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East Jersey State Prison

Medium-Security prison in New Jersey

East Jersey State Prison

Summary

Medium-Security prison in New Jersey

FieldValue
prison_nameEast Jersey State Prison
imageEastJerseyStatePrisonNew.jpg
location1100 Woodbridge Road
Avenel, New Jersey
coordinates
statusOpen
classificationMixed
capacity1227 inmates
opened1901
managed_byNew Jersey Department of Corrections
population1049 inmates (updated 2025)former_name=Rahway State Prison

Avenel, New Jersey

East Jersey State Prison (2007)
East Jersey State Prison (2010)
President Clinton greets Denzel Washington, and Rubin "Hurricane" Carter at a screening of “The Hurricane” at the White House. (Dec. 3, 1999, by William Vasta.)

East Jersey State Prison (formerly "Rahway State Prison") is a maximum security prison operated by the New Jersey Department of Corrections in Avenel, Woodbridge Township, New Jersey. It was established in 1896 as Rahway State Prison, and was the first reformatory in New Jersey, officially opening in 1901. It housed 1,227 inmates . As of 2025, its population is now 1,049.

General information

Buildings and Grounds

  • The prison's mailing address is in Rahway, NJ, but the prison is located outside of Rahway, in nearby Avenel, New Jersey.
  • The prison's large dome is a well known, local landmark visible from nearby US Route 1–9 and New Jersey Transit's North Jersey Coast Line routes.
  • The prison features a large walled compound 21 acre in size, which contains the administration building, cell houses, classrooms, a chapel, shops, and other buildings.
  • The prison was originally surrounded by hundreds of acres of farmland where inmates worked.
  • Located just South of the prison is the Adult Diagnostic and Treatment Center (A.D.T.C.), New Jersey's facility for incarcerated sex offenders. Officers assigned to A.D.T.C. also operate the Special Treatment Unit (S.T.U.), which is the state's location for those civilly committed sexually violent predators. These inmates are typically ones who completed serving their time, but are not psychologically deemed safe to reintegrate into society and are extremely likely to re-offend.

Operational Information

  • Originally, inmates were categorized on a conduct-based "grading" system, in which inmates at different grade levels were granted varying privileges. Each inmate received a book of rules and regulations detailing expected appropriate behavior and the consequences of violating the rules. All inmates entered the system at the "second grade" level with the opportunity to advance or to be demoted.
  • In the first years of operation, inmates woke at 5:45 a.m. with lights out at 9 p.m. Their typical day consisted primarily of school and/or work. Students went to classes for half the day and worked the other half. The prison offered vocational training and jobs, including tailoring, cooking, shoe-making, printing, electrical work, farming/gardening, plumbing, and painting.
  • The Education Department of East Jersey State Prison offers a variety of programs to the inmates. Vocational training courses include auto-body, auto mechanics, culinary arts, painting and decorating, and horticulture. The prison offers primary education (A.B.E. Course) and secondary education (GED) courses to the inmates. Inmates who are high school or GED graduates can take college classes offered through Union County College's "Project Inside" program.

History

New Jersey Reformatory

  • In 1895, the New Jersey Legislature voted to establish the state's first reformatory, named the New Jersey Reformatory.
  • The New Jersey Reformatory opened in 1901, housing 193 men between the ages of 16 and 30.
  • In 1912, the number of inmates had increased to 525.
  • In 1928, enrollment increased to 745. Of the 514 prisoners admitted during 1928, 304 (59%) were under twenty years of age, 164 (32%) were twenty to twenty-four, and 46 (9%) were from twenty-five to twenty-nine years old, with a racial breakdown of 406 (79%) White and 108 (21%) African-American.
  • The first superintendent, J. E. Heg, served only for a year. He was succeeded by Joseph W. Martin, who led the institution until his death in 1909. Martin was succeeded by Dr. Frank Moore, who retired in 1929.

Construction and Building Upgrades

  • Architect John Rochester Thomas (1848 - 1901), designed the original prison in 1895 and construction began on state-owned property, known as Edgar Farm in 1896.
  • By 1908, there were two four-tiered cell houses. One cell house contained 256 cells measuring 9'x5'x8.6'H, while the other had 384 cells that were only 7.1'x5'x8'H. A 1928 inspection reported that the cells were equipped "with a fair quality of toilet and lavatory."
  • In 1929, with the opening of nearby reformatories at Annandale (1928) and Bordentown (1937), Rahway State Prison changed from a reformatory to a prison for adult males.
  • In 1930, construction began on additions to the institution. Between 1931 and 1932, industrial and laundry buildings were added.
  • in 1932, the dormitory, "Two Wing", was built, housing 300 men, increasing the prison's capacity to 900 inmates.
  • In 1951, Rahway's capacity was furthered increased to 1,000, when the last wing, "Three Wing", was constructed. As years passed, renovation on the institution continued.
  • In 1967, one of the old buildings was improved and made into "Five Wing".
  • From 1985 to 1988, trailers were erected and old buildings renovated (textile and laundry) for housing and dining facilities. These new additions became "Six, Seven, and Eight Wings".
  • Around 2008, the yellow paint was removed from the brick of wings 1–4, restoring the brick aesthetics of the original 1896 building.

Riots and escapes

  • From April 17–22, 1952, prisoners took officers hostage during a riot after officers beat inmates with nightsticks. The riot ended when the inmates were gassed.
  • In 1971, on Thanksgiving Day, 500 inmates held 6 hostages, including the warden, for 24 hours. Six officers were injured, three with stab wounds in the early hours of the riot. The inmates demanded a more sufficient diet, regulation of commissary prices, improvement of the educational system and vocation training, better discipline of officers, and additional medicine supplies including aspirin. Ultimately, the prison was retaken with no loss of life and the captives were set free without the use of firearms.
  • On August 11, 1972, three convicted murderers escaped by sawing through the bars of a third-floor window. Three officers were held responsible for the escape and suspended.
  • In August 1980, in an effort to reduce the numbers of escapes, the prison issued gray prison uniforms to the prisoners.

Name change

On November 30, 1988, Rahway State Prison was renamed East Jersey State Prison. The change was lobbied by Rahway citizens, who claimed the name stigmatized the city and affected property values. Nevertheless, the prison is still commonly referred to by its former name.

References

References

  1. Cox, William, Lovell Bixby and William Root, "Handbook of American Prisons and Reformatories," Vol. 1, NY: The Osborne Assoc., 1933
  2. "TOTAL INMATES IN NEW JERSEY STATE CORRECTIONAL INSTITUTIONS AND SATELLITE UNITS". State of New Jersey.
  3. White, K., East Jersey State Prison Celebrates 100 Years, 1996, available from East Jersey State Prison
  4. East Jersey State Prison: Brief History, March 1995, available from East Jersey State Prison
  5. Garret, Paul and Austin MacCormick, "Handbook of American Prison and Reformatories," NY: National Society of Penal Information, Inc., 1929
  6. Reilly, M., "Locked In Time: East Jersey State Prison marks 100 years of {{sic. ?. changeing
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