Being told what to do, at the Old Idaho State Penitentiary, Boise, Idaho, USA.

Being told what to do, at the Old Idaho State Penitentiary, Boise, Idaho, USA. Stock Photo
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Contributor:

M L Pearson / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

CTM30D

File size:

34.5 MB (1.7 MB Compressed download)

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Dimensions:

4256 x 2831 px | 36 x 24 cm | 14.2 x 9.4 inches | 300dpi

Location:

Old Idaho State Penitentiary, Boise, Idaho, United States, America, USA

More information:

The Old Idaho Penitentiary State Historic Site, also known as the Idaho Territorial Prison, was constructed in the Territory of Idaho in 1870 and lasted until 1973. The territory was less than ten years old when the prison was built east of Boise, Idaho in the western United States. From its beginnings as a single cell house, the penitentiary grew to a complex of several distinctive buildings surrounded by a high sandstone wall. The stone was quarried from the nearby ridges by the resident convicts, who also completed all the later construction. Over its one-hundred and one years of operation, the penitentiary received more than 13, 000 convicts, with a maximum population of a little over six-hundred. Two-hundred and fifteen of the inmates were women. Two famous inmates were Harry Orchard and Lyda Southard. Harry Orchard assassinated Governor Frank Steunenberg at the turn of the 19th to 20th century and Lyda Southard was known as Idaho's Lady Bluebeard for killing several of her husbands to collect upon their life insurance.