Ghostly Past
Occupies Haunted Historical Prison
By James Donahue
Back in the days when Butch Cassidy and the Sundance Kid
were robbing banks and trains across the wilds of Wyoming, the region was
building its first prison and preparing for statehood.
The Wyoming Frontier Prison, also known as the “Old Pen,”
was opened at Rawlings in 1901 and continued operations until it was
closed in 1981. It has since been used to made a few movies, and now
stands as a national historical monument. Its notoriety is centered on a
belief that the building is very haunted.
Small wonder the place is bedeviled. It has a grisly history
of excessive torture and mistreatment and execution of prisoners.
An estimated 13,500 prisoners were housed in Old Pen during
the 80 years it operated. Fourteen of them were sentenced to death either
by hanging or later by lethal gassing, and a few others blew themselves
up during a failed escape attempt in 1959.
As the story is told, the prisoners in Death Row were
tunneling their way out of the old prison when they came upon and
apparently cut open an underground gas line. They died in that tunnel
after someone struck a match to examine what was obstructing their dig.
Two other prisoners froze to death when confined to an
unheated “dungeon-house” added in 1906 for special punishment of the
incorrigibles.
The first two executions were conducted with the “traveling”
Julian Gallows. This was a torture device designed by architect James P.
Julian that made the condemned prisoner hang himself. The person to be
executed stood on a trap door connected to a lever that pulled the plug
out of a barrel of water. As water flowed from the barrel, it caused a
lever with a counterweight to rise, pulling on the support beam under the
gallows. They said the first man to be executed by this device waited
some 30 minutes before the trap dropped and he was hung.
The prison added a “death house” in 1916 which included
eight cells to house death row prisoners and an indoor version of the
Julian Gallows. This device was even more of a horror than the original
“traveling” gallows because of a poor design. The gallows didn’t drop the
condemned prisoner far enough to break his neck so they died a slow death
by strangulation. Nine men were hung this way.
Unfortunately, this do-it-yourself gallows
didn't drop the condemned man far enough to break his neck, and they died
a slow death through strangulation. Nine men were hung in his fashion.
The last five executions were conducted in a gas chamber
that was installed in 1936 to do a “more humane job.” The condemned men
were killed by the use of hydrocyanic acid gas. This is not really a
humane way to be killed since it takes up to ten minutes for death to
occur, but obviously an improvement over the system of hanging used prior
to then.
There were numerous other killings within the walls of that
old prison, usually during attempted prison breaks. In 1907 an inmate
that acquired a gun and some dynamite smuggled into the prison fatally
shot a guard before the break was thwarted.
Another guard died during another attempted prison break in
1911.
In 1912, 30 prisoners successfully escaped the wooden
stockade and barbed wire and during the hunt, a Rawlings resident was
murdered by one of the escapees. The last successful prison escape
occurred in 1927 when seven prisoners made a break for freedom.
During the early years after the prison opened the place was
equipped with some extremely cruel types of “special” punishment for
inmates who got unruly. Not only was a special dungeon prepared, but
there were variations of solitary confinement and a punishment pole on
which men were handcuffed and whipped with a rubber hose. The latter was
discontinued after it was deemed illegal in 1930.
Prisoners were put to work in various factories that
produced brooms, shirts, wool blankets for the military during the war
and finally automobile license plates.
The stories of strange “feelings” and ghostly apparitions
experienced by visitors to the old prison have been so numerous that it
has become a popular place for paranormal investigation teams. There have
been so many wanting to work in the building the museum now charges the
groups by the hour.
Among the research groups has been the Cheyenne Paranormal
Investigation team, which claims the prison is one of the most active
places they visit.
Using sensitive recording devices, the team claims that in
one visit in July, 2008, it recorded more than 50 sounds within a few
hours. There were at least 10 different voices, drips where there was no
water and footsteps where there were no people.
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