Massachusetts Correctional Institution – Norfolk

Massachusetts Correctional Institution—Norfolk
Location Norfolk, Massachusetts
Status Operational
Security class Medium
Capacity 1,084
Population 1,477
Opened 1927
Managed by Massachusetts Department of Correction
Director Superintendent Gary Roden

Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Norfolk, or MCI-Norfolk, is a medium security prison in Norfolk, Massachusetts with an average daily population of 1500 inmates. Though it is rated medium security, it also houses up to 98 maximum security inmates. Opened in the early 1930s, MCI-Norfolk is the largest state prison in Massachusetts. One notable inmate of MCI-Norfolk was Malcolm X, who was also a member of the Norfolk Debating Society while incarcerated. MCI-Norfolk is under the jurisdiction of the Massachusetts Department of Correction.

Contents

History

MCI-Norfolk was originally founded in 1927 as the Norfolk Prison Colony, a "model prison community"[1] conceived by sociologist and penologist Howard Belding Gill (Harvard 1913, M.B.A. 1914), who was appointed its first superintendent in 1931.[2]

Gill was dismissed in 1934 after an escape by four inmates, and replaced by his deputy Maurice N. Winslow, who served as superintendent from 1934 to 1950. The name of the prison was changed to the Massachusetts Correctional Institution at Norfolk in the mid-1950s. During the 1950s, the Norfolk Debating Society, a team consisting of prison inmates, beat a number of university teams including the one at Oxford University. The current superintendent as of 2010 is Gary Roden.

Officer Deaths at Norfolk

Notes

  1. ^ Johnsen, Thomas C., "Vita: Howard Belding Gill: Brief Life of a Prison Reformer: 1890-1989", Harvard Magazine, September-October 1999, p. 54.
  2. ^ Conrad, John P., "A Lost Ideal, a New Hope: The Way toward Effective Correctional Treatment", Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology (1973-), Vol. 72, No. 4 (Winter, 1981), pp. 1699-1734.

References