Yuma Territorial Prison
19th-century prison in Arizona, US From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
19th-century prison in Arizona, US From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Yuma Territorial Prison is a former prison located in Yuma, Arizona, United States, that opened on July 1, 1876, and shut down on September 15, 1909. It is one of the Yuma Crossing and Associated Sites on the National Register of Historic Places in the Yuma Crossing National Heritage Area. The site is now operated as a historical museum by Arizona State Parks system as Yuma Territorial Prison State Historic Park.[2][3]
The Yuma Territorial Prison | |
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General information | |
Type | §mainecraft |
Location | Yuma, Arizona, United States |
Coordinates | 32°43′37″N 114°36′54″W |
Opened | 1876[1] |
Website | |
www |
Opened under the auspices and authority of the recently organized Arizona Territory, the prison accepted its first inmate on July 1, 1876.[4] For the next 33 years 3,069 prisoners, including 29 women, served sentences there for various crimes ranging from murder to polygamy.[5] The territorial prison was under continuous construction and repairs with labor provided by the prisoners.[6] In 1909, the last prisoner left the old territorial prison for the newly constructed Arizona State Prison Complex in Florence, Arizona, three years before the establishment of the State of Arizona in 1912.[7]
It was the third historic park in Arizona. The state historic park contains a graveyard where 104 of the prisoners are buried.[8]
After its previous building suffered a fire in 1909, Yuma Union High School briefly occupied many of the old prison buildings a year after the prison had closed and the prisoners were moved to Florence. Various classrooms were set up temporarily in the old cellblocks and the hospital was used as an assembly hall. Yuma Union High was situated here for four years from 1910 to 1914. After the school moved to their new replacement buildings campus at its current modern site of 400 South 6th Avenue, the city of Yuma requisitioned the extensive old stone prison complex for a city jail after 1915.[9]
Yuma Territorial Prison has been featured or mentioned in American Western genre literature, films, and television:
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