Millbank Penitentiary
Better known
these days for being the administrative ‘home’ of political parties of both
sides and, of course, as the location of Tate Britain, Millbank in the 19th
century was a far from salubrious address. Once dubbed the English Bastille,
Millbank Penitentiary – known familiarly as ‘The Tench’ – dominated this part
of the riverside for many decades and represented a style of prison design that
is still influential today.
Millbank takes its name from the mill
belonging to Westminster Abbey which once stood on what was a lonely and
Map c.1867 showing dominant position of the 'Tench' |
Millbank Penitentiary (or the ‘National Penitentiary
of London and Middlesex’ to use its official title) was designed by the radical
philosopher and philanthropist Jeremy Bentham. He advocated a move away from
prisons comprised of blocks (such as Newgate at the time) to construction on a
‘panopticon’ plan, i.e. with separate wings arranged in a star shape. These
wings converged at a central ‘Governor’s House’ from which guards were able to
keep watch over more than a thousand prisoners. Services were also concentrated
here, including laundries and a chapel.
Bentham bought the land for his ‘project’ -7 acres of
marshy, damp ground next to the Thames - in 1812. The penitentiary took ten
years to build and cost an enormous £500,000. When finished, the outer moat
enclosed over 16 acres and the building comprised six radiating wings, 7 large
courtyards and 3 miles of corridors. From the outside it looked like a vast
medieval castle with its round corner turrets and conical roofs.
View from outside the perimeter walls |
Intended as a reformatory (rather than just penal)
institution, Bentham’s radical proposal was that prisoners should be provided
with useful work for which they should be allowed a share of the profits. They should
also be taught general and trade skills – a “mill for grinding rogues honest and idle men industrious”. Medical treatment was provided and a workshop
set up outside the prison where those discharged could find work. Half their
sentence was spent working in their cells – weaving, shoemaking and tailoring
were the most common occupations – and then the rest working in association
with other inmates. Bentham’s thesis was that “morals be reformed, health preserved, industry invigorated, instruction
diffused, public burthens lightened – all by a simple idea in Architecture”.
One of the 6 panopticons |
The use of single cells for prisoners was a radical
departure at that time. Before this all inmates, of both sexes, were thrown in
together. But although this sounds like an improvement, other aspects of
Bentham’s régime were extremely harsh. Under what was known as the ‘separate
system’, prisoners were deprived of all human contact. Masked and forbidden to
speak, they were shut up in their cells except for brief exercise periods. This
compulsory silence was believed to lead to moral regeneration as the
wretched prisoner contemplated his moral failings. Suicide, unsurprisingly, was
common.
Each cell had a small table, a ‘slop tub’ with a lid,
a hammock and a rug. Prisoners were given a stick painted red at one end and
black at the other. By pushing the stick through a narrow slit in the wall a
warder’s attention could be attracted. If the black end was showing it meant
you needed more work, if the red end it meant your needs were ‘of a more
personal nature’!
Frith's painting 'Race to Wealth' 1880 - Millbank exercise yard |
But Bentham’s building was, from the outset, beset by
problems. Subsidence was a perennial issue.
Its sheer size also meant that even the most
seasoned of warders kept getting lost in its labyrinthine corridors - one
prison guard is said to have still marked his way with a chalk even after 7
years’ service there. The ventilation system allowed sound to carry, meaning
that prisoners could communicate between cells. It
was also an ideal breeding ground for diseases due to its
damp location and surrounding moat, later filled in. Many prisoners suffered
from scurvy or dysentery. An outbreak of the latter was once so serious that
the whole prison had to be emptied and prisoners were either pardoned or sent
onto already overcrowded hulks.
The irony was that the penitentiary had been meant to
replace these verminous, germ-ridden hulks - old battleships first used to
house convicts as early as 1779 when labour was needed to dredge the Thames.
Although only meant to be used as a stop-gap measure when prison accommodation
was particularly squeezed (for example, when convicts could no longer be sent
to the transantlantic colonies due to American Independence) , by 1841 they
housed 3,552 prisoners and continued to be used until the 1860s.
Given the penitentiary’s many shortcomings the
decision was eventually taken to build a new "model prison" at
Pentonville and this opened in 1842. The following year Millbank’s status was
downgraded, Bentham’s notions of ‘reforming’ its inmates went out of the window
and the prison for which he had such big plans became nothing more than a
holding depot for convicts awaiting transportation to Australia. By 1850,
around 4,000 convicts were being transported annually from the UK, some for offences
as trivial as stealing a loaf of bread. But by 1853 large-scale transportation had ended and Millbank
then became an ordinary local prison. Then from 1870 it was used as a military
prison. By 1886 it had ceased to hold any inmates.
Tate Britain |
Millbank Penitentiary eventually closed in 1890. Seven
years later the sugar magnate Sir Henry Tate’s new ‘National Gallery of British
Art’ opened on the site. Today, the only reminder that the prison ever existed
is a section of the penitentiary tunnels, along which convicts were led for
embarkation onto Thames barges, which survive in the cellars of the nearby
Morpeth Arms, a pub built in 1845 to serve the prison warders. Bricks
from the prison were also used in construction of the nearby Millbank Estate, built
by the LCC between 1897 and 1902 and now Grade II-listed.
References:
Dickens’s
Victorian London Alex Werner and Tony Williams (2011)
Victorian
London Liza Picard (2005)
The London
Encyclopedia ed. Ben Weinreb et al. (2008)
The London
Doré Saw Eric de Maré (1973)
Londoners
Celina Fox (1987)
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