1. Solitary Confinement and the Rise of the Penitentiary
Although I will be criticizing the modern practice of solitary confinement
in terms of its injustice and cruelty, its historical origins, like those
of the penitentiary itself, lie not in the practice of torture and the
abuse of state power, but rather in a reform-spirited reaction against
such practices. The period between 1775 and 1850 saw dramatic changes
in Europe and North America in the state's conception of its right to
punish offenders, and the legacy of that period still infuses much of
our thinking about punishment and penal institutions. It is not possible
to understand the evolution of disciplinary practices in the Canadian
penitentiary and the role of solitary confinement without tracing the
rise of the penitentiary itself as a distinctive penal institution in
England and the United States. Developments in these countries in the
eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries provided not only the institutional
framework for the establishment of the first Canadian penitentiary, but
also a correctional strategy designed to ensure the legitimacy of state
authority. It is a paradox of history that a central feature of that correctional
strategy -solitary confinement -has come to epitomize the most disturbing
abuse of power that exists in the Canadian penitentiary today.
Before 1775, imprisonment was rarely used in England as a punishment
for felony. Major crimes were punished with hanging, banishment, transportation,
whipping, or the pillory. At the Old Bailey, London's major criminal court,
imprisonment accounted for no more than 2.3 per cent of the judges' sentences
in the years between 1770 and 1777. Where a prison term was imposed for
a felony, the range of offenders was narrow -those convicted of manslaughter,
perjury, combining against employers, or rioting -and the sentences were
short by modern standards, never longer than three years and typically
a year or less.1 Although few felons were
sentenced to imprisonment, most experienced the pains of confinement awaiting
trial and, when convicted, awaiting transportation to the colonies or
execution. Imprisonment was also used by local justices of the peace to
punish summary offences, such as vagrancy, desertion of family, bastardy,
offences against the authority of employers, embezzlement of raw materials
supplied to cottage workers by employers, theft of farm produce, the taking
of firewood from privately owned woods, and minor game offences.2
But criminal conviction, whether for a felony or a summary offence, was
not the predominant basis for imprisonment in the eighteenth century.
At the time of John Howard's prison census of 1776, almost 60 per cent
of all individuals confined in England and Wales were debtors who were
imprisoned until they could give satisfaction to their creditors or until
they were discharged as insolvents by an act of Parliament.3
There were three major institutions of confinement in eighteenth- century
England: the debtors' prisons, the county and borough jails, and the houses
of correction. The debtors' prisons were distinctive because of the special
position debtors occupied in the hierarchy of prisoners. They could not
be made to work, they were permitted to live with their wives and children,
and they had full access to visitors from the outside. In the larger debtors'
prisons in London, immunity from discipline meant that the debtors were
left to police their own community.' As a result, the social life of the
debtors' prison ran unchecked. The Fleet was reputed to be the biggest
brothel in London. Howard discovered a beer and wine club in operation
in the King's Bench and a committee of inquiry in 1813 discovered a music
society there.'4 Page 1 of 11
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