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2007: Oral History – Recording the Memories of Eastern State Penitentiary’s Eyewitnesses
$20,000

There are a surprising number of “eyewitnesses” to Eastern State Penitentiary’s history, but time is running out to preserve their memories.

Interviews with former inmates, guards, and staff are essential to understanding what day-to-day life was like at the prison. We have recorded the stories of some of these eyewitnesses, but more than one hundred remain.

Historians call the process of recording personal memories “oral history.” An Eastern State oral history project in 1992 recorded interviews with 55 former inmates, officers and staff members.

Former inmate Norman Pearson recorded his first impression of the cold, stone cellblocks. Former officer (and later Deputy Secretary of Corrections) Donald Vaughn talked about the relatively relaxed atmosphere inside the prison, and the way many of the staff and inmates preferred Eastern State to the places they wound up later.

The 1992 oral history interviews have provided a key resource for the research into Eastern State Penitentiary. The interviews have been featured in Eastern State exhibits about prison labor and the use of solitary confinement. More than thirty audio clips from the oral histories are incorporated into Eastern State’s current audio tour, The Voices of Eastern State Penitentiary.

There is a problem. The 1992 oral history program interviewed only a fraction of the men and women who remember the active Eastern State Penitentiary. Since then, we have met dozens upon dozens of former inmates, officers and staff members.

Many of their stories are incredible: former inmate W.S.* remembers pitching a knuckleball against professional baseball players visiting the prison; visitor E.D. remembers coming to Eastern State as part of a wedding party.

We have compiled a list of more than one hundred men and women who have yet to be interviewed. Each interview will take several hours of preparation and filming. Then each interview will need to be transcribed and reviewed, so that the information is as accurate and accessible as possible.

The costs are daunting, and each year we lose some of our valuable eyewitnesses. After all, Eastern closed more than thirty-five years ago.

Thank you for making it possible for us to record the irreplaceable memories of these men and women! Our 2007 Annual Appeal raised more than $33,800 for this project. An additional $30,000 in grants from the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission ($15,000) and the Independence Foundation ($15,000) is allowing us to accelerate our race against time to collect as many oral histories interviews as possible. First, we are pursuing interviews that help us fill specific gaps in our knowledge of Eastern State. Eight alumni provided interviews in 2007. We are continuing to secure a variety of high priority interviews in 2008 as well as collecting interviews focused on the Hospital and medical care at Eastern State.

* Rights to identify names not yet secured.
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Major Joseph Brierley (left) became Warden in 1966, and was interviewed in 1992. Deputy Superintendent Edward Mingle (right) was never interviewed. Warden William Banmiller (center) was never interviewed, but his son Gerard was interviewed in 2006: “Visiting Eastern State Penitentiary was not a pleasant thing, but it was an interesting thing.”

Photo: Philadelphia Inquirer, 1957
An inmate gets fitted for a suit in the tailor shop prior to release. Ahandwritten note on the back of the photo says, “Mack goes home.” We hope that oral histories will help us identify these men, and dozens more in our archives.
Two inmates appear to dry doll clothing with a desk fan. The meaning of their task is long forgotten, but may be solved with new interviews.
Donald Vaughn began his career at Eastern State, and retired as Deputy Secretary of Corrections for the State.

 

Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site, Inc.