Report of the Committee of the Society for the Improvement of Prison Discipline, and for the Reformation of Juvenile Offenders, Volumes 6-7 |
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Page xv
... crime , in which humanity is violated , and decency outraged : and , that it is , therefore , with anxious yet confident hope , that this Meeting looks to the wisdom of Par- liament for the suppression of evils , as disgraceful to the ...
... crime , in which humanity is violated , and decency outraged : and , that it is , therefore , with anxious yet confident hope , that this Meeting looks to the wisdom of Par- liament for the suppression of evils , as disgraceful to the ...
Page 2
... crime . The delinquent was , then , re- quired to make reparation not to the offended only , but to the community at large , for the security that he had endangered , and the peace he had disturbed . This dis- covery powerfully ...
... crime . The delinquent was , then , re- quired to make reparation not to the offended only , but to the community at large , for the security that he had endangered , and the peace he had disturbed . This dis- covery powerfully ...
Page 5
... crime ; that , for this purpose , it is necessary to adopt such measures as shall deter others from the commission of the offence , and restrain the criminal from repeating it ; that , for the attainment of both these objects ...
... crime ; that , for this purpose , it is necessary to adopt such measures as shall deter others from the commission of the offence , and restrain the criminal from repeating it ; that , for the attainment of both these objects ...
Page 8
... others . The consequence of such defects is , that these gaols are so many establishments for the encouragement and growth of crime . There is no employment , no reflec- tion , no moral nor religious instruction . That this.
... others . The consequence of such defects is , that these gaols are so many establishments for the encouragement and growth of crime . There is no employment , no reflec- tion , no moral nor religious instruction . That this.
Page 10
... crime will appear to have been gene- rated within its walls ! Were it possible to trace the his- tory of these individuals , and detect the subsequent in- fluence of the habits and connections thus formed , how many would be found to ...
... crime will appear to have been gene- rated within its walls ! Were it possible to trace the his- tory of these individuals , and detect the subsequent in- fluence of the habits and connections thus formed , how many would be found to ...
Common terms and phrases
airing-yards allowed alterations amount of earnings appointed attended Borough Gaol bread Bridewell buildings Castle County cells cent chaplain Child Stealing City Gaol classification clothing Committee confinement convicted County Gaol County House court crime criminal daily day-rooms debtors Debtors included discharge ditto effect employment erected established feet felons female prisoners four Gaol Act Gaol and House governor greatest number hard labour House of Correction imprisonment improvement inspection instruction irons keeper last Report magistrates male prisoners matron ment Michaelmas mill misdemeanants misdemeanors moral Northallerton number of commitments number of prisoners oakum offences officers Penitentiary persons pound present prison contains prison discipline prisoners committed punishment quarter sessions reads prayers rooms sentenced to hard separate sick sleeping-cells Society soners sons statement Stealing Sundays superintendence surgeon tion Total Number Town tread-mill tread-wheel trial turnkeys untried vagrants visiting justices visiting magistrates wards weekly cost wheel whole number women work-rooms yards
Popular passages
Page 118 - Of law there can be no less acknowledged, than that her seat is the bosom of God, her voice the harmony of the world ; all things in heaven and earth do her homage, the very least as feeling her care, and the greatest as not exempted from her power...
Page 118 - ... her seat is the bosom of God, her voice the harmony of the world : all things in heaven and earth do her homage, the very least as feeling her care, and the greatest as not exempted from her power : both Angels and men and creatures of what condition soever, though each in different sort and manner, yet all with uniform consent, admiring her as the mother of their peace and joy.
Page 72 - Act, the Justices shall adopt such Plans as shall afford the most effectual Means for the Security, Classification, Health, Inspection, Employment and Religious and Moral Instruction of the Prisoners ; the Building shall be so constructed or applied, and the Keepers
Page 28 - ... behaviour, and condition of the prisoners, the means of setting them to work, the amount of their earnings, and the expenses attending the prison, and...
Page 295 - Esquires, and others their fellows, justices of our said Lord the King, assigned to keep the peace in the county aforesaid, and also to hear and determine divers felonies, trespasses, and other misdemeanors committed in the same county.
Page 292 - I have the honour to acquaint you, for the information of the Right Honourable the Governor.
Page 102 - In the preamble it states, in a beautiful and simple strain of eloquence, that " Nothing is more godly, more sure, more to be wished and desired betwixt a prince, the supreme head and ruler, and the subjects whose governor and head he is, than on the prince's part great clemency and indulgency, and rather too much forgiveness and remission of his royal power and just punishment, than exact severity and justice to be showed; and, on the subjects...
Page 295 - Year of the Reign of Our Sovereign Lord George the Fourth by the Grace of God of the United Kingdom...
Page 104 - Crescente malitia, crescere debuit et pcena;" yet neither will the King exceed the usual punishment of law, nor invent any new torture or torment for them*, but is graciously pleased to afford them as well an ordinary course of trial as an ordinary punishment, much inferior to their offence.
Page 313 - Nine of those poor outcasts from society, 3 boys and 6 girls, clothed in rags, with squalid countenances,were brought in from the police office, and placed before the audience. An address appropriate to so novel an occasion was made by a member of the board, and not an individual, it may safely be affirmed, was present, whose warmest feelings did not vibrate in unison with the philanthropic views which led to the foundation of this house of refuge.