This is a 360 video experience. Use your mouse or the arrow keys on your keyboard to see the entire 360 view.
Take a 360-degree video tour inside the former Iowa State Penitentiary at Ft. Madison with Ret. Lieutenant Judy Milks. Brian Powers/The Register
Judy Milks worked as a lieutenant at the now closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison for 16 years. She was the prison's first female lieutenant. Here she poses for a photo in the prison's gym.(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)Buy Photo
FORT MADISON, Ia. Leonard Harveyspent a lot of time in the dark, narrow crevice behind inmate cells. It was a favorite tactic of unruly inmates to plug a toilet and flood their cell. Harvey, plant operations manager at the Iowa State Penitentiary,navigatedthe walkway behind the cell to get at the plug. When aninmate heard the pipe uncapped, he flushed and sent fluidsflying, usually on a new hire who didn't know better.
This was worse than getting spit at, another inmate favorite.
Lacking freedom, they used body fluids as weapons.
The stories of darkness and mystery are rich at the oldprison, its first stones laid before Iowa was a state. At lastit sits entirely empty, themedical wing closed a couple weeks ago, leaving it a relic of human behavior and structures to correct it. And now a group is trying to save it.
Only wind whips through the prison yard where the most violent of criminals at the maximum-security fort once did sit-ups inside chain-link exercise cages. Stone walls surround the vast emptiness, razor wire shining in the sun, and corner battlement towers are vacant of trained weapons specialists who for 178 years watched inmates below.
Here, near the banks of the Mississippi River in Fort Madison, a historical group of structures begins its deterioration while the state pays $1,000 a day to keep the utilities running and its grounds secure.
Some inmates housed in the new prison for men that opened in 2015 would love to see the old hellhole crumble down, said Judy Milks, a retired prison lieutenant who was part of a group to take us inside the walls last week.
She does not.There is too much history here in the structures, some dating to 1839 andon the National Register of Historic Places, too many stories of inmates and guards who lived, worked and died in what was the nation's oldest continuously operating prison.
Autoplay
Show Thumbnails
Show Captions
Milks is part of the nonprofit Historic Iowa State Penitentiary, a group that is trying to save the prison and potentially create a museum andtourist attraction as they have in prisons in other states.
Somebody needs to come along with some money to do it. So far that isnt happening.
As we venture into the nooks and crannies of a place that might give some people the willies, its as if the last renters had just upped and moved out, leaving toilet paper rolls on metal bunks and scrawled messages on cell walls.
This was their whole world, Milks said. They never got outside these walls, unless they went to Iowa City for medical care.
The new place has no stories, added Patti Wachtendorf, who started work here in her 20s and was named the penitentiarys first female warden in 2017.
This old place has stories, she said. I can almost hear them walking around, all the noises.
Words scribed into a cell wall at the closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison.(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)
The first exterior limestonewall of ancient cell block17 has grown light with age. Back in 1839, prisoners helped construct it, and guards dug holes in the ground for them to sleep at night, said Jean Peiton, a volunteer with the nonprofit, whose mission is to save the prison for education, economic and historical purposes.
At the time, new incarceration methods were spreading nationwide, called the Auburn system. Instead of prisoners being held in large rooms before paying a fine or facing flogging or execution, the system was designed to reform prisoners with strict habits, silence and discipline while separating them into private cells at night.
A four-tiered block of cells center the stone walls, flanked by a cement walkway called a range, which correctional officers patrolled, often ducking thrown objects and insults. Most cells are roughly six feet wide, twice as long, and contain a solid metal bed frame attached to the floor and walls, a sink, toilet and two metal plates attached to the wall that act as a desk and chair.
On the toptier, another cell became famous among guards. A prisoner had painted a large frog around a sink inits open mouth. New guards were often told to find the frog to really know the prison.
New officers were often told they have to find the lizard and the frog at te closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison on Wednesday, March 8, 2017, in Fort Madison. The lizard was built into an exterior wall in one of the original buildings and the frog was painted by an inmate in their cell.(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)
Behind the block of cells is a metal utility walkway where Harvey did his plumbing. Wachtendorf said correctional officers used to quietly stand back there and listen to inmates talk. You can learn a lot, she said.
To the east of the oldest structureare cell blocks 18, 19 and 20, built in the Romanesque Revival style from 1913 to 1942, listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
Historically significant structures that are owned by the state must be maintained, per Iowa Code. Tearing them down may be difficult.
The nonprofits first step in its preservation is an environmental assessment that costs from $120,000 to $180,000 before deciding what buildings could be used for ahistorical attraction, education and even small business opportunities.
The group has asked the state to fund it. With budget shortfalls at the state and the Iowa Department of Corrections, Wachtendorf said the money just isnt there.
But we need to preserve this history, she said.
Entering cell block 19, Milks had visions of her past work life here.
One of the old cell blocks at the closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison.(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)
It was bedlam, she said. I liked the excitement.
They called them cons for a reason. I was 50 when I started; Im 70 now. They thought they could get something over on me. Being around a while, they couldnt. Its the only way you got respect around here.
She had to quit looking up their crimes.
Baby rapers, mom killers. I had one inmate who took his mother out to eat and then killedher, she said. He loved to talk about it.
The stories behind the historical walls tell not only of correctional methods but those of men and their crimes, the group said. The old timers who lived half a century here and died. The communities that formed within the walls. The practice of religion and the moments of human decency that accompanied the deviant behavior.
Thats why Mark Fullenkamp is involved. The web director at the University of Iowa grew up in Fort Madison. His mom worked at the prison and ordered the last hanging rope in 1963. When he knew it would soon close, he toured the facility and found old wooden boxes filled with glass-plate negatives of prison mugshots dating back 150 years. He has tirelessly embarked on a preservation of those mug shots ever since, as well as compiling written and oral histories of the inmates.
Photo negatives create snapshot of prison's past
The reverse of the decades-old negative at right produced the image above of an Iowa inmate. Mark Fullenkamp has inverted and digitized more than 11,200 glass-plate negatives.(Photo: Special to the Register/Mark Fullenkamp)
The group has studied preservation efforts at penitentiaries in Pennsylvania, Missouri and Ohio. The old Mansfield, Ohio, prison has been a popular attraction because of the movie The Shawshank Redemption. Others, such as the prison in Jefferson City, Mo., have used ghost tours to help make money to maintain it.
The ghost hunters are all after them, Fullenkamp said. They show up at meetings with T-shirts from paranormal groups.
None in the group want to go down that road.
You have a lot of families of people who lived here or who were victims of the people who lived here, so we need to do it respectfully, Wachtendorf said. People died here. People lived here. This isnt a joke.
As we exit the cell block, toilet paper balls are still stuck 10 feet high on the walls across from the cells. Prisoners had wet them or peed on them to toss on the walls, a sort of mummified parting message to the old place.
The exercise cages at the closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison.(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)
Into the next cell block, 20, we stand inside a tight cell. Even without the front barsclosed, the walls close in quickly.
On one wall, an inmate had painted the Hawkeyes logo of the University of Iowa. This is where Milks stands to tell her stories.
She had to call for forced cell extractions byofficers with shields and stab-proof gear. She had to take down a man who had hanged himself.
The inmates took to calling her Eva Gabor when I was 50 pounds lighter and 20 years younger, she said. She got sick of it because every time she came on the range, they all started whistling the theme from Green Acres, an old TV show Gabor starred in. One day, she demanded they call her Phyllis Diller, a comic and actor popular in the 1960s that only the old lifers knew. Somehow it stuck.
She could get along with them with BS and not taking crap. One day when an inmate in a top tier began yelling brutal sexual insults at her, she walked to the middle of the range in full view of the cells, spread her arms wide and leaned back to yell with a wicked smile: Now this is prison!
They all laughed, even the guy yelling the insults, she said.
God I love this place. Isnt it awful?
In the theater, Fullenkamp said he recently found a receipt for what he considers the last movie shown there, Death Games, about an inmate using martial arts to clean up a corrupt prison. More importantly, the Art Deco seatsand historical nature of the 1930s-era U-shaped structure that also housed the chow hall are in peril.
The theater sits silent in an 1930s-era building that was damaged in a 2015 storm.(Photo: Special to The Register)
Its deteriorating with a roof problemand window damage from a 2015 storm.
The group Preservation Iowa has the penitentiary on its 2017 list of most endangered properties.
The city doesnt want it, the state doesnt want it, but people in these rust belt towns need something, Fullenkamp saidof one of Iowas most economically struggling counties (Lee). I think we are opening minds. At first, people said you cant do anything with that place. Then you see them thinking about it.
Go into a bar around here at 1 a.m., added Harvey, you hear all kinds of ideas.
Historical photographs tell many stories. Fullenkamp has ideas of projecting inmates historical photographs on cell walls with an audio oral history for tour groups. There are stories of the 1981 riot, when inmates took over the prison, orthe 2005 escape, when two inmates fashioned a makeshift rope out of upholstery fabric and used to it climb over razor wire and leap from the stone walls, only to be captured later in nearby states.
There are the hanging gallows, right on the southeast corner of the prison walls, where Fullenkamp saw the photo of ahangmans lowered head as he preparedan execution.
A crowd gathers at the Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison before the Nov. 24, 1922, hanging of Orrie Cross, who had slain Des Moines grocer George Fosdick.(Photo: Register file photo)
We stand there quietly looking at the cornerwhere people far and wide came, even onriver boats,to watch men hang.
Its the unknown, Peiton said of the appeal inside these walls. Wondering how one survives in little cages. The vast aura of despair and occasional enlightenment of the men who lived here.
A section of the now closed Iowa State Penitentiary at Fort Madison that was once used for hangings .(Photo: Brian Powers/The Register)
The ring of an old sweat lodge that native Americans used outside the chapel attests to past hopes. Those inmates, said the prison officials and preservationist on the tour, were not always the monsters portrayed in film. They could be normal, absentdrugs or alcohol, or with medication for a mental illness.
I stood there talking to these guys like Im talking to you,Harvey said. Its not like on TV, all those popular prison shows now. But I have to admit, I go home and watch them, and Im in here living it every day. Doesnt make sense.
Many of the old inmates who fiercely protected their routines, playing dominoes on the tables aside the gymnasium floor, have passed on. The young guys who played basketball have staked out their territories in the new prison.
All thats left here is a lot of emptiness, not a sound for the first time in 178 years.
Read or Share this story: http://dmreg.co/2nbz8Aw
Original post:
Go inside an abandoned Iowa prison full of beauty, sadness - DesMoinesRegister.com
- Thinking Slowly: The Paradoxical Slowness of Human Behavior - Caltech - December 23rd, 2024 [December 23rd, 2024]
- From smog to crime: How air pollution is shaping human behavior and public safety - The Times of India - December 9th, 2024 [December 9th, 2024]
- The Smell Of Death Has A Strange Influence On Human Behavior - IFLScience - October 26th, 2024 [October 26th, 2024]
- "WEIRD" in psychology literature oversimplifies the global diversity of human behavior. - Psychology Today - October 2nd, 2024 [October 2nd, 2024]
- Scientists issue warning about increasingly alarming whale behavior due to human activity - Orcasonian - September 23rd, 2024 [September 23rd, 2024]
- Does AI adoption call for a change in human behavior? - Fast Company - July 26th, 2024 [July 26th, 2024]
- Dogs can smell human stress and it alters their own behavior, study reveals - New York Post - July 26th, 2024 [July 26th, 2024]
- Trajectories of brain and behaviour development in the womb, at birth and through infancy - Nature.com - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- AI model predicts human behavior from our poor decision-making - Big Think - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- ZkSync defends Sybil measures as Binance offers own ZK token airdrop - TradingView - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- On TikTok, Goldendoodles Are People Trapped in Dog Bodies - The New York Times - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- 10 things only introverts find irritating, according to psychology - Hack Spirit - June 18th, 2024 [June 18th, 2024]
- 32 animals that act weirdly human sometimes - Livescience.com - May 24th, 2024 [May 24th, 2024]
- NBC Is Using Animals To Push The LGBT Agenda. Here Are 5 Abhorrent Animal Behaviors Humans Shouldn't Emulate - The Daily Wire - May 24th, 2024 [May 24th, 2024]
- New study examines the dynamics of adaptive autonomy in human volition and behavior - PsyPost - May 24th, 2024 [May 24th, 2024]
- 30000 years of history reveals that hard times boost human societies' resilience - Livescience.com - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- Kingdom of the Planet of the Apes Actors Had Trouble Reverting Back to Human - CBR - May 12th, 2024 [May 12th, 2024]
- The need to feel safe is a core driver of human behavior. - Psychology Today - April 15th, 2024 [April 15th, 2024]
- AI learned how to sway humans by watching a cooperative cooking game - Science News Magazine - March 29th, 2024 [March 29th, 2024]
- We can't combat climate change without changing minds. This psychology class explores how. - Northeastern University - March 11th, 2024 [March 11th, 2024]
- Bees Reveal a Human-Like Collective Intelligence We Never Knew Existed - ScienceAlert - March 11th, 2024 [March 11th, 2024]
- Franciscan AI expert warns of technology becoming a 'pseudo-religion' - Detroit Catholic - March 11th, 2024 [March 11th, 2024]
- Freshwater resources at risk thanks to human behavior - messenger-inquirer - March 11th, 2024 [March 11th, 2024]
- Astrocytes Play Critical Role in Regulating Behavior - Neuroscience News - March 11th, 2024 [March 11th, 2024]
- Freshwater resources at risk thanks to human behavior - Sunnyside Sun - March 11th, 2024 [March 11th, 2024]
- Freshwater resources at risk thanks to human behavior - Blue Mountain Eagle - March 11th, 2024 [March 11th, 2024]
- 7 Books on Human Behavior - Times Now - March 11th, 2024 [March 11th, 2024]
- Euphemisms increasingly used to soften behavior that would be questionable in direct language - Norfolk Daily News - February 29th, 2024 [February 29th, 2024]
- Linking environmental influences, genetic research to address concerns of genetic determinism of human behavior - Phys.org - February 29th, 2024 [February 29th, 2024]
- Emerson's Insight: Navigating the Three Fundamental Desires of Human Nature - The Good Men Project - February 29th, 2024 [February 29th, 2024]
- Dogs can recognize a bad person and there's science to prove it. - GOOD - February 29th, 2024 [February 29th, 2024]
- What Is Organizational Behavior? Everything You Need To Know - MarketWatch - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- Overcoming 'Otherness' in Scientific Research Commentary in Nature Human Behavior USA - English - USA - PR Newswire - February 4th, 2024 [February 4th, 2024]
- "Reichman University's behavioral economics program: Navigating human be - The Jerusalem Post - January 19th, 2024 [January 19th, 2024]
- Of trees, symbols of humankind, on Tu BShevat - The Jewish Star - January 19th, 2024 [January 19th, 2024]
- Tapping Into The Power Of Positive Psychology With Acclaimed Expert Niyc Pidgeon - GirlTalkHQ - January 19th, 2024 [January 19th, 2024]
- Don't just make resolutions, 'be the architect of your future self,' says Stanford-trained human behavior expert - CNBC - December 31st, 2023 [December 31st, 2023]
- Never happy? Humans tend to imagine how life could be better : Short Wave - NPR - December 31st, 2023 [December 31st, 2023]
- People who feel unhappy but hide it well usually exhibit these 9 behaviors - Hack Spirit - December 31st, 2023 [December 31st, 2023]
- If you display these 9 behaviors, you're being passive aggressive without realizing it - Hack Spirit - December 31st, 2023 [December 31st, 2023]
- Men who are relationship-oriented by nature usually display these 9 behaviors - Hack Spirit - December 31st, 2023 [December 31st, 2023]
- A look at the curious 'winter break' behavior of ChatGPT-4 - ReadWrite - December 14th, 2023 [December 14th, 2023]
- Neuroscience and Behavior Major (B.S.) | College of Liberal Arts - UNH's College of Liberal Arts - December 14th, 2023 [December 14th, 2023]
- The positive health effects of prosocial behaviors | News | Harvard ... - HSPH News - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- The valuable link between succession planning and skills - Human Resource Executive - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Okinawa's ants show reduced seasonal behavior in areas with more human development - Phys.org - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- How humans use their sense of smell to find their way | Penn Today - Penn Today - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Wrestling With Evil in the World, or Is It Something Else? - Psychiatric Times - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Shimmying like electric fish is a universal movement across species - Earth.com - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Why do dogs get the zoomies? - Care.com - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- How Stuart Robinson's misconduct went overlooked for years - Washington Square News - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Whatchamacolumn: Homeless camps back in the news - News-Register - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Stunted Growth in Infants Reshapes Brain Function and Cognitive ... - Neuroscience News - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Social medias role in modeling human behavior, societies - kuwaittimes - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- The gift of reformation - Living Lutheran - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- After pandemic, birds are surprisingly becoming less fearful of humans - Study Finds - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Nick Treglia: The trouble with fairness and the search for truth - 1819 News - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Science has an answer for why people still wave on Zoom - Press Herald - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Orcas are learning terrifying new behaviors. Are they getting smarter? - Livescience.com - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Augmenting the Regulatory Worker: Are We Making Them Better or ... - BioSpace - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- What "The Creator", a film about the future, tells us about the present - InCyber - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- WashU Expert: Some parasites turn hosts into 'zombies' - The ... - Washington University in St. Louis - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Is secondhand smoke from vapes less toxic than from traditional ... - Missouri S&T News and Research - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- How apocalyptic cults use psychological tricks to brainwash their ... - Big Think - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Human action pushing the world closer to environmental tipping ... - Morung Express - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- What We Get When We Give | Harvard Medicine Magazine - Harvard University - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Psychological Anime: 12 Series You Should Watch - But Why Tho? - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- Roosters May Recognize Their Reflections in Mirrors, Study Suggests - Smithsonian Magazine - October 27th, 2023 [October 27th, 2023]
- June 30 Zodiac: Sign, Traits, Compatibility and More - AZ Animals - May 13th, 2023 [May 13th, 2023]
- Indiana's Funding Ban for Kinsey Sex-Research Institute Threatens ... - The Chronicle of Higher Education - May 13th, 2023 [May 13th, 2023]
- Have AI Chatbots Developed Theory of Mind? What We Do and Do ... - The New York Times - March 31st, 2023 [March 31st, 2023]
- Scoop: Coming Up on a New Episode of HOUSEBROKEN on FOX ... - Broadway World - March 31st, 2023 [March 31st, 2023]
- Here's five fall 2023 classes to fire up your bookbag - Duke Chronicle - March 31st, 2023 [March 31st, 2023]
- McDonald: Aspen's like living in a 'Pullman town' - The Aspen Times - March 31st, 2023 [March 31st, 2023]
- Children Who Are Exposed to Awe-Inspiring Art Are More Likely to Become Generous, Empathic Adults, a New Study Says - artnet News - March 31st, 2023 [March 31st, 2023]
- DataDome Raises Another $42M to Prevent Bot Attacks in Real ... - AlleyWatch - March 31st, 2023 [March 31st, 2023]
- Observing group-living animals with drones may help us understand ... - Innovation Origins - March 31st, 2023 [March 31st, 2023]
- Mann named director of School of Public and Population Health - Boise State University - March 31st, 2023 [March 31st, 2023]
- Irina Solomonova's bad behavior is the star of Love Is Blind - My Imperfect Life - March 31st, 2023 [March 31st, 2023]
- Health quotes Dill in article about rise of Babesiosis - UMaine News ... - University of Maine - March 31st, 2023 [March 31st, 2023]