War Department could do without the military prison.
  • 1895 July 1: Congress transferred the military prison from the War Department to the US Department of Justice. The Department of Justice took over the plant and inaugurated the United States Penitentiary. Commandant of the military prison, James V. Pope. Warden of the USP, James W. French.
  • 1896: House Judiciary Committee recommended that the facility be replaced.
  • 1896 June 10: the Congress authorized a new federal penitentiary.
  • 1897 March: Warden French marched prisoners every morning two and one-half miles (4 km) from Ft. Leavenworth to the new site of the federal penitentiary. Work went on for two and one-half decades.
  • 1899 July 1: Robert W. McClaughry was appointed Leavenworth's second Warden.
  • 1901 November 10: Joseph Waldrupe was the first correctional officer to be killed (records dating back to 1901) in the line of duty at Leavenworth.
  • 1903: Enough space was under roof to permit the first 418 prisoners to move into the new federal penitentiary.
  • 1904: First Cell house completed
  • 1906 February 1: All prisoners had been transferred to the new facility, and the War Department appreciatively accepted the return of its prison.
  • 1910 April 21: During construction, six prisoners escape by smashing through prison gates with a hijacked railroad locomotive but only one, Frank Grigware, eludes recapture.[12]
  • 1910 May: The Attorney General approved construction of a separate cellblock for females on the penitentiary grounds—this plan was later abandoned.
  • 1913 June: T. W. Morgan, editor of a newspaper in the small Kansas town of Ottawa, was appointed Leavenworth's 3rd Warden.
  • 1919: Construction of the cellblocks completed.
  • 1926: Construction of the shoe shops completed.
  • 1928: Construction of the brush and broom factory completed.
  • 1929: Construction of the barber shop and first intraprison murder.
  • 1930: In May, the Bureau of Prisons became a federal agency within the Department of Justice.
  • 1930: On September 5, Carl Panzram becomes the first to be executed (records dating back to 1927) by hanging at Leavenworth.
  • 1934: On December 11, President Franklin Roosevelt authorized the first federal prison industries as a public corporation.
  • 1938: On August 12, Robert Suhay and Glenn Applegate become the first double execution (records dating back to 1927) by hanging at Leavenworth.
  • 1944 to 1947: Japanese American conscientious objectors are held at Leavenworth after refusing military service in protest of the wartime incarceration of themselves and their families.[13]
  • 1980s and 1990s: The institution undergoes major renovations to three of its four cellhouses: A, B, and C. D-Cellhouse today remains the only cellblock true to its original design.
  • 2005: Federal Bureau of Prisons changes USP Leavenworth's mission. The BOP decided to change the custody level of USP Leavenworth from High / Maximum to Medium while retaining the USP designation for historical reasons.
  • 2011: The Federal Bureau of Prisons takes comments on a proposed new 1,500 medium security and 300 minimum security facility on the current prison grounds on 144 acres to the west of the current prison and a 238-acre area to the east.[14]
  • 2021: On December 15, USP Leavenworth began moving Inmates from the CCA facility in Leavenworth into housing units inside the walls. This would take a total for 5 days to complete. Pre-trial inmates replaced general population inmates in 3 of the housing units. USP- Leavenworth now houses Pre-trial inmates of all custody levels. USP-Leavenworth houses General Population Medium custody inmates & pre-trial (all custody) inside the main facility, with a Camp (minimum custody) inmate adjacent to the main facility.

Notable inmates (current and former)

Famous escapees

Frank Grigware, imprisoned for train robbery, escaped from Leavenworth in 1910 with five other men by smashing through the prison gates with a hijacked supply locomotive. While the others were quickly recaptured, Grigware escaped to Canada. In 1916 he became the mayor of Spirit River, Alberta. He was discovered by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the FBI in 1933, but serious doubts about his original conviction led the U.S. to drop its extradition request in 1934. Grigware never returned to the U.S. and died in Alberta in 1977.[15]

Basil Banghart escaped from Leavenworth three times. He escaped federal custody a fourth time while awaiting return to Leavenworth.[citation needed]

On December 11, 1931, seven inmates took Warden Thomas B. White hostage and escaped, aided by the well-known gangsters Frank Nash, George "Machine Gun" Kelly, and Thomas James Holden. [16]

Executions

On September 5, 1930, serial killer Carl Panzram, under a federal death sentence for murder, was hanged at USP Leavenworth. On August 12, 1938, two men under the sentence of death for murder, Robert Suhay and Glenn Applegate, were hanged at USP Leavenworth.[17]

Cemetery

The penitentiary maintains a cemetery for deceased prisoners outside the walls of the prison.[18][19]

See also

References

  1. ^ "United States Penitentiary Leavenworth Kansas". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior.
  2. ^ "USP Leavenworth".
  3. ^ Federal Bureau of Prisons. "USP Leavenworth". Bop.gov. Retrieved January 25, 2014.
  4. ^ "Welcome to the U.S. Disciplinary Barracks". USDB. Retrieved December 24, 2013.
  5. ^ "Prison Info - Leavenworth Convention and Visitors Bureau - lvarea.com - Retrieved September 1, 2009". lvarea.com. Retrieved January 25, 2014.
  6. ^ Encyclopedia of crime and punishment, Volume 2 By David Levinson Sage Publications, Inc; 1 edition (March 18, 2002) ISBN 0-7619-2258-X.
  7. ^ McNeil Island and the Federal Penitentiary, 1841-1981 - historylink.org - Retrieved October 1, 2009.
  8. ^ The U.S. Federal Prison System by Mary F. (Francesca) Bosworth - Sage Publications, Inc; 1st edition (July 15, 2002) ISBN 0-7619-2304-7.
  9. ^ The U.S. Federal Prison System by Mary F. (Francesca) Bosworth - Sage Publications, Inc; 1st edition (July 15, 2002) ISBN 0-7619-2304-7.
  10. ^ Thomas Crane Young, FAIA (1858-1934) - landmarks-stl.org - Retrieved July 25, 2009.
  11. ^ Jackson, Joe (August 28, 2002). Leavenworth Train: A Fugitive's Search for Justice in the Vanishing West. New York, New York: Carroll & Graf. ISBN 978-0786710607. Retrieved August 22, 2013.
  12. ^ Federal Bureau of Investigation (January 24, 2014). "A Byte Out of History - The Five-Decade Fugitive Chase". fbi.gov.
  13. ^ "Leavenworth (detention facility)". Densho Encyclopedia. Retrieved August 6, 2014.
  14. ^ Erickson, Matt (January 27, 2011). "Prison Bureau seeking public comment on plans for new Leavenworth facility". TonganoxieMirror.com. Retrieved January 25, 2014.
  15. ^ Federal Bureau of Investigation (January 24, 2014). "A Byte Out of History - The Five-Decade Fugitive Chase". fbi.gov.
  16. ^ Leavenworth Seven: The Deadly 1931 Prison Break Author Kenneth M. LaMaster Publisher: Arcadia Publishing 2019
  17. ^ "Executions of Federal Prisoners (since 1927) February 15, 2013, at the Wayback Machine." Federal Bureau of Prisons. Retrieved on August 22, 2010.
  18. ^ "United States Penitentiary in Leavenworth Cemetery". Geographic Names Information System. United States Geological Survey, United States Department of the Interior.
  19. ^ United States Penitentiary Cemetery at Find a Grave

Further reading

  • Earley, Pete (1992). The Hot House: Life Inside Leavenworth Prison. New York: Bantam Books. ISBN 9780553075731. OCLC 24174454.
  • LaMaster, Kenneth M. (2008). U.S. Penitentiary Leavenworth. Charleston, South Carolina: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738550916. OCLC 182525862.
  • Wilson, Donald Powell (1951). My Six Convicts: A Psychologist's Three Years in Fort Leavenworth. New York: Rhinehart. OCLC 265013.
  • LaMaster, Kenneth M. (2019) Leavenworth Seven: The Deadly 1931 Prison Break Publisher Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9781467140409

External links

united, states, penitentiary, leavenworth, this, article, about, civilian, prison, military, prison, united, states, disciplinary, barracks, leavenworth, medium, security, penitentiary, with, adjacent, minimum, security, satellite, camp, northeast, kansas, ope. This article is about the civilian prison For the military prison see United States Disciplinary Barracks The United States Penitentiary Leavenworth USP Leavenworth 2 is a medium security U S penitentiary with an adjacent minimum security satellite camp in northeast Kansas It is operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons a division of the United States Department of Justice It also includes a satellite federal prison camp FPC for minimum security male offenders United States Penitentiary LeavenworthPrison from the southwestLocationLeavenworth KansasCoordinates39 19 48 N 94 56 11 W 39 33000 N 94 93639 W 39 33000 94 93639 Coordinates 39 19 48 N 94 56 11 W 39 33000 N 94 93639 W 39 33000 94 93639 1 StatusOperationalSecurity classMedium security with minimum security satellite camp Population1 503 1 261 at the USP 242 in prison camp April 2022 Opened1903Managed byFederal Bureau of PrisonsWardenDonald HudsonUSP Leavenworth is located in Leavenworth Kansas which is 25 miles 40 km northwest of Kansas City Kansas 3 Contents 1 Background 2 Design 3 Historical timeline 4 Notable inmates current and former 5 Famous escapees 6 Executions 7 Cemetery 8 See also 9 References 10 Further reading 11 External linksBackground EditUSP Leavenworth a civilian facility is the oldest of three major prisons built on federal land in Leavenworth County Kansas It is separate from but often confused with the United States Disciplinary Barracks USDB a military facility located on the adjacent Fort Leavenworth army post Located 4 miles 6 4 km north of the USP the USDB is the sole maximum security penal facility for the entire United States Military 4 Prisoners from the original USDB were used to build the civilian penitentiary In addition the military s medium security Midwest Joint Regional Correctional Facility JRCF located southwest of the new USDB opened in 2010 The USDB and JRCF operate independently from USP Leavenworth The prison was described by Pete Earley the only writer at that time who had ever been granted unlimited access to the prison in his book The Hot House The prison s history has also been covered in a pictorial history titled U S Penitentiary Leavenworth by Kenneth M LaMaster the retired Institution Historian USP Leavenworth was the largest maximum security federal prison in the United States from 1903 until 2005 when it was downgraded to a medium security facility 5 Design EditUSP Leavenworth was one of three first generation federal prisons which were built in 1913 Prior to its construction federal prisoners were held at state prisons In 1895 Congress authorized the construction of the federal prison system 6 The other two were Atlanta and McNeil Island although McNeil dates to the 1870s the major expansion did not occur until the early 1900s 7 The prison follows a format popularized at the Auburn Correctional Facility in New York where the cell blocks were in a large rectangular building The rectangular building was focused on indoor group labor with a staff continually patrolling 8 The Auburn system was a marked difference from the earlier Pennsylvania plan popularized at Eastern State Penitentiary in which cell blocks radiated out from a central building and was the original design for the nearby Disciplinary Barracks before it was torn down and replaced by a totally new prison 9 The St Louis Missouri architecture firm of Eames and Young designed both Leavenworth and the United States Penitentiary Atlanta 10 Leavenworth s prison cells are back to back in the middle of the structure facing the walls The prison s walls are 40 feet 12 m high 40 feet 12 m below the surface and 3 030 feet 920 m long and enclose 22 8 acres 92 000 m2 Its domed main building was nicknamed the Big Top or Big House 11 The domed Disciplinary Barracks two miles 3 km to the north was nicknamed the Little Top until it was torn down in 2004 and replaced with a newer structure Historical timeline Edit1827 Colonel Henry Leavenworth chose site for new fort 1875 Fort chosen as the site for a military prison Within a year Fort Leavenworth housed more than 300 prisoners in a remodeled supply depot building 1894 Secretary of War conceded to the House Appropriations Committee that War Department could do without the military prison 1895 July 1 Congress transferred the military prison from the War Department to the US Department of Justice The Department of Justice took over the plant and inaugurated the United States Penitentiary Commandant of the military prison James V Pope Warden of the USP James W French 1896 House Judiciary Committee recommended that the facility be replaced 1896 June 10 the Congress authorized a new federal penitentiary 1897 March Warden French marched prisoners every morning two and one half miles 4 km from Ft Leavenworth to the new site of the federal penitentiary Work went on for two and one half decades 1899 July 1 Robert W McClaughry was appointed Leavenworth s second Warden 1901 November 10 Joseph Waldrupe was the first correctional officer to be killed records dating back to 1901 in the line of duty at Leavenworth 1903 Enough space was under roof to permit the first 418 prisoners to move into the new federal penitentiary 1904 First Cell house completed 1906 February 1 All prisoners had been transferred to the new facility and the War Department appreciatively accepted the return of its prison 1910 April 21 During construction six prisoners escape by smashing through prison gates with a hijacked railroad locomotive but only one Frank Grigware eludes recapture 12 1910 May The Attorney General approved construction of a separate cellblock for females on the penitentiary grounds this plan was later abandoned 1913 June T W Morgan editor of a newspaper in the small Kansas town of Ottawa was appointed Leavenworth s 3rd Warden 1919 Construction of the cellblocks completed 1926 Construction of the shoe shops completed 1928 Construction of the brush and broom factory completed 1929 Construction of the barber shop and first intraprison murder 1930 In May the Bureau of Prisons became a federal agency within the Department of Justice 1930 On September 5 Carl Panzram becomes the first to be executed records dating back to 1927 by hanging at Leavenworth 1934 On December 11 President Franklin Roosevelt authorized the first federal prison industries as a public corporation 1938 On August 12 Robert Suhay and Glenn Applegate become the first double execution records dating back to 1927 by hanging at Leavenworth 1944 to 1947 Japanese American conscientious objectors are held at Leavenworth after refusing military service in protest of the wartime incarceration of themselves and their families 13 1980s and 1990s The institution undergoes major renovations to three of its four cellhouses A B and C D Cellhouse today remains the only cellblock true to its original design 2005 Federal Bureau of Prisons changes USP Leavenworth s mission The BOP decided to change the custody level of USP Leavenworth from High Maximum to Medium while retaining the USP designation for historical reasons 2011 The Federal Bureau of Prisons takes comments on a proposed new 1 500 medium security and 300 minimum security facility on the current prison grounds on 144 acres to the west of the current prison and a 238 acre area to the east 14 2021 On December 15 USP Leavenworth began moving Inmates from the CCA facility in Leavenworth into housing units inside the walls This would take a total for 5 days to complete Pre trial inmates replaced general population inmates in 3 of the housing units USP Leavenworth now houses Pre trial inmates of all custody levels USP Leavenworth houses General Population Medium custody inmates amp pre trial all custody inside the main facility with a Camp minimum custody inmate adjacent to the main facility Notable inmates current and former EditMain article List of inmates at the United States Penitentiary LeavenworthFamous escapees EditFrank Grigware imprisoned for train robbery escaped from Leavenworth in 1910 with five other men by smashing through the prison gates with a hijacked supply locomotive While the others were quickly recaptured Grigware escaped to Canada In 1916 he became the mayor of Spirit River Alberta He was discovered by the Royal Canadian Mounted Police and the FBI in 1933 but serious doubts about his original conviction led the U S to drop its extradition request in 1934 Grigware never returned to the U S and died in Alberta in 1977 15 Basil Banghart escaped from Leavenworth three times He escaped federal custody a fourth time while awaiting return to Leavenworth citation needed On December 11 1931 seven inmates took Warden Thomas B White hostage and escaped aided by the well known gangsters Frank Nash George Machine Gun Kelly and Thomas James Holden 16 Executions EditOn September 5 1930 serial killer Carl Panzram under a federal death sentence for murder was hanged at USP Leavenworth On August 12 1938 two men under the sentence of death for murder Robert Suhay and Glenn Applegate were hanged at USP Leavenworth 17 Cemetery EditThe penitentiary maintains a cemetery for deceased prisoners outside the walls of the prison 18 19 See also EditPortals United States Politics Kansas List of U S federal prisons Federal Bureau of Prisons Incarceration in the United StatesReferences Edit United States Penitentiary Leavenworth Kansas Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior USP Leavenworth Federal Bureau of Prisons USP Leavenworth Bop gov Retrieved January 25 2014 Welcome to the U S Disciplinary Barracks USDB Retrieved December 24 2013 Prison Info Leavenworth Convention and Visitors Bureau lvarea com Retrieved September 1 2009 lvarea com Retrieved January 25 2014 Encyclopedia of crime and punishment Volume 2 By David Levinson Sage Publications Inc 1 edition March 18 2002 ISBN 0 7619 2258 X McNeil Island and the Federal Penitentiary 1841 1981 historylink org Retrieved October 1 2009 The U S Federal Prison System by Mary F Francesca Bosworth Sage Publications Inc 1st edition July 15 2002 ISBN 0 7619 2304 7 The U S Federal Prison System by Mary F Francesca Bosworth Sage Publications Inc 1st edition July 15 2002 ISBN 0 7619 2304 7 Thomas Crane Young FAIA 1858 1934 landmarks stl org Retrieved July 25 2009 Jackson Joe August 28 2002 Leavenworth Train A Fugitive s Search for Justice in the Vanishing West New York New York Carroll amp Graf ISBN 978 0786710607 Retrieved August 22 2013 Federal Bureau of Investigation January 24 2014 A Byte Out of History The Five Decade Fugitive Chase fbi gov Leavenworth detention facility Densho Encyclopedia Retrieved August 6 2014 Erickson Matt January 27 2011 Prison Bureau seeking public comment on plans for new Leavenworth facility TonganoxieMirror com Retrieved January 25 2014 Federal Bureau of Investigation January 24 2014 A Byte Out of History The Five Decade Fugitive Chase fbi gov Leavenworth Seven The Deadly 1931 Prison Break Author Kenneth M LaMaster Publisher Arcadia Publishing 2019 Executions of Federal Prisoners since 1927 Archived February 15 2013 at the Wayback Machine Federal Bureau of Prisons Retrieved on August 22 2010 United States Penitentiary in Leavenworth Cemetery Geographic Names Information System United States Geological Survey United States Department of the Interior United States Penitentiary Cemetery at Find a GraveFurther reading EditEarley Pete 1992 The Hot House Life Inside Leavenworth Prison New York Bantam Books ISBN 9780553075731 OCLC 24174454 LaMaster Kenneth M 2008 U S Penitentiary Leavenworth Charleston South Carolina Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9780738550916 OCLC 182525862 Wilson Donald Powell 1951 My Six Convicts A Psychologist s Three Years in Fort Leavenworth New York Rhinehart OCLC 265013 LaMaster Kenneth M 2019 Leavenworth Seven The Deadly 1931 Prison Break Publisher Arcadia Publishing ISBN 9781467140409External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to United States Penitentiary Leavenworth USP Leavenworth Federal Bureau of Prisons 1 http www lvcountyed org Additional U S Geological Survey Geographic Names Information System United States Penitentiary Leavenworth Kansas listing at 39 19 51 N 094 56 10 W 39 33083 N 94 93611 W 39 33083 94 93611 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title United States Penitentiary Leavenworth amp oldid 1123967267, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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