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19 matches on "Correctional institutions--Ohio"
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags
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Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags  Save
Description: This image shows inmates at the Ohio Reformatory for Women producing Ohio and American flags as part of their vocational training. In 1911, the Ohio General Assembly authorized the establishment of a separate women’s penal institution which opened on September 1, 1916, as the Ohio Reformatory for Women in Marysville, Ohio, with a population of 34 inmates. When Marguerite Reilley was appointed superintendent of the Reformatory in 1935, she found dirty and unkempt inmates with excessively restricted living habits. She instituted the “human being” program which provided recreation, entertainment, jobs, and vocational training for the inmates. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA2002AV_B03_00189_009
Subjects: Ohio Reformatory for Women; Correctional institutions -- Ohio; Prisoners; Flags -- Ohio; Flags--United States;
Places: Marysville (Ohio); Union County (Ohio)
 
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags
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Save
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags  Save
Description: This image shows inmates at the Ohio Reformatory for Women producing Ohio and American flags as part of their vocational training. In 1911, the Ohio General Assembly authorized the establishment of a separate women’s penal institution which opened on September 1, 1916, as the Ohio Reformatory for Women in Marysville, Ohio, with a population of 34 inmates. When Marguerite Reilley was appointed superintendent of the Reformatory in 1935, she found dirty and unkempt inmates with excessively restricted living habits. She instituted the “human being” program which provided recreation, entertainment, jobs, and vocational training for the inmates. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA2002AV_B03_00189_003
Subjects: Ohio Reformatory for Women; Correctional institutions -- Ohio; Prisoners; Flags -- Ohio; Flags--United States;
Places: Marysville (Ohio); Union County (Ohio)
 
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags
Thumbnail image
Save
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags  Save
Description: This image shows inmates at the Ohio Reformatory for Women producing Ohio and American flags as part of their vocational training. In 1911, the Ohio General Assembly authorized the establishment of a separate women’s penal institution which opened on September 1, 1916, as the Ohio Reformatory for Women in Marysville, Ohio, with a population of 34 inmates. When Marguerite Reilley was appointed superintendent of the Reformatory in 1935, she found dirty and unkempt inmates with excessively restricted living habits. She instituted the “human being” program which provided recreation, entertainment, jobs, and vocational training for the inmates. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA2002AV_B03_00189_012
Subjects: Ohio Reformatory for Women; Correctional institutions -- Ohio; Prisoners; Flags -- Ohio; Flags--United States;
Places: Marysville (Ohio); Union County (Ohio)
 
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates with completed flag
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Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates with completed flag  Save
Description: This image shows inmates at the Ohio Reformatory for Women producing Ohio and American flags as part of their vocational training. In 1911, the Ohio General Assembly authorized the establishment of a separate women’s penal institution which opened on September 1, 1916, as the Ohio Reformatory for Women in Marysville, Ohio, with a population of 34 inmates. When Marguerite Reilley was appointed superintendent of the Reformatory in 1935, she found dirty and unkempt inmates with excessively restricted living habits. She instituted the “human being” program which provided recreation, entertainment, jobs, and vocational training for the inmates. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA2002AV_B03_00189_018
Subjects: Ohio Reformatory for Women; Correctional institutions -- Ohio; Prisoners; Flags -- Ohio; Flags--United States;
Places: Marysville (Ohio); Union County (Ohio)
 
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags
Thumbnail image
Save
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags  Save
Description: This image shows inmates at the Ohio Reformatory for Women producing Ohio and American flags as part of their vocational training. In 1911, the Ohio General Assembly authorized the establishment of a separate women’s penal institution which opened on September 1, 1916, as the Ohio Reformatory for Women in Marysville, Ohio, with a population of 34 inmates. When Marguerite Reilley was appointed superintendent of the Reformatory in 1935, she found dirty and unkempt inmates with excessively restricted living habits. She instituted the “human being” program which provided recreation, entertainment, jobs, and vocational training for the inmates. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA2002AV_B03_00189_017
Subjects: Ohio Reformatory for Women; Correctional institutions -- Ohio; Prisoners; Flags -- Ohio; Flags--United States;
Places: Marysville (Ohio); Union County (Ohio)
 
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags
Thumbnail image
Save
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags  Save
Description: This image shows inmates at the Ohio Reformatory for Women producing Ohio and American flags as part of their vocational training. In 1911, the Ohio General Assembly authorized the establishment of a separate women’s penal institution which opened on September 1, 1916, as the Ohio Reformatory for Women in Marysville, Ohio, with a population of 34 inmates. When Marguerite Reilley was appointed superintendent of the Reformatory in 1935, she found dirty and unkempt inmates with excessively restricted living habits. She instituted the “human being” program which provided recreation, entertainment, jobs, and vocational training for the inmates. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA2002AV_B03_00189_008
Subjects: Ohio Reformatory for Women; Correctional institutions -- Ohio; Prisoners; Flags -- Ohio; Flags--United States;
Places: Marysville (Ohio); Union County (Ohio)
 
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags
Thumbnail image
Save
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags  Save
Description: This image shows inmates at the Ohio Reformatory for Women producing Ohio and American flags as part of their vocational training. In 1911, the Ohio General Assembly authorized the establishment of a separate women’s penal institution which opened on September 1, 1916, as the Ohio Reformatory for Women in Marysville, Ohio, with a population of 34 inmates. When Marguerite Reilley was appointed superintendent of the Reformatory in 1935, she found dirty and unkempt inmates with excessively restricted living habits. She instituted the “human being” program which provided recreation, entertainment, jobs, and vocational training for the inmates. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA2002AV_B03_00189_005
Subjects: Ohio Reformatory for Women; Correctional institutions -- Ohio; Prisoners; Flags -- Ohio; Flags--United States;
Places: Marysville (Ohio); Union County (Ohio)
 
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags
Thumbnail image
Save
Ohio Reformatory for Women inmates making flags  Save
Description: This image shows inmates at the Ohio Reformatory for Women producing Ohio and American flags as part of their vocational training. In 1911, the Ohio General Assembly authorized the establishment of a separate women’s penal institution which opened on September 1, 1916, as the Ohio Reformatory for Women in Marysville, Ohio, with a population of 34 inmates. When Marguerite Reilley was appointed superintendent of the Reformatory in 1935, she found dirty and unkempt inmates with excessively restricted living habits. She instituted the “human being” program which provided recreation, entertainment, jobs, and vocational training for the inmates. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: SA2002AV_B03_00189_023
Subjects: Ohio Reformatory for Women; Correctional institutions -- Ohio; Prisoners; Flags -- Ohio; Flags--United States;
Places: Marysville (Ohio); Union County (Ohio)
 
Ohio Penitentiary stereoview
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Ohio Penitentiary stereoview  Save
Description: This 1870s stereoview shows the exterior of the Ohio Penitentiary, located at 254 West Spring Street in Columbus, Ohio. The stereoscope was a popular form of entertainment in the late 19th century. Stereoviews, also called stereographs, contain side-by-side images captured simultaneously from two slightly different perspectives. Looking at the card through a stereoscope, a viewer sees a single three-dimensional image. One half of the double image is shown here. The full stereoview card is 4.25 by 7 inches (10.8 by 17.78 cm). First erected in 1813 at the corner of Main and Second streets, the state penitentiary in Columbus was a three-story brick structure with 13 cells. The first convicts were brothers Hank and Dale Evans from Pickaway County, who were sentenced for five years for assault and battery with intent to kill. They began serving their sentences on August 15, 1815. A new three-story building was built on the same site in 1818. By 1830 the state penitentiary proved inadequate. In 1832, the legislature approved building a new penitentiary capable of holding 500 convicts. The building was constructed on Spring Street in 1834. In April 1955 it housed an all-time high of 5,235 prisoners. Most prisoners were removed from the prison by 1972, following completion of the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility. The Ohio Pen was closed in 1984. The site was abandoned and remaining building were demolished in 1997 to make way for Nationwide Arena. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: Om1909_1982274_001
Subjects: Ohio Penitentiary (Columbus, Ohio); Ohio Government; Architecture; Prisons; Correctional institutions -- Ohio
Places: Columbus (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio)
 
Ohio Reformatory for Women Inmate Scrubbing Floor
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Ohio Reformatory for Women Inmate Scrubbing Floor  Save
Description: Ohio Reformatory for Women inmate scrubbing floor, ca. 1950-1959. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL00187
Subjects: Correctional institutions--Ohio; Multicultural Ohio--Ohio Women
Places: Marysville (Ohio); Union County (Ohio)
 
Ohio Reformatory for Women Inmate Holding Suitcase
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Ohio Reformatory for Women Inmate Holding Suitcase  Save
Description: Ohio Reformatory for Women inmate holding a suitcase, ca. 1950-1959. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: AL00189
Subjects: Correctional institutions--Ohio; Multicultural Ohio--Ohio Women
Places: Marysville (Ohio); Union County (Ohio)
 
Protestors at Ohio Statehouse
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Protestors at Ohio Statehouse  Save
Description: Protestors gather on the steps at the Ohio Statehouse for a demonstration related to support of the "Lucasville Brothers," organized by the Ohio Prisoners' Labor Union on September 19. 1973. According to a related article, they hoped to bring attention to the 150 prisoners being held in solitary confinement since August at the Southern Ohio Correctional Facility (referred to as the Lucasville Penitentiary) in Scioto County, Ohio. The prisoners were largely members of the OPLU, and the punishment was seen as an effort to discourage union participation. One man's sign reads, "Lucasville is a $35,000,000 Concentration Camp." This photograph was taken for publication in the Columbus Free Press newspaper. The Columbus Free Press began as a bi-weekly publication in Columbus, Ohio, in 1970. An underground newspaper, it replaced the Ohio State University publication The People, Yes. The earliest known issue of the newspaper appeared on January 4, 1971. The newspaper underwent a series of name changes over the decades, with titles including the Columbus Free Press & Cowtown Times (1972-1976), the Columbus Freepress (1976-1992) and The Free Press (1992-1995). The paper, which covered many liberal and progressive causes, was an alternative to mainstream news sources in central Ohio with the slogan “The Other Side of the News.” In 1995, the paper ceased publication briefly before reemerging as a website in early 1996, and returning as a print publication under the Free Press title in the form of a quarterly journal in 1998. Published under various frequencies during the first part of the 21st century, the Free Press again became a nonprofit monthly publication in 2017 with both a print and web presence, published by the Columbus Institute for Contemporary Journalism and operated by a volunteer staff and board. View on Ohio Memory.
Image ID: MSS1301AV_B04F10_02
Subjects: Protests and protestors; Demonstrations; Activism; Prisoners and prisons; Correctional institutions -- Ohio; Labor unions
Places: Columbus (Ohio); Franklin County (Ohio)
 
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