Breaking into Alcatraz
A former guard's inside look at America's most famous prison
- By Eric Jaffe
- Smithsonian.com, May 01, 2007, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 4)
Did they have visitation rights?
The inmates were allowed one visit a month, by a blood relation. Officers had to find out who they were, had to be a close relative or, if you didn't have that, maybe a close friend. They were allowed to talk for an hour. It kinda went by our boat schedule. There was no talking about what's going on in the outside world. Just family business.
Before my time, they said Al Capone's mother came over with his wife, Mae. They went through the metal detector, and apparently Mrs. Capone kept setting it off. They had a woman go into the dressing room with her and found out she had metal stays in her corset.
Did anyone try to escape?
There were a total of 36 inmates and 14 tries to escape from Alcatraz. No serious attempts during my time. The best known was made famous by Clint Eastwood [in the movie Escape From Alcatraz]. But there were others. The bloodiest one was in 1946, six inmates including Clarence Carnes, who I knew. He was the youngest inmate there, a full-blooded Choctaw Indian. They spread the bars apart, and this guy starved himself to fit through. He knocked out the officer and dropped his weapon, a .45 automatic, to his mates down below. They took over the cell house, held it for two-and-a-half days.
During that time, all but three inmates got killed. Those three got captured. Two were sent to San Quentin and were gassed. I'd just started work then, in 1948. The other guy got two life sentences plus 99 years. Clarence was a young guy who got talked into the escape attempt. He finally got out, and I was with him in the 80s on the Merv Griffin Show, on Mike Douglas and a number of other shows. Him as the youngest inmate, me as the youngest guard.
As the youngest guard ever, did you get picked on?
That was my big problem. I was 21, and they would try to take advantage of my age. I just had to overlook it. They'd give me the finger. I knew if I called them on it, they'd say, "Oh, I was just scratching my nose." They'd blow kisses at me. How can you tell on that? The administration would have said, we made a mistake hiring you. I ignored it, and that was the best way.
There was also the doom-and-gloom despair, the despondency that prevailed in the place. I was more sensitive to it. I left during the Korean War—that was my escape from Alcatraz.
You knew the Birdman of Alcatraz, Robert Stroud. (Stroud raised canaries in his cell at Leavenworth prison and was the subject of the 1962 film, Birdman of Alcatraz.)
I knew him in the hospital. He was developing Bright's disease, a kidney condition, and needed further medical treatment. They put him into a special room—it wasn't a cell, it was a small room for utilities, but they made it into a cell so he could be by himself. The only contact he had was with people like myself, working in there. They did watch him closer than other inmates. A few times I was in there by myself, and I was warned—he stabbed an officer to death at Leavenworth.
Did you know any other interesting characters?
There was this one guy, George "Machine-Gun" Kelly, that everybody liked. He was a banker, a bootlegger, a kidnapper. He had a very good personality. A very affable Irishman. Unlike any inmate I knew there, he had a couple years of college and came from a pretty good family in Memphis, Tennessee. He was a typical case that got caught up during the Prohibition period. When that ended, he was already in it. You turn out to be what you're hanging around with. As far as I know, he never shot anybody. The movies show he did, but movies are the worst way to get any kind of truth.
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Comments (6)
Is there a list of the Correctional Officers that worked at Alcatraz?
Posted by Charlotte McConaha on January 28,2012 | 11:55 PM
I have furniture made at the prison as well and was wondering if you found out any information concerning your furniture that you could share with me...
Posted by Ray Stevenson on January 1,2012 | 01:12 AM
Alcatraz was one of the highlights of our cross-country trip in 1976. We had just came from hiking in Yosemite and were dressed warmly. Not so many of the others on the boat. We stood in standby line for 2 1/2 hours, but it was worth the wait. Our guide was excellent -- showing us the dark, dark isolation cells, and all around the prison. He remarked that there was no rehabilitation there ever intended - just incarceration. Interesting was the fact that everything had to be brought in right down to soil for gardens. I was discharged in Treasure Island and never thought I would get a chance to visit the "Rock".
Posted by james plough on December 28,2009 | 07:45 PM
Awsome I M doing a report on Alcatraz and this realy helped! Thanks!
Posted by SP on October 25,2009 | 03:00 PM
Hi! I just visited Alcatraz and am interested in your furniture. Can you send me pics? Thanks!
Posted by MJLinder on January 2,2008 | 08:33 PM
My mother just recently passed away at the age of 95. As one of her sons the task has been given to me to find out some information. My parents have the only one of a kind dinning room table, china cabinet, and buffet that was make by the prisoners of Alcatraz back in the 30's. All of the pieces are stamped with Alcatraz under each piece. The back of the chairs form an "A". Every thing is in excellent condition. My father worked for the Federal Prison service for 35 years and retired at La Tuna Federal Prison in Anthony, TX. I have been searching the Internet for pictures of thw Wardens house and the furniture but it only shows the structure after it burned. My father worked at La Tuna when Alcatraz closed and bought it around 1963. Do you have any pictures, a value, or know of someone interested in buy a piece of History. Dennis Ellis dennis.ellis@urgwda.org
Posted by Dennis Ellis on December 18,2007 | 06:12 PM