Second report of the inspectors of prisons of Great Britain. III. Southern and Western district / [by F.B. Hawkins].
- Home Office
- Date:
- 1836]
Licence: Public Domain Mark
Credit: Second report of the inspectors of prisons of Great Britain. III. Southern and Western district / [by F.B. Hawkins]. Source: Wellcome Collection.
8/82 page 2
![III. Southern and Western District. 2 SECOND REPORT OF INSPECTORS OF PRISONS. But is it sufficient to say, without defining the mo( e, m iv uc < > carried into operation ? Are just attention to mental and bodily health, it. c.. makeshifts, to accident? the details to be resigned to the caprice of '^“Xment for the convicted American penitentiaries, with this express object m view. s,„A —a:e8, =b» “ K . 4. U4 °f Fourth!°Daily separate visits of the chaplain, the surgeon, and the gaoler, wbli a nrivileo-e of briefly conversing with them. Fifth. DaiTy exercise,’ of at least °“« burgeon of blowing still more Sixth. A discretionary power confided to the suige » 6X Seventh A visit'made^at least3once a month to each prisoner thus confined by one of the visiting magistrates ted hy any repugnance on my part so far are these remarks fo^“^C^hmJndid tta introduction in officers, funds, and salaries, can sep remodelling in many m- conditions above proposed would nec - ... easily consent to try a new stances: and the magistrates an ie P^ after having already incurred and least of all at a time Whinam fed most ^enttoemg any compulsory interfile in ^isons not fi/y ture attempts, the public confidence would be cretionof the visiting magistrates, who will adopt it uhen tlre res respective prisons guarantee such a step ; and in the piopoition s credit its gradual extension will ^ ensured , ht t0 be permitted. Wherever this system is applied to untue pi«« *‘s tkm 0\ exercise, in addition to the precautions above specifae, bPut> rather than at as well as ample means of m eicou a ]10use of detention and a house of once to level ^ my humble opinion, to allow to the untried of thdr^JS.! restricting them, at the same time, from conversation with each other, and from the dangerous their attention to It would be most advantageous if benevolent pe. somnvou “J as t0 the clisci line the helpless condition ot the indivi ua « 10 q ' unies’s some means of gaining a of its inmates. Permanent reforma ion 1 .-elected being, against whom future livelihood are ZlZ o\«n lives his last « » ZX- ss, f ^^vSfsasi^St been undertaken at^Exeter!1 lTave\ other places endeavoured to promote this U,rUe the liberty of —££££ That a printed paper be affixed m the jams oi j settlements; and, .... I have the honour to lemain, My Lord, Your Lordship’s most obedient servant, Bisset Hawkins.](https://iiif.wellcomecollection.org/image/b30450329_0008.jp2/full/800%2C/0/default.jpg)


