Menard Correctional Center, known prior to 1970 as Southern Illinois Penitentiary, is located in the town of Chester in Randolph County, Illinois. It is a state prison housing maximum-security and high medium-security adult males.The average daily population as of 2007 is 3,410.[1] Menard Correctional Center opened in March 1878, and is the second oldest prison in Illinois. It also stands as Illinois’s largest maximum-security prison. Menard once housed death row; however, on January 10, 2003 the Condemned Unit closed when former Governor George Ryan granted clemency to all Illinois death row inmates.[2]
Menard Correctional Center's average prisoner age is 34 years old. Each inmate's average annual cost totals $19,190.00.[3]
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The first Illinois penitentiary was founded in Alton. Reformer Dorothea Dix visited the site and complained about the filthy conditions there. It was eventually closed and during the Civil War the site was used to house Confederate prisoners. The Alton prison was replaced by a new one in Joliet in 1858. Twenty years later the Southern Illinois Penitentiary was opened, taking prisoners from the southern counties of the state. It was established in 1878 overlooking the Mississippi River.[4] The original buildings were finished by 1889, consisting of the North and South Cell Houses and the Administration Building.[1] A wall enclosed the 11½ acres of the prison grounds.[5] The rear wall runs over the top of a hill that was one of the prison’s rock quarries.[5] Menard also had also a quarry outside the walls.[4] All the original buildings were made by prison labor.[1] The original North and South Cell Houses each contained 400 cells on four tiers. Inmates lived two to a cell. None of these cells had plumbing and buckets were used instead. In 1928, the prison suffered from massive overcrowding. Designed to hold 800 men, the institution had approximately 2,000.[4] Thus, an additional five cages were built on each side of the cell house corridors. These cages, which housed two men each, had a center wall of steel with the top and sides consisting of iron bars.[5] Old buildings within the prison yard were also being used as dormitories, housing prisoners until around 1930 when a new cell house was built to combat the excessive inmate population.[4] The new cell house contained 500 cells, each housing two inmates. All of these cells had plumbing.[5] In 1928, the bathhouse was located in the basement of one of the old buildings. It contained 76 showers.[4] By 1931, the baths were relocated to the basement of the commissary, containing 84 concrete showers.[5] Throughout this time, inmates were given time to bathe once week during the winter and twice a week in the summer.[5]
In 1879, the first 200 prisoners were taken to Southern Illinois Penitentiary.[1] By 1928, there were 1974 inmates and 96 guards. Thus, there was approximately one guard to every 20 inmates. In 1927, of the 484 inmates who arrived at the prison in 1927, 406 were white, and 78 were black.[4] By 1931, the inmate population had risen 2,285 with four yard offices, and 130 guards, or approximately one guard to every 17 inmates. Of the 2,285 inmates, 1,844 were white and 441 were black.[5]
In 1928, Menard owned 1,100 acres (4.5 km2) of farmland outside the grounds. The farm included a dairy and a piggery that contributed to the prison diet. The root cellar was one of the largest and intricately designed of any institutions at the time. All industries within the prison were housed in the old buildings that, by 1928, had been renovated to suit better working conditions. The major industries included clothing manufacture, a quarry, and the farm. The products were sold on the open market. However, no compensation was awarded to inmates.[4] By 1931, the farm grew to 1,500 acres (6.1 km2) and brick manufacturing and the machine shop were added to the prison’s major industries.[5]
In 1897, Illinois adopted indeterminate sentencing.[1] By 1931, eighty percent of the inmates were serving indeterminate sentences.[5]
In 1903, a “grade system” was adopted for inmates. This lasted until 1920, when the "progressive Merit System" was adopted. Using this system, "good time" could be awarded to or taken from inmates based on their behavior.[1] In addition, inmates were divided into grades, A, B, C, D, and E, based on behavior. The disciplinary staff, consisting of the warden and his deputies, decided on promotions and demotions in grade levels. For example, men in grades A and B were allowed to write two letters a week. Those in C could only write once a week. D and E inmates could only write on special permission.[4]
Silence was mandatory in the mess hall and in marching lines. Smoking was permitted in the cells and dormitories. The prison commissary, around 1930, allowed inmates to buy tobacco, candy, toilet articles, canned goods, and fruit. No limit was set on the purchases.[5]
Around 1930, punishment involved a loss of privileges. For more serious offenses the men are put in punishment cells, large cells located in a buildings to the rear of the deputies’ offices. For some offenses men were cuffed to the bars during working hours. By 1931, this practice was discontinued.[4]
Inmates who are illiterate attend school. Other inmates can enroll voluntarily. Menard had courses for elementary schooling and several high school subjects.[4]
In the 1970s, a significant increase in inmate population, not only at Menard but also around the country, may have been the cause of two incidents during the time. In May 1973, thirty-eight inmates took over the commissary and held a guard hostage for sixteen hours. In May 1974, sixty inmates held four guards hostage, this time demanding congregation rights in the prison yard and several changes in administrative procedures.[1]
In March 1994, Menard was in the news when 24-year-old Michael Blucker took the state to court after contracting HIV when in the prison. Blucker stated that prison staff helped gang members rape him. Although the juries found the staff not to be liable, the case uncovered problems of sexual assault and gang activities within the prison.[6]
By 1931, Menard was one of three sites in which executions were carried out by electrocution in Illinois. Between 1928 and 1962, the electric chair was used 18 times here for those sentenced to death in the southern counties of the state.[5] The state's other electrocutions were carried out at the Stateville Correctional Center in Crest Hill and at the Cook County Jail in Chicago.
Prior to the January 11, 2003 commutation of death row sentences, male death row inmates were housed in Menard, Pontiac, and Tamms correctional centers. After the commutations, only Pontiac continued to hold death row prisoners.[7]
As of 2006, Menard Correctional Center has a total of 2,600 acres (11 km2), 41 of which are inside the grounds.
The grounds are composed of six housing units. The South Lowers Housing Unit and the South Uppers Housing Unit house inmates with moderate aggression levels and those who currently have job assignments. The North I Cell House contains the Protective Custody Unit, the Step-Down Unit, and General Population. The North II Cell House contains inmates in disciplinary segregation, administrative detention, and the general population. The East Cell House is heavy monitored. Inmates assigned here are classified as either Level E, High, or Moderate escape risk. The West Cell House holds inmates that are either high or moderate escape risk and are classified as High Aggressive Inmates.
Within the grounds there is also the Inmate Dining Hall, Chapel, Health Care Unit, Receiving and Classification Unit, Education Building, Maintenance and telecommunications Departments, Menard Division of Illinois Correctional Industries, and Randolph Hall, which acts as Menard’s training complex for prison employees.
The current industries at Menard include meat processing, knitting and sewing, manufacturing of floor care and cleaning products, waste removal, and recycling operations.
Menard, as of 2006, employs approximately 854 employed at Menard. It has a daily population of around 3,410 inmates. The racial breakdown is 62% black, 28% white, and 9% Hispanic. Of the inmates housed at Menard 51% of offenders are incarcerated for murder, 21% of inmates have life sentences, and 33% are serving more than 20 years. The average age of inmates at Menard is 34 years old.[1]
In the 1993 movie The Fugitive, Dr. Richard Kimble (played by Harrison Ford) is sent to the prison at Menard to await execution, but escapes following a bus-train collision enroute.