Darlinghurst Gaol

Darlinghurst Gaol
Darlinghurst Gaol
Darlinghurst gaol new south wales.jpg
An aerial view of Darlinghurst Goal, 1930
Location Darlinghurst, New South Wales
Closed 1914

Darlinghurst Gaol was an Australian prison located in Darlinghurst, New South Wales. The site is bordered by Victoria, Burton and Forbes streets, with entrances on Forbes and Burton Streets.

Contents

History

The imposing entrance to the gaol
Grounds of the former gaol in 2011

Construction on Darlinghurst Gaol wall began in 1822, with completion of some of the cellblocks in 1840. The gaol was ready for occupation in a year later, with the first prisoners occupying the gaol on 7 June 1841.

The gaol was finally completed in 1885. The main material used for construction of the gaol is Sydney sandstone, cut into large blocks by convicts. Convict markings on the blocks are visible along the upper half of the wall on Darlinghurst Road. A tall circular chapel stands in the middle of the site, around which are sited the six rectangular cellblocks in a radial fashion.

Australian poet Henry Lawson spent time incarcerated here during some of the turbulent years of his life and described the gaol as Starvinghurst Gaol due to meagre rations given to the inmates. The site is now open to the public as The National Art School. The last hanging at the gaol was in 1907.[1]

Hangings were open to public viewing throughout several decades. People would gather at the front gate of the gaol in Forbes Street, and the condemned would be brought out on a platform built above the gaol gate. The public executioner Alexander Green lived for a time in a hut outside the eastern wall of the gaol, would then leave his house to the jeers and catcalls of the gathering crowd, enter the prison and do his job. Seventy-six people were hanged at Darlinghurst Gaol, but most of them met their demise on the scaffold inside the gaol in a corner of E-wing.

Modern-day use

The site was transferred in 1921 to the New South Wales Department of Education, who adapted the building for use as the East Sydney Technical College. The National Art School was established in 1995 and is now the sole occupant of the site. The Darlinghurst Road side of the Gaol, (commonly known as "the wall") has for many years been a popular place for male prostitutes to offer their services.

Notable prisoners

Watercolour of the Gaol by inmate Henry Louis Bertrand, 1891
  • Louisa Collins, last woman to hang in NSW. (Her principal trial is online.[1])
  • Henry Lawson, Australian writer and poet
  • Andrew George Scott, known as "Captain Moonlite", Australian bushranger
  • Jimmy Governor, upon whom Thomas Keneally's novel "The Chant of Jimmie Blacksmith" was based
  • Albert Thomas Dryer, founder of the Irish National Association of Australasia
  • Charles Sandys Packer, prominent Australian Composer, Musician, Organist, Pianist and Singer
  • Frank Gardiner, Australian bushranger and mastermind of the Forbes gold escort robbery at Eugowra on 15 June 1862 (sentenced to 32 year, but pardoned early)
  • Clarke brothers, Thomas and John, bushrangers from the upper Shoalhaven in south-east New South Wales, hanged on 25 June 1867
  • John Dunn, Australian bushranger, member of Ben Hall's gang, hanged in the gaol on 19 March 1866

See also

References

Further reading

  • Deborah Beck, Hope in Hell: a history of Darlinghurst Gaol and the National Art School, Allen and Unwin, 2005

External links

Coordinates: 33°52′47″S 151°13′07″E / 33.87972°S 151.21861°E / -33.87972; 151.21861


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