- Looking Outward
[All information contained in this article is the result of email correspondence with Charles Dudley Martin - Legal Representative and Estate Administrator of Robert Stroud] "Looking Outward: A History of the U.S. Prison System from Colonial Times to the Formation of the Bureau of Prisons" by the "Birdman of Alcatraz",
Robert Stroud , is a history of the United StatesPrison System from colonial times until the formation of the United States Bureau of Prisons in the 1930's.Robert Stroud gained the permission of the Warden at Alcatraz Penitentiary,
San Francisco ,California to write a history of the U.S. prison system. Stroud had been incarcerated atMcNeil Island , Leavenworth Penitentiary,Alcatraz Island and lastly at the United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners. Stroud interviewed inmates, guards and administrative personnel at all those prisons. He also researched the written records on all of the other U.S. federal penitentiaries.When Stroud finished his manuscript, he asked permission from the Warden at the Medical Center for Federal Prisoners at Springfield, Missouri, to send his manuscript to prospective publishers. The Springfield Warden sent his request to the Director of the
Federal Bureau of Prisons atWashington, D.C. who refused Stroud's request to offer his manuscript for publication. The Director said that Stroud's manuscript aroused prurient interest in homosexual activity and slandered the reputation of some guards, whom Stroud described as sadistic, and libelled some wardens, whom Stroud described as incompetent or corrupt.Charles Dudley Martin ofMissouri represented Stroud in his law suit against the Warden of United States Medical Center for Federal Prisoners and the Director of the Bureau of Prisons. When Stroud died, (the day before President John F. Kennedy was assassinated), the judge ordered Stroud's manuscripts to be impounded in custody of the Clerk for the United StatesDistrict Court for the Western District of Missouri at Kansas City. TheProbate Court of the State of Missouri for Jackson County at Kansas City appointed Mr Martin as administrator of Stroud's hand written will.When Mr Martin presented his letters of administration to the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri and moved for custody of Stroud's manuscripts, the Bureau of Prisons dropped their objections after a hail of public criticism. The U.S. District Court then ordered the manuscripts delivered to the offices of Mr Martin as administrator of Robert Stroud's estate.
An experienced
literary agent in New York City was then retained, who offered a copy of "Looking Outward" to several New York publishers. Although they praised the manuscript, they declined to publish it. The prisoners, guards and wardens described by Stroud were at that time still alive. Only Stroud, who was dead, and his prisoner witnesses, who were scattered, could verify the claims of abuse and corruption. All of the publishers approached declined to publish Stroud's manuscript, fearing civil suits for publication of defamatory writings, along with potential civil damage suits for libel.As of the 26th of December 2007, Mr Martin still has Stroud's hand written manuscript of "Looking Outward" in his possession, together with his hand written
autobiography , entitled "Bobbie". In "Bobbie", Stroud tries to understand the formation of his personality and behavior. Mr Martin also has the hand written notes ofThomas Gaddis , who wrote the biography and screen play of "Birdman of Alcatraz".What will become of Stroud's manuscripts?
Mr. Martin currently intends to consign one, or both, manuscripts, together with the court orders removing them from custody of the U. S. District Court and transferring them to himself as the administrator of Stroud's estate, together with Thomas Gaddis's notes of "Birdman of Alcatraz", for sale at auction in San Francisco, California.
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