The Development of American Prisons And Prison Customs 1776 1845 Electronic Re

Cover The Development of American Prisons And Prison Customs 1776 1845 Electronic Re
The Development of American Prisons And Prison Customs 1776 1845 Electronic Re
Orlando Faulkland Lewis
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P. D. S. VoL 1, p. 550.
11 B. P. D. S. Vol. 1, p. 808.
12 B. P. D. S. 1829, p. 255.
18 Assembly Journal, 1833, 199, p. 7. " Op. Cit, p. 13. 15 Op. Cit, p. 15.
134 HISTORY OF AMERICAN PRISONS ability of the contractors thus to undersell in the open market the products of prison labor, affecting injuriously the mechanical industry of the State. 16 A Legislative committee took the matter under consideration. It reported that it was advantageous to the contracor to be able to count upon a dependabl
...e number of men. The labor problem ought easily to be self-regulative. The mechanics ought themselves to bid for the contracts ; the State ought to demand high prices for the labor of the convicts. It was hard, anyway, to compete through convict labor with the mechanical industry of the country. The State maintained no monopoly. Convicts were offered to all bid- ders, and sold to the highest bidder. If one bidder was cleverer than the other, that was no cause for complaint. Markets were not overstocked because of the output of prison-made products.

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