Prisons Over Seas / Deportation and Colonization; British and American Prisons of To-day

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INTRODUCTION

CONTENTS

List of Illustrations

PRISONS OVER SEAS CHAPTER I THE FIRST FLEET

CHAPTER II THE GROWTH OF NEW SOUTH WALES

CHAPTER III CONVICT LIFE

CHAPTER IV A CONVICT COMMUNITY

CHAPTER V THE PROBATION SYSTEM

CHAPTER VI CONVICT SHIPS

CHAPTER VII THE EXILES OF CRIME

CHAPTER VIII THE COLLAPSE OF DEPORTATION

CHAPTER IX GIBRALTAR

CHAPTER X THE BRITISH SYSTEM OF PENAL SERVITUDE

CHAPTER XI FRENCH PENAL COLONIES

CHAPTER XII PENAL METHODS IN THE UNITED STATES

CHAPTER XIII BRITISH PRISONS OF TO-DAY

The History and
Romance of
Crime

FROM THE EARLIEST TIMES
TO THE PRESENT DAY

Decoration

THE GROLIER SOCIETY
LONDON


Armour of Ned Kelly and Manacles Worn by Prisoners in Tasmania

The Kelly gang of bushrangers, of which Ned Kelly was chief, wore veritable armour, bullet-proof, made of old plough shares, iron pots and scrap iron. They terrorised the northeastern part of New South Wales from 1870 to 1878, and it became known as the "Kelly country." Troublesome bushrangers also devastated Tasmania, and when captured, were hanged or sent to the penal settlement at Norfolk Island.


title page

Prisons Over Seas

DEPORTATION AND COLONIZATION
BRITISH AND AMERICAN PRISONS
OF TO-DAY

by

MAJOR ARTHUR GRIFFITHS

Late Inspector of Prisons in Great Britain

Author of
"The Mysteries of Police and Crime"
"Fifty Years of Public Service," etc.

Decoration

THE GROLIER SOCIETY


EDITION NATIONALE

Limited to one thousand registered and numbered sets.

NUMBER 307.


                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                           

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