Bridewell (New York City jail)

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Bridewell
File:Old Bridewell, New York, America. Coloured lithograph by H.R Wellcome V0014022.jpg
"The Old Bridewell, which formerly stood in the Park, between the City Hall and Broadway"
General information
Location Manhattan, New York City
Opened 1768
Demolished 1838

The Bridewell was a municipal prison built in 1768 on the site now occupied by City Hall Park in the Civic Center neighborhood of Manhattan, New York City.

History

According to the Oxford English Dictionary, Bridewell is a common English noun referred both to a gaol in which prisoners were held, or a workhouse to which they were confined. The term was used for a number of jails in the Thirteen Colonies.

Construction on the New York City Bridewell began in 1768, although the building was not completed until after the end of the American Revolutionary War.[1] Even though it was incomplete, the British used the jail to house prisoners of war during the Revolutionary War.[2] Prior to British control of New York, the jail in 1776 housed Thomas Hickey prior to his execution in the plot to assassinate George Washington.

It stood until it was replaced by The Tombs in 1838; some of the dressed stone blocks from the Bridewell were used to construct The Tombs.[3][4]

References

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  4. Carrott, Richard G The Egyptian revival: its sources, monuments, and meaning, 1808–1858 University of California Press, 1978 ISBN 0-520-03324-8 p.165

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