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West Virginia State Penitentiary

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Image of West Virginia State Penitentiary located in

West Virginia State Penitentiary

Beyond your average beatings and shankings, this pen has a pretty bloody undercurrent running through its history

Established in 1866, the West Virginia State Penitentiary continued housing inmates until 1995. At the time of its closing, 653 inmates were housed and guarded by a staff of 32 employees. The walls in several of the common areas feature murals painted by three inmates (plus the color-mixing help of a fourth, due to one painter's colorblindness).
The building was divided into four separate sections: North Hall, aka "The Alamo," where the men whose behavior on the inside earned them 22 to 24 hours per day in a 5x7-foot cell; New Wall contained the "mainline," everyday assortment of convicts; "Rat Row" held the rats and snitches, who had testified against their own peers in trials and thereby earned special protection and a separate exercise area in the yard; and "Honor Hall" was inhabited by the so-called "trustees," who were the polar opposite of The Alamo's residents; their behavior on the inside earned them special privileges and decreased security.
Beyond your average beatings and shankings, the pen has a pretty bloody undercurrent running through its history. For one, Charles Manson once petitioned to be relocated to the West Virginia State Penitentiary. His hand-written letter remains on display in the electric chair area. Then, on New Year's Day in 1986, a planned riot took place. Ultimately the governor was called in to negotiate a settlement (the inhabitants got a new cafeteria), but not before three snitches were executed at the hands of their fellow inmates. In 1992, three men managed to tunnel out via the greenhouse in the prison yard.
Over the years, 93 men from the pen were executed for their crimes: 83 by hanging and 9 by electrocution. Those who were hanged proceeded up the so-called Death House's 13 stairs and slipped their heads through a noose with 13 knots (both symbolic of the judge and each member of the jury). All hangings were public until 1931, when one man being executed was decapitated during the hanging process. From then on, all executions were "by invitation only:" the inmate's family, family of the victim, media, clergy, coroner.
When West Virginia reinstated capital punishment in 1951, a fellow inmate was commissioned to build the penitentiary's electric chair, "Old Sparky." For obvious reasons, this gentleman joined the ranks of the rats & snitches and had to go into protective custody within the prison. Three switches providing current to the chair were installed. The electrician who performed the day-before check of the wiring put one hot/two dead, so as to give the guards a 2 out of 3 chance of not throwing the responsible switch.
Obviously, this place has its fair share of ghosts and demons, literal and figurative. Visitors have reported seeing the "Shadow Man," a static-y silhouette of a figure that roams the entire prison grounds, along with spirits from prison guards and inmates past. Compounding its already shady history, the penitentiary was built on the leveled grounds of the Adena Native American tribe's sacred burial site. Sure, lots of places are purportedly located as such, but this situation is different: located directly across the street from the central, administrative tower of the prison is the Grave Creek Mound Archaeological Complex, featuring the only eponymous mound remaining in the town of Moundsville.

Read more about West Virginia State Penitentiary on Atlas Obscura...

Category: Memento Mori, Intriguing Environs, Architectural Oddities
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Edited by: Nicholas Jackson, Rachel


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