Parramatta Correctional Centre

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Parramatta Correctional Centre
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Location North Parramatta, New South Wales
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Status Open
Security class Medium (male)
Capacity 580
Opened 1 January 1798
Managed by Corrective Services NSW
File:Prison guard parra jail.JPG
A prison guard on lookout in the watchtower at Parramatta Jail

Parramatta Correctional Centre, a former Australian medium security prison for males, was in operation between 1798 and 2011. Located in North Parramatta, New South Wales, the centre was initially called Parramatta Gaol until its name was changed to Parramatta Correctional Centre in 1992. When in operation, the centre was managed by Corrective Services NSW, an agency of the Department of Attorney General and Justice of the Government of New South Wales. Immediately prior to its closure, the centre detained short term sentenced and remand inmates, operated as a transient centre, and was the periodic detention centre for metropolitan Sydney.

History

Correctional facilities were first established in Parramatta in 1798, being "a strong logged gaol of 100 feet in length, with separate cells for the prisoners ... and paled around with very high fence", housing eight prisoners.[1] In 1799, a fire destroyed this facility and it was rebuilt in 1802 on the same site (now occupied by Riverside Theatres).[2] A more substantial stone structure was built between 1837 and 1843 by James Houison and Nathaniel Payten on the North Parramatta site. Parramatta Gaol was formally proclaimed on 2 January 1842 with progressive opening of wings up until approximately 1910. It was closed in 1918 and was used as a mental hospital.[3] Re–established in 1922, the centre became a major industrial prison with inmates working in the fields of tailoring, bookmaking and carpentry, tin smithing and bakery. The centre closed briefly between 3 September 1997 and 1998.[1]

In 2004, there were calls for the centre to be closed after two inmates escaped by scaling the prison wall using ladders without being seen by guards.[4]

Prior to its closure on 9 October 2011, Parramatta Correctional Centre was Australia's oldest serving correctional centre. Corrective Services NSW have not determined the future use of the property.

[5][6][7]

Notable prisoners

  • Darcy Dugan (1920_1991)[8] – bank robber and a notorious prison escape artist.
  • William Henry Eyes (1819_1907)[9] – sexual assault of a young girl; later a successful politician in New Zealand.
  • George Freeman(1935-1990)[8] – an organised crime figure and illegal casino operator.
  • Kevin John Gallagher[10] – convicted murderer and armed robber, who stabbed a fellow prisoner to death in Parramatta Gaol in 1981.
  • John Frederick "Chow" Hayes[citation needed] – underworld figure, standover man and convicted murderer.
  • Len Lawson[citation needed] – rapist and murderer.
  • Neddy Smith[11] – served life
  • Jim McNeil(deceased)[12] – (born as James Thomas McNeil), Playwright,arrested, tried, and convicted and sentenced to 17 years in prison

Current use

During 2012 the centre was used for the setting of a film, The Convict, and has been used in filming for both Home and Away and Underbelly television series.[13]

In Popular Culture

The song "Tomorrow", recorded by Australian rock band Cold Chisel on their 1980 album East (album), portrays the desperation of a Parramatta Gaol inmate on a life sentence who escaped three days earlier, and is facing imminent recapture.[14]

See also

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References

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External links