The Eastham
family purchased a 12,790 acre
plantation in 1891. Property was
leased soon afterward to the Texas State
Prison System for farming on a shared
basis. The landowner supplied
seeds, machinery, tools and mules, while
the State provided labor to plant, tend
and harvest the crops. The state
received 60 percent of the cotton and 50
percent of the sugar cane. The
State bought the land in 1915 after the
death of Mrs. Delha Eastham.
Eastham Prison Farm was among the first
to construct a maximum security building
in 1919. The State Ferry, erected
in 1920 by convict labor, crossed the
Trinity River into Madison County.
Prisoners used picks and shovels to cut
into the steep river banks to build a
road wide enough for wagon travel.
Unrest among the prisoners was curtailed
when noted penologist O.B. Ellis,
General Manager of the prison system
including Eastham, ushered in more
progressive treatment of the inmates.
Advancements included improved living
and working conditions, introduction of
a library, gymnasium, craft shop and
chapel, and an education program.
Eastham continues to be a major part of
the State's prison system.
Community benefits include improved
roads and a source of employment.
Source: Texas Historical
Commission
Click on the
photo's below to view a larger Picture.
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Guards - 1918
Submitted by Carolyn Williams
Freeman |
Eastham Prison Unit - 1918
Guards - Irvin Wilson "Wils"
Williams & Steve Bynum
Submitted by Carolyn Williams
Freeman |
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Old
Plantation Cemetery
Eastham Prison |
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