San Quentin State Prison

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The sprawling San Quentin prison complex
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The sprawling San Quentin prison complex
San Quentin up close
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San Quentin up close

San Quentin State Prison is located on 432 acres (1.7 km²) on Point Quentin in Marin County, California, United States, north of San Francisco. San Quentin State Prison was opened in July 1852, and is the oldest prison in California. It was built by inmates who were housed on the prison ship Waban during the construction. San Quentin held both male and female inmates until 1934 when the women's prison at Tehachapi was built.

The state's male death row is located at San Quentin, as well as its only gas chamber. In recent years, however, the gas chamber has been used to carry out lethal injections.

It has its own ZIP Code, 94964; the surrounding area is 94974. It is bordered by the water of the San Francisco Bay to the south and east and by Interstate 580, just after it crosses the bay on the Richmond-San Rafael Bridge.

In 1941 the first prison meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous took place at San Quentin; in commemoration of this the 25-millionth copy of the A.A. "Big Book" was presented to Jill Brown, of San Quentin, at the International Convention of Alcoholics Anonymous in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

On February 24, 1969, Johnny Cash played in front of inmates. The concert was released on record and filmed by Granada Television.

In 2003, Metallica filmed the video for the song St. Anger inside San Quentin, playing to enthusiastic inmates.

Contents

[edit] Notable inmates

The San Quentin gas chamber originally employed lethal cyanide gas for the purpose of carrying out capital punishment. The chamber has since been converted to an execution chamber where lethal injection is used. Two chairs once sat where the restraining table is now located.
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The San Quentin gas chamber originally employed lethal cyanide gas for the purpose of carrying out capital punishment. The chamber has since been converted to an execution chamber where lethal injection is used. Two chairs once sat where the restraining table is now located.

[edit] Current

[edit] Former

  • Clarence Ray Allen - Convicted for ordering the strangulation of Mary Sue Kitts and the shotgun killing of Bryon Schletewitz and seven others (others were not killed). Executed on January 17, 2006.
  • Edward Bunker - FBI most wanted fugitive who reformed and became an author and actor. Was sentenced at age 17, the youngest inmate at the time.
  • Caryl Chessman - Convicted sex offender, was given the death penalty in 1948 and executed in 1960.
  • Billy Cook - Murderer of Carl Mosser, his wife Thelma, their three small children and motorist Robert Dewey; he died in the gas chamber on December 12, 1952.
  • Juan Corona - Convicted of killing 25 people and sentenced to life without parole. Transferred to Corcoran State Prison.
  • Henry Cowell - American composer convicted on a "morals" charge in 1936.
  • Merle Haggard - The noted country singer, sentenced to 15 years time (he served 3 years) starting at age 19 for grand theft auto and armed robbery.
  • Robert Alton Harris - The first person excuted in San Quentin's gas chamber after the reinstitution of California's death penalty.
  • Michael Wayne Hunter - Sentenced to death after the murders of his father and stepmother in 1981. Retried in 2002 on appeal, sentenced to Life Without the Possibility of Parole. Transferred to Salinas Valley State Prison.
  • George Jackson - Member of the Black Panther Party, killed in San Quentin in 1971.
  • Charles Manson - Leader of the Manson family. Transferred to Corcoran State Prison in 1989. [1]
  • Wallace Fard Muhammad - Founder of the Nation of Islam.
  • Bill Sands - (born Wilber Powell Sewell) Author of My Shadow Ran Fast (1964), an autobiography and call for prison reform.
  • Sirhan Sirhan - Assassin of Robert F. Kennedy. Has since been transferred to Corcoran State Prison.
  • Danny Trejo - Actor.
  • Stanley Tookie Williams - Convicted murderer & co-founder of the Crips street gang. Author and cause celebre. Executed by lethal injection on December 13, 2005 and declared dead at 12:38 am.
Source for all inmates except Masters, Sands, and Williams: Los Angeles Times article: "San Quentin"

[edit] Trivia

Although "San Quintín" is Spanish for "Saint Quentin", the prison is not in fact named after the saint. The land on which it is situated, Point Quentin, is named after a Miwok warrior named Qintin, fighting under Chief Marin, who was taken prisoner at that place. [2] Numerous towns and localities in the area (and in California generally) are named for Roman Catholic saints, and the designation of the prison's locality follows that motif.

Underaged girls have sometimes been referred to as "San Quentin Quail", on the assumption that violators of California's minor protection laws could end up there. In the 1940 Marx Brothers film, Go West, Groucho Marx plays a character named "S. Quentin Quale". There was also a 1946 Warner Brothers cartoon featuring a quail, named and titled Quentin Quail.

In 1993 a movie titled Blood In Blood Out, which was based on Mexican / Prison gang warfare in Southern California, was filmed in parts at the prison.

Metallica's "St. Anger" video was shot in this prison on April 30, 2003. They performed a live concert for the inmates the following day.

MythBusters visited San Quentin in a 2005 episode to conduct research about a paper crossbow.

All the characters in Cube are named after prisons: Quentin after San Quentin State Prison in California; Holloway after the Holloway Prison in England; Kazan after the prison in Kazan, Russia; Rennes after a prison in Rennes, France; Alderson after the prison in Alderson, West Virginia; Leaven and Worth after the prison in Leavenworth, Kansas.

[edit] External links