Fairmount Avenue
One of the auxiliary towers of the fortress style prison that Eastern State Penitentiary. This view is from outside the prison walls, on Fairmont Avenue, in the Fairmount section of Philadelphia, PA. Towers, such as this, have no windows on the inside and no entrances. The architecture was meant to scare people away and keep prisoners inside its walls.
Cellblock 1
Opened in 1829, the design of theese cellblocks had a "church-like appearance". The cells had wooden floors and a high, arched ceiling almost like a chapel - with a round skylight, called a "dead eye", or "Eye of God". Known as the "Pennsylvania System", the design of solitary confinement was intended lead criminals to be penitent, leading to rehabilitation. Hence the term "penitentiary", which originated with Eastern State.
Cellblock 14
Built with inmate labor, 100 years after the opening of Eastern State Penitentiary. Built the same as previous cellblocks, but three stories high and curved to fit between existing building. The cells in this building were designed for two inmates each, but were also smaller than in previous cellblocks.
The Barber Chair
Corrupt guards would strap inmates to a so-called "mad chair" so tightly that they would lose circulation in their limbs. The prisoner would then be left there for days without food or water, naturally turning them mad. Pictured here, however, is an innocuous barber's chair in cell block 10.
Park Avenue
The cell of Al Capone, otherwise known as "Park Avenue", (in cellblock 8) who was incarcerated for carrying a concealed weapon. Capone spent eight months of a one year sentence in this cell. The room was decorated to Capone’s demands according to a newspaper description written in The Philadelphia Public Ledger on August 20, 1929. The article suggested that Capone was allowed luxuries others were not, though the warden denied the report. Luxuries included an armchair, Oriental rug, decorative lamps, a radio, and an armoire, in addition to other creature comforts. A mural is also reported to have been painted on the back wall, which can be partially seen in the upper right corner of the cell today.
Tower Entrance and Exit
The only entry and exit point of Eastern State Prison. Inmates would be brought in by local sheriff's and police through this point and taken in to the intake center, straight ahead from this entrance. After being photographed and fingerprinted, inmates were reported to have been blindfolded so as not to see the layout of the prison.