In the 1920s, there was a shortage of federal prison space for female inmates.[8] Women offenders either were given alternative punishments or were housed alone within all-male institutions. Prison staff and fellow inmates sexually exploited girls and women who were incarcerated in these facilities.[8]
Mabel Walker Willebrandt, then an Assistant U.S. Attorney General, first encouraged establishment of a facility for women.[9] FPC Alderson, which opened on April 30, 1927, as the Federal Industrial Institute for Women,[10] was the first federal women's prison in the United States.[11] It was opened during a reform movement in the 1920s to help reform female offenders.[12]
The first warden, Mary B. Harris, was chosen by Willebrandt.[9] Despite later bureau mythology that Alderson opened its doors with moonshining women from the hills of West Virginia, 174 women had been sent to the facility in the first year of operation before its formal November 14, 1928, opening.[13] The West Virginia location was chosen as it was remote enough from major population centers to reduce potential escapes, while it was reasonably close to the U.S. capital.[14] The vast majority of the women were imprisoned for drug and alcohol charges imposed during the Prohibition era.[15]
Esther Heffernan, a sociology professor at Edgewood College, said that throughout history the inmates included "relatives of famous mobsters and grandmotherly women who embezzled money from banks. You've had a real mixture." Hefferman added that in Alderson, which was a "not undesirable" place to be confined, the isolation from urban life could be stressful for inmates. She said that the inmates, "Coming from the streets of New York and D.C.," were awakened at night by crickets and frogs.[16]
Most of the inmates at FPC Alderson have been convicted of non-violent or white-collar crime. Many are in the drug program and have come from other prisons to attend the program at Alderson.
Serving as a model for prison reform at the time, the facility was styled after a boarding school, offering education with no armed guards.[18] The facility followed a reformatory model with no fenced grounds.[8] The prison consisted of primarily work-oriented facilities designed for minor federal offenders. It originally consisted of 14 cottages built in a horseshoe pattern on two-tiered slopes.[19] The offenders were segregated by race in the cottages and each building contained a kitchen and rooms for about 30 women.[19]
While there is no barbed wire on the fence surrounding the camp, the prisoners have schedules and each one must work. Inmates get holidays off except those who work in the powerhouse and kitchen.[20] From its beginning, Alderson's staff members have maintained a focus on vocational training and personal growth experiences, with craft-shop activities an integral part of vocational training.[21]
Free time is spent walking around the sidewalk that is set between the two dorms as this is within bounds for the inmates. Since 2004 inmates are no longer free to roam the entire campus and are restricted in areas of the prison. They also play recreational activities such as volleyball.
John Benish, the former co-manager of the Alderson Hospitality House, a hospitality establishment where families of Alderson inmates stay when visiting, said that FPC Alderson is "built like a college campus. There is lot of property, a lot of greenery and there is no barbed wire around."
The Alderson facility includes two dormitories with 500 inmates each. Inmates live in two-person cubicles instead of traditional barred prison cells,[22] and sleep in bunk beds. The cubicles are 5-by-9-foot (1.5 m × 2.7 m), separated by cinder-blocks.[citation needed]
The prison was nicknamed "Camp Cupcake" by members of the news media when Martha Stewart was sentenced to a five-month term there[23] and was referred to as "Yale" by Stewart herself.[24] Local residents have also referred to it as "the college campus."[23]
By 2004, according to Alexandra Marks of The Independent, the operating model for Alderson followed "a punitive rather than a rehabilitative model".[12] As of 2004, most prisoners at Alderson were convicted of recreational drug-related offenses. Prisoners are not permitted to patronize Alderson-area businesses.[25]
The facility allows weekend visits, but special hours are available for holidays.[20] In prior years the families of inmates were allowed past visiting rooms only on Thanksgiving Day when they could also share in a holiday feast for $1.75.[20]
FPC Alderson was one of six federal and state prisons participating in the Paws4prisons service dog training program.[26] This program allowed inmates the opportunity to interact and work with dogs.[27] This included an academic curriculum where inmates first learned how to train "shelter-rescue dogs" and then progressed to developing highly trained assistance dogs.[28]
Released from custody in 1958 after serving 25 years.
Wife of notorious bank robber and murderer George Kelly Barnes, better known as "Machine Gun Kelly;" convicted in 1933 of being her husband's accomplice in the kidnapping of businessman and oil tycoon Charles F. Urschel.[32]
American citizen who participated in English-language propaganda broadcast transmitted by Radio Tokyo to Allied soldiers in the South Pacific during World War II; known as "Tokyo Rose."
Released from custody on May 16, 2013 after serving 3 years.
Detroit City Council member from 2005 to 2009 and wife of former-Congressman John Conyers; pleaded guilty to bribery in 2009 for accepting $60,000 from a waste management company in return for her helping the company win a $1.2 billion contract with the city.[43][44]
Released from custody in 2007 after serving 3 years.
North Carolina Agriculture Commissioner from 2001 to 2003; pleaded guilty in 2003 to extortion, mail fraud, and conspiracy for accepting thousands of dollars in illegal cash payments, falsifying campaign finance reports, and extorting money from carnival operators with the promise of state contracts.[45][46]
Released from custody in 2005 after serving 5 months.
American business magnate, television host, author, and magazine publisher; convicted in 2004 of obstruction of justice and lying to federal prosecutors investigating insider trading.[47][48]
Released from custody in 2011 after serving 3 years.
Former US Secret Service Most-Wanted Fugitive; pleaded guilty to fraud and identity theft for falsely assuming several identities, including that of missing person Brooke Henson, in order to steal money and gain entrance to Ivy League universities; Reed was featured on the television program America's Most Wanted.[49][50]
American jazz singer and songwriter arrested for possession of narcotics on May 19, 1947 and sentenced to serve a year and a day, but released for good behavior on March 16, 1948.
^Inmates released from custody prior to 1982 are not listed on the Federal Bureau of Prisons website.
^"Martha's Prison Thanksgiving". Highbeam (The Cincinnati Post). 24 November 2004. Archived from the original on 2 November 2012. Retrieved 17 July 2011. Mullins said the prison dormitories are in Summers County
^"County population drop due partly to inmate switch". Bluefield Daily Telegraph. Associated Press. 2001-07-07. p. 6. The prison is located on Glen Ray Road in Monroe County. But Mullins said the prison dormitories are in Summers County. - Found on Newspaperarchive.com
This list template only include facilities for post-trial long-term confinement of adult females and juvenile females sentenced as adults, of one or two years or more (referred to as "prisons" in the United States, while the word "jail" normally refers to short-term confinement facilities)