15 Interesting Facts About Alcatraz
Alcatraz Island is located in San Francisco Bay, 1.25 miles offshore from San Francisco, California, United States. The small island was developed with facilities for a lighthouse, a military fortification, a military prison, and a federal prison from 193
Published 6 years ago in Wow
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Unlike most prisons, criminals were not automatically sentenced to Alcatraz. The most defiant inmates were sent there to smarten up and learn to obey the rules. Therefore, Alcatraz had no set sentences. A typical inmate would spend 6 to 8 years there until they were deemed a “model” prisoner and transferred back to their original prison where they were either paroled or made to serve out the rest of their original sentence.
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Alcatraz cells are barely bigger than a closet, measuring 5-feet by 9-feet. If a prisoner stretched out his arms he could touch the cell walls. They were just big enough for a sink, toilet, and cot. D block cells were bigger, but considering they were solitary confinement,, you probably didn’t want to move there.
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In 1945, John Giles semi-successfully escaped the island by stealing an army uniform from the laundry and simply walking onto an army truck. It might’ve worked if the truck was headed for the city, but it was on its way to Angel Island, and as soon as he got off the truck, correctional officers sent him back to Alcatraz. So close, yet so far!
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Alcatraz’s final escape attempt by Frank Morris and brothers Clarance and John Anglin was turned into a book called Escape From Alcatraz, and a film by the same name. The three used homemade tools to drill holes in their cell walls in order to reach the vents and swim free using homemade life jackets. The men were never seen again and presumed dead. However, many believe they made it to shore and lived the rest of their lives as free men.
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Each prisoner had their registry number stenciled on their shirts and overalls, and it became a way of distinguishing the old timers from the newbies. Those with 4-digit numbers were newbies, while those with the low numbers were veterans such as Al Capone who arrived in 1934 and was known as number 85.
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Below the A block of cells was a set of cells which were dubbed the Spanish Dungeons. Over the years, stories about the dungeons grew, some saying they were built by the Spanish Inquisition (they weren’t). Others claimed they were built beneath the water line because they were wet and cold. In truth though, they were 100 feet above the water line — not below. In 1942, the Bureau of Prisons decided that the dungeons were cruel and unusual punishment and prohibited any further use of them.