An Account of the State Prison or Penitentiary House, in the City of New-York
An Account of the State Prison or Penitentiary House, in the City of New-York
By One of the Inspectors of the Prison [Thomas Eddy]
New York: Isaac Collins and Son, 1801
Octavo. Bound in later 1/2 calf over marbled boards. Good binding. 97 p. 2 folding plates (one showing the prison's elevation, the other, the floor plan), 2 folding tables, after Joseph F. Mangin, engraved by Gilbert Fox. Binding restored. Marbled end papers. Sabin 54026.
"In 1796 New York abolished the death penalty for all crimes except murder and treason. It approved two penitentiaries to house prisoners convicted under the revised codes and serving sentences longer than one year: one in the Greenwich neighborhood of New York City and another, never brought to fruition, in Albany." Jodi Schorb, Reading Prisoners: Literature, Literacy, and the Transformation of American Punishment, 1700-1845, Rutgers UP, 2014. The author, Thomas Eddy (1758-1827) was a Philadelphia-born Quaker. He became a successful merchant in New York and engaged in charitable work. In 1796, Eddy helped State Senators Philip Schuyler and Ambrose Spencer to draft a bill which established the NY penitentiary system. He became the prison's first Director, from 1797 to 1801. He wrote this book on his experiences running the prison. Sabin 54026.