State Reform School, 1898 Report
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(Created page with " B. C White, Director Mrs B. C. White, Matron William Hyde, Supt. Boys Bldg E. W. Cook, Overseer & Guard W. H. Batchelor, Overeseer & Guard Joseph Smith, Teacher Mrs Fannie D...") |
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+ | Third biennial report to the Board of Trustees of the Montana State Reform School for the two years ending December 1, 1898. | ||
+ | For the two years last past, steady progress has been made by all of the | ||
+ | inmates of the institution, and a large amount of work has been done in | ||
+ | improving the buildings and grounds. | ||
− | B. C White, Director | + | ==Staff== |
− | Mrs B. C. White, Matron | + | *[[B. C White]], Director |
− | William Hyde, Supt. Boys Bldg | + | *[[Mrs B. C. White]], Matron |
− | E. W. Cook, Overseer & Guard | + | *[[William Hyde]], Supt. Boys Bldg |
− | W. H. Batchelor, Overeseer & Guard | + | *[[E. W. Cook]], Overseer & Guard |
− | Joseph Smith, Teacher | + | *W. H. Batchelor, Overeseer & Guard |
− | Mrs Fannie Dinsomre, Teacher | + | *Joseph Smith, Teacher |
− | Mrs Kate Harlan, Seamstress | + | *Mrs Fannie Dinsomre, Teacher |
− | Mrs Anna Stamgreene, Cook | + | *Mrs Kate Harlan, Seamstress |
− | Fred Christopher, Cook Boys Bldg | + | *Mrs Anna Stamgreene, Cook |
− | John Biggs, Engineer | + | *Fred Christopher, Cook Boys Bldg |
− | Mrs Eva Humphrey, Laundress | + | *John Biggs, Engineer |
− | A. H. Humphrey, Night watchman | + | *Mrs Eva Humphrey, Laundress |
+ | *A. H. Humphrey, Night watchman | ||
+ | |||
+ | B. C. White sent two home-made sugar beet extractions, a syrup of 44% sugar, and a lump of brown sugar of 56% sugar, to the Montana Experiment Station. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==School== | ||
+ | Prom September 10 until May 20, all of the inmates are in school four | ||
+ | hours a day, under competent instructors. Some that are committed to the | ||
+ | institution are mentally deficient, but the majority of the boys and girls are | ||
+ | of average mental capacity and a few are very bright. The studies com- | ||
+ | •prise the common school course, viz., reading, writing, artithmetic, spelling, | ||
+ | language, geography, history and physiology. Monthly examinations are | ||
+ | held, and a pupil to pass has to make an average of 75 per cent. | ||
+ | |||
+ | ==Trades training== | ||
+ | The state as yet has made no provision for teaching the industrial trades. | ||
+ | The inmates are employed in the various duties incident to the management | ||
+ | of the farm and caring for the buildings and grounds and the domestic labor | ||
+ | of the school. A majority of the boys during the spring and summer are | ||
+ | kept employed, planting, hoeing and caring for the crops; also handling | ||
+ | and caring for the live stock. The laundry furnishes practical work for | ||
+ | some of the older boys, and quite a force of boys is kept busy in the boys' | ||
+ | building, and in the kitchen the boys learn the practical part of baking and | ||
+ | preparing food, which, however, at present can only be taught to a limited | ||
+ | number. | ||
+ | The girls are employed in the kitchen in the girls' building, sewing room | ||
+ | and in the general duties of hall and dormatory work, and caring for | ||
+ | the building generally. All of the work carried on at the institution is of a | ||
+ | practical nature. They prepare meals, make their own clothes, do all the | ||
+ | darning and mending; also make all of the coats, pants and vests for the | ||
+ | boys' department. All of the work, study and training is planned for the | ||
+ | improvement of the inmates, and to teach the practical side of life. | ||
+ | During the summer military drill is carried on and is also continued | ||
+ | during the winter, when the weather is suitable for outdoor exercise. The | ||
+ | military drill i^ highly beneficial, in training the mind to attention, a | ||
+ | better carriage of the body and maintaining discipline. The drill could be | ||
+ | made more efficient and attractive if we had "Quaker guns" for the two | ||
+ | companies. At the present time, however, we are organizing a drum corps. | ||
+ | and are beginning on the rudiments of music. By spring it is expected that | ||
+ | we shall have a fair military band, which will add to the attractiveness of | ||
+ | the drill. | ||
+ | 3S REPORT OF BOARD OF | ||
+ | IMPROVEMENTS. | ||
+ | The sewer provided under the act of the legislature of 1896, with an appropriation | ||
+ | of $2,500, has been completed, but not within the appropriation, | ||
+ | an 1 does the work for which it was designed in a highly satisfactory manner, | ||
+ | and will have sufficient capacity to carry off all the sewage of the school | ||
+ | for ffty years hence. The full length to where it enters the slough near the | ||
+ | Yellowstone river is 0,320 feet. It is laid of 8-inch vitrified pipe, with oakum | ||
+ | gaskets and Portland cement around every joint. The contract for excavating | ||
+ | 3,320 feet at an average depth of ten feet was let for 12 1-2 cents | ||
+ | per lineal foot, and the balance of the excavating for a distance of 3,000 feet | ||
+ | was done by the boys, to an average depth of four feet, and the boys did all | ||
+ | of the filling in. | ||
+ | An excavation 12 feet deep and 25 feet in diameter has been made back | ||
+ | of the boiler house and an 108 barrel tank set therein; connection made | ||
+ | with the artesian well and also with the steam pump. Stand pipes two | ||
+ | inches in diameter, fitted with fire plugs and hose, have been put in the | ||
+ | girls' building, giving us quite an efficient fire protection, which was greatly | ||
+ | needed. Tn utilizing the water of the artesian well, it gives to the school a | ||
+ | supply of pure, soft water for all domestic purposes, and avoids the large | ||
+ | accumulation of lime and scale in the boiler and hot water pipes that we | ||
+ | had to contend with while using the strong alkali water from the seepage | ||
+ | well in the boiler house. | ||
+ | Electric lights have been installed in the boys' building, thereby doing | ||
+ | away with the lamps, which were dangerous and a source of constant annoyance. | ||
+ | Window guards have also been put on the building, the floors and | ||
+ | wainscoting painted, transoms put in, the plastering repaired, and about | ||
+ | eighteen inches of sand filled in the cellar. A large sink, with connections | ||
+ | made with the sewer, has been put in the kitchen. | ||
+ | A new closet has been built for the boys, thereby doing away with the | ||
+ | use of a joint closet for both sexes. Over 500 feet of board walks have been | ||
+ | built, hundreds of loads of sand have been hauled in around the buildings, | ||
+ | to bring the lawns to grade; a large lawn has been graded and set out to | ||
+ | trees in front of the boys' building, and a new play ground made. Over | ||
+ | five hundred shade trees have been set out and nearly all of them are in | ||
+ | a thrifty condition. A tile drain has been laid around both buildings in an | ||
+ | effort to keep the water out of the cellars, but it has proven ineffectual, as it | ||
+ | was not put deep enough. To keep the water down a steam pump has to be | ||
+ | used for about six months of the year. Competent engineers recommend | ||
+ | filling in the cellars above the water line. This flood of water undoubtedly | ||
+ | comes from irrigation. | ||
+ | A large and commodious root cellar, 30 by 70 feet, has been built. | ||
+ | Excavation was made four feet below the surface of the ground and a solid | ||
+ | wall of masonry, six and a half feet high and two feet thick, was laid, for | ||
+ | sides and end. A roof of large pine poles was put on, the cracks well chinked | ||
+ | and the whole covered with two feet of dirt. The work on this large structure | ||
+ | was all done by the boys, and the only expense that the state had to | ||
+ | STATE PRISON COMMISSIONERS. .iJ | ||
+ | meet was for material and overseer. This building furnishes the institution | ||
+ | with a necessary and valuable addition to the plant and supplies a needed | ||
+ | want for the storage of vegetables | ||
+ | The floor has been laid in the laundry, a large tank put in to heat water | ||
+ | for washing and bathing purposes, all of the vats have been connected with | ||
+ | the sewer, and a portion of the laundry has been partitioned off for a | ||
+ | paint shop. | ||
+ | A bath room has been put in for the use of the girls in the girl's building, | ||
+ | and an ample supply of water is secured by connection with the large tank | ||
+ | in the laundry. This arrangement is greatly appreciated by all, as it does | ||
+ | away with very primitive methods of bathing and gives us a nicely equipped | ||
+ | bath room. It is hoped that means can be procured to also put in inside | ||
+ | water closets for the girls' building. | ||
+ | NEEDS. | ||
+ | The girls' building needs a heating plant that will heat. My predecessor | ||
+ | called attention to the heating plant now used, and recommended that it be | ||
+ | discarded and steam heat be installed. I very earnestly renew the recommendation. | ||
+ | The hot air system now in use is dangerous, dirty and nearly worthless | ||
+ | in cold weather. The building is made unhealthy by the clouds of | ||
+ | sulphurous smoke and coal gas that pour into the rooms through the hot air | ||
+ | pipes. The furnaces consume a vast amount of coal with no adequate return | ||
+ | in heat. In cold weather, with the furnaces running to their full capacity, | ||
+ | with pipes red hot and pitch oozing out of the floor joist, it requires constant | ||
+ | and vigilant attention both night and day to prevent a fire, and the | ||
+ | system now in use menaces the lives of every occupant of the building. It | ||
+ | should be abandoned without delay and a steam heating plant installed. | ||
+ | Regardless of the fact that a new heating plant should be installed, another | ||
+ | boiler should be purchased as a measure of safety. Should anything go | ||
+ | wrong with the present boiler or its equipment, we have no means of heating | ||
+ | the boys' building or running the pumps. | ||
+ | A gymnasium, could be used to most excellent advantage at the institution. | ||
+ | as we have no means of recreation or exercise for either the boys or girls | ||
+ | during cold weather, except those that have details to carry on the ordinary | ||
+ | work of the institution. We are by degrees accumulating a library and | ||
+ | now possess seventy-two volumes. It is not necessary to impress upon the | ||
+ | minds of the board the necessity of a better library and a reading room. | ||
+ | We need more good books and papers. This fact is so obvious- that further | ||
+ | comment is unnecessary. I especially recommend that some action be taken | ||
+ | towards limiting the age of those committed to the school, or an equipment | ||
+ | furnished adequate to the demands of the institution for treating the overaged | ||
+ | young women and men sent here. This institution is neither a foundling | ||
+ | asylum for infants or a reformatory for treating adult felons. The | ||
+ | equipment and design of the institution is a training school for juvenile | ||
+ | delinquents. The practice of sending renegade boys here that are over | ||
+ | eighteen years of age, but whose ages are given in the commitment as sixteen | ||
+ | 40 REPORT OF EOARD OP | ||
+ | or seventeen, is pernicious in the highest degree. Youth that have been | ||
+ | released or escaped from eastern institutions drift into the state and are | ||
+ | in time sent here. At the present time we have four boys here that have | ||
+ | been in eastern institutions, and one of them was committed as 17 when | ||
+ | as a fact he states that he is twenty-two, and I have every reason to think | ||
+ | he states his age correctly. Another class of youths come west to be dime | ||
+ | novel cowboys and all-round bad men. As soon as it becomes apparent tnar | ||
+ | hard work on the range and^expert horsemanship are the essentials for a | ||
+ | successful career in the saddle, these youths drift into the towns and cities | ||
+ | and in time are sent to the reform school as vagrants, petty thieves and | ||
+ | burglars. The pernicious and corrupting influence that these youths have | ||
+ | on the younger boys of the institution is vicious beyond the power of words | ||
+ | to express. If the law is not amended limiting the age to 16 for both | ||
+ | sexes, I recommend that an isolation department be provided, where these | ||
+ | young men can be treated. It is not so bad in the girls' department, but we | ||
+ | get a great many young women that are over eighteen, and the influence | ||
+ | of these is, as a rule, bad. | ||
+ | I tbink that at least forty acres of the farm should be fenced with an | ||
+ | enclosure of sufficient height to prevent escapes. The work of the institution | ||
+ | could be carried forward with better results, an officer could give | ||
+ | better attention to the work in hand, "and it would in a measure prevent the | ||
+ | constant efforts to get away. | ||
+ | The institution needs more land, if we are to raise all of the hay that is | ||
+ | required for the stock now on the premises. We have the necessary labor | ||
+ | and teams, and if the state will furnish the land we can raise all of our hay. | ||
+ | I recommend that the 20 acres adjoining the farm on the south be purchased. | ||
+ | I also recommend that the name of the institution be changed from the | ||
+ | Montana State Reform School to the Montana State Industrial School. The | ||
+ | notion always prevails, and undoubtedly is to some extent just, that a boy | ||
+ | or girl that has been in a reform school is to some extent a criminal, or | ||
+ | very bad, and has needed vigorous treatment. This is probably true, but | ||
+ | when an inmate is paroled it is something of a stigma upon him that he has | ||
+ | been in a "reform school," whereas if the name "Industrial School" were sub- , | ||
+ | stituted, I am of the opinion that it would be for the better welfare of the | ||
+ | boys and girls sent here. | ||
+ | The health of the institution has been exceptionally good. We have had | ||
+ | no epidemics of any kind, and no serious accidents, greater than an injured | ||
+ | thumb and a few sprains. There has been but one case of serious sickness in | ||
+ | the past two years, and with regular habits, a reasonable amount of exercise | ||
+ | and good food the inmates are very healthy and strong. | ||
+ | Sunday-school and religious services are held every Sunday in the chapel. | ||
+ | The Sunday-school is conducted by the employes, and the afternoon service | ||
+ | is conducted by one of the ministers of Miles City. Rev. Charles Quinney, | ||
+ | rector of the Episcopal church, officiates on the first Sunday of the month. | ||
+ | Rev. Henry James, of the Methodist Church, the second Sunday; che Christian | ||
+ | Endeavor has the third Sunday; the fourth Sunday Rev. Edward McSTATE | ||
+ | PRISON COMMISSIONERS. 41 | ||
+ | Cullough Calvin, of the Presbyterian Church, and upon a fifth Sunday occurring | ||
+ | in a month, the Woman's Chrustian Temperance Union conducts a | ||
+ | service. Rev. Father VanDenbrock, of the Catholic Church, conducted services | ||
+ | at the institution until poor health compelled him to relinquish the | ||
+ | appointment. | ||
+ | We have also been favored with services by Dr. Reed, president of the | ||
+ | Bozeman College; Rev. Dr. Gwynn, of Great Falls; Rev. Bennett, presiding | ||
+ | elder of the Bozeman district, and Dr. Martin, of the Presbyterian College at | ||
+ | Deer Dodge. | ||
+ | Mrs. Mabel Conklin, of Brooklyn, N. Y., and Maj. Hilton, of San Francisco, | ||
+ | temperance speakers, have delivered addresses at the school. | ||
+ | Donations—Gov. Smith sent us a box of books, papers and magazines; the | ||
+ | Miles City Club a large number of magazines and illustrated papers Mr. C. R. | ||
+ | Middleton, magazines; Mrs. Jepp Ryan, books, papers and magazines; the | ||
+ | Woman's Christian Temperance Union, papers; Mr. Edmund Butler, ninetyseven | ||
+ | volumes of "War of the Rebellion, Official Records of the Union and | ||
+ | Confederate Armies." | ||
+ | Cash contributions have been made by the following gentlemen to purchase | ||
+ | instruments for a band: W. B. Jordan, $10; W. H. Bullard, $10; D. W | ||
+ | Stacy, $5; H. R. Phillips, $5; Dr. W. L. Andrus, $5; W. E. Savage, $5; Chas. J. | ||
+ | Smith, $2; Samuel Gordon, $5; King Bros., $2.50; H. W. Mclntyre, $5; B. K_ | ||
+ | Holt Meat Co., $5; Miles City Lumber Co., $5; F. Orschel, $5; Albert Kircher, | ||
+ | $2; Judge C. H. Loud, $5; A. Farnum, $5; Truscott & Harmon, $5. | ||
+ | In conclusion, I wish to state that it is a source of very great gratification | ||
+ | to the Matron and Director to note the many evidences of interest and cooperation | ||
+ | in the work of the institution, shown by the Board of Trustees. | ||
+ | At all times the members of your board have shown an interest and disposition | ||
+ | to aid the management in carrying forward the work, and have heartily | ||
+ | co-operated in all plans for the advancement of the welfare of the inmates. | ||
+ | I wish also to call the attention of the board to the earnest work done | ||
+ | by the ministers of the town in their work at the institution, and I wish to | ||
+ | acknowledge the fact that they have greatly aided in stimulating and | ||
+ | building up a good moral tone and sentiment among the inmates, and the | ||
+ | Sunday service is a source of great profit and enjoyment. | ||
+ | We have every reason to be grateful for the success that has attended | ||
+ | our efforts in the management of the institution, and the absence of all | ||
+ | serious calamity. | ||
+ | BURTON C. WHITE. | ||
+ | Director. | ||
+ | |||
+ | 42 REPORT OF BOARD OF | ||
+ | FINANCIAL STATEMENT. | ||
+ | 1897. 1898. | ||
+ | Dry goods $1,730.59 $1,180.63 | ||
+ | Groceries 3,284.55 3,227.85 | ||
+ | Meats 849.60 733.55 | ||
+ | Salaries 7,884.88 7,360.15 | ||
+ | Trustees 195.00 | ||
+ | Fuel 2,026.68 1,478.38 | ||
+ | Lights 959.80 685.50 | ||
+ | Hardware 552.70 792.99 | ||
+ | Feed 269.93 609.29 | ||
+ | Furniture 73.30 140.75 | ||
+ | Physician 1,033.00 107.00 | ||
+ | Medicine 189.80 | ||
+ | Building and improvements 907.81 | ||
+ | Blacksmithing 121.75 | ||
+ | Irrigation 375.00 | ||
+ | Insurance 1,110.00 | ||
+ | Sundries 325.82 | ||
+ | $19,541.27 | ||
+ | Appropriation 16,222.00 | ||
+ | 16,875.00 | ||
+ | 348.64 | ||
+ | 736.72 | ||
+ | 90.90 | ||
+ | 290.50 | ||
+ | $20,118.79 | ||
+ | Deficit $3,898.79 $2,666.27 | ||
+ | Tbo following appropriations will be necessary to carry forward the work | ||
+ | of tho school for the next two years: | ||
+ | T. | ||
+ | An appropriation of $20,000 for general maintenance for 1899 and $21,000 | ||
+ | for the year 1900. | ||
+ | II. | ||
+ | An appropriation of $2,500 to install a steam heating plant in the girls' | ||
+ | building. | ||
+ | III. | ||
+ | An appropriation of $1,000 to purchase machinery and material for the | ||
+ | manufacture and repair of boots and shoes. | ||
+ | IV. | ||
+ | An appropriation of $250 for a gymnasium. | ||
+ | V. | ||
+ | An appropriation of $1,000 to purchase 20 acres of land adjoining the | ||
+ | school farm on the south. | ||
+ | VI. | ||
+ | An appropriation of $800 to build a high wire fence around 40 acres of the | ||
+ | farm. | ||
+ | STATE PRISON COMMISSIONERS. 4., | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 1. | ||
+ | Boys. | ||
+ | Showing number received since opening school 124 | ||
+ | Number in school Dec, 1, 1897 49 | ||
+ | Number in school Dec. 1, 1898 62 | ||
+ | Received during year 1897 , 19 | ||
+ | Received during year 1898 25 | ||
+ | Total number cared for during year 1898 74 | ||
+ | Total number cared for during year 1897 71 | ||
+ | Number paroled in 1897 19 | ||
+ | Number paroled in 1898 12 | ||
+ | Number escaped in 1897 2 | ||
+ | Number escaped in 1898 1 | ||
+ | Number pardoned in 1897 1 | ||
+ | Girls. Total. | ||
+ | 25 149 | ||
+ | 12 61 | ||
+ | 12 74 | ||
+ | 5 21 | ||
+ | 3 28 | ||
+ | 15 89 | ||
+ | 15 86 | ||
+ | 3 22 | ||
+ | 4 16 | ||
+ | 2 | ||
+ | 1 | ||
+ | 1 2 | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 2. | ||
+ | Showing age when committed, as stated in commitment form, Dec. 1, 1896, | ||
+ | to Dec. 1, 1898. | ||
+ | Boys. Girls. | ||
+ | Eight years old 1 | ||
+ | Nine years old , 2 | ||
+ | Ten years old 2 | ||
+ | Eleven years old 5 | ||
+ | Twelve years old ' | ||
+ | . | ||
+ | . | ||
+ | 3 | ||
+ | Thirteen years old 5 | ||
+ | Fourteen years old 7 | ||
+ | Fifteen years old 5 | ||
+ | Sixteen years old 7 | ||
+ | Seventeen years old 7 | ||
+ | Unknown 2 | ||
+ | Total . , 46 7 | ||
+ | In the above list there are two boys and one girl that are over 18. The age | ||
+ | is given as 17 in the commitment. | ||
+ | 44 REPORT OF BOARD OF | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 3. | ||
+ | Whole number received, and counties from which they have been committed. | ||
+ | since opening of institution to Dec. 1, 1898. | ||
+ | Boys. Girls. | ||
+ | Beaverhead 3 | ||
+ | Broadwater | ||
+ | Carbon | ||
+ | Cascade 15 3 | ||
+ | Choteau 5 | ||
+ | Custer 11 3 | ||
+ | Dawson | ||
+ | Deer Lodge 11 4 | ||
+ | Fergus 3 3 | ||
+ | Flathead , 2 | ||
+ | Gallatin 10 1 | ||
+ | Granite 4 | ||
+ | Jefferson 3 | ||
+ | Lewis and Clarke 19 • 1 | ||
+ | Madison ' 1 1 | ||
+ | Meagher , 2 | ||
+ | Missoula 7 2 | ||
+ | Park 7 | ||
+ | Ravalli 1 1 | ||
+ | Sil v er Bow 13 5 | ||
+ | Sweet Grass : 1 | ||
+ | Teton 2 | ||
+ | Valley | ||
+ | Yellowstone 4 1 | ||
+ | Total 124 25 | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 4. | ||
+ | Offence, as stated in commitment, of those received during past two years.. | ||
+ | from Dec. 1, 1896, to Dec. 1, 1898.' | ||
+ | Boys. Girls. | ||
+ | Incorrigibility 25 4 | ||
+ | Incorrigibility and mendicancy 2 | ||
+ | Incorrigibility and vagrancy 3 | ||
+ | Forgery 1 | ||
+ | Burglary, 1st degree 4 | ||
+ | Burglary, 2d degree 3 | ||
+ | Grand larceny 5 1 | ||
+ | Felii larceny 3 | ||
+ | Assault, 3d degree 1 | ||
+ | Receiving stolen property 1 | ||
+ | Total 46 7 | ||
+ | STATE PRISON COMMISSIONERS. 4., | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 5. | ||
+ | Showing scholarship of inmate when received. | ||
+ | —Reading | ||
+ | — | ||
+ | Boys. | ||
+ | Could not read or write 8 | ||
+ | Read in First Reader 10 | ||
+ | Read in Second Reader 5 | ||
+ | Read in Third Reader 15 | ||
+ | Raad in Fourth Reader 15 | ||
+ | Read in Fifth Reader 4 | ||
+ | Read in Sixth Reader 4 | ||
+ | Total 61 | ||
+ | —Attainments in Arithmetic | ||
+ | — | ||
+ | Boys. | ||
+ | Never had arithmetic ' 18 | ||
+ | Knew numbers 3 | ||
+ | Far as Addition 9 | ||
+ | Far as Subtraction 5 | ||
+ | Far as Multiplication 7 | ||
+ | Far as Short Division 2 | ||
+ | Far as Long Division 5 | ||
+ | Far as Fractions 7 | ||
+ | Far as Decimals 2 | ||
+ | Far as Percentage 3 | ||
+ | Total 61 | ||
+ | —Attainments in Writing | ||
+ | — | ||
+ | Boys. | ||
+ | Could not write 17 | ||
+ | Write name only | ||
+ | Write legibly 9 | ||
+ | Write well 35 | ||
+ | Total 61 | ||
+ | —Relating to Parents of Inmates | ||
+ | — | ||
+ | Boys. | ||
+ | Father intemperate 32 | ||
+ | Both father and mother intemperate 5 | ||
+ | Unknown 12 | ||
+ | Temperate ' 18 | ||
+ | Total 61 | ||
+ | Girls. | ||
+ | V | ||
+ | 1 | ||
+ | 3 | ||
+ | 1 | ||
+ | 3 | ||
+ | 12 | ||
+ | Girls. | ||
+ | 2 | ||
+ | Girls. | ||
+ | 2 | ||
+ | 2 | ||
+ | 12 | ||
+ | Girls. | ||
+ | 7 | ||
+ | 3 | ||
+ | 1 | ||
+ | 1 | ||
+ | 12 | ||
+ | 46 REPORT OF EOARD OP | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 6. | ||
+ | Birth Place of Present Inmates. | ||
+ | Boys. Girls. | ||
+ | New York 1 | ||
+ | New Jersey 2 | ||
+ | Pennsylvania 2 | ||
+ | Ohio 4 | ||
+ | West Virginia 1 | ||
+ | Michigan 3 | ||
+ | Illinois 1 | ||
+ | Wisconsin 1 | ||
+ | Minnesota 3 | ||
+ | Kentucky 1 | ||
+ | Missouri 2 | ||
+ | Texas 1 | ||
+ | North Dakota 4 | ||
+ | South Dakota 2 | ||
+ | Montana ". | ||
+ | . | ||
+ | 15 | ||
+ | Nebraska 3 | ||
+ | Wyoming 1 | ||
+ | Kansas 1 | ||
+ | Colorado 3 | ||
+ | Utah 1 | ||
+ | Nevada 1 | ||
+ | California 1 | ||
+ | Washington 1 | ||
+ | Canada | ||
+ | England 1 | ||
+ | Treland 2 | ||
+ | Germany | ||
+ | Russia 1 | ||
+ | Unknown . 3 | ||
+ | Total 62 12 | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 7. | ||
+ | Showing Pecuniary Circumstances in Ancestry. | ||
+ | Boys. | ||
+ | No accumulations 48 | ||
+ | Forehanded 12 | ||
+ | Unknown 1 | ||
+ | Total 61 | ||
+ | Girls. | ||
+ | 10 | ||
+ | 2 | ||
+ | 12 | ||
+ | STATE PRISON COMMISSIONERS. 47 | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 8. | ||
+ | Showing Religious Training. | ||
+ | Boys. Girls. | ||
+ | None 15 | ||
+ | Attended church and Sunday-school occasionally 41 7 | ||
+ | Regular attendance at church and Sunday-school 5 5 | ||
+ | Total 61 12 | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 9. | ||
+ | Showing Religious Faith of Parents. | ||
+ | Boys. Girls. | ||
+ | Protestant 29 8 | ||
+ | Roman Catholic 22 3 | ||
+ | Hebrew 1 | ||
+ | None , 3 | ||
+ | Unknown 7 1 | ||
+ | Total 62 12 | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 10. | ||
+ | Showing Home Life and Conditions. | ||
+ | Boys. Girls- | ||
+ | Both parents dead 8 1 | ||
+ | Father dead—step-father 9 2 | ||
+ | Mother dead—step-mother 2 1 | ||
+ | Both parents living, separated and father remarried 1 | ||
+ | Both parents living, separated and mother remarried 7 1 | ||
+ | Both parents living together 18 3 | ||
+ | Mother dead, father unmarried 11 | ||
+ | Parents separated 4 1 | ||
+ | Eoth parents in penitentiary 2 | ||
+ | Father unknown, step-father and mother in penitentiary 1 | ||
+ | Knows nothing about parents 1 1 | ||
+ | Total \ 62 12 | ||
+ | 48 REPORT OF BOARD OF | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 11. | ||
+ | Showing those Received at Institution from Following Named Counties for | ||
+ | Year Ending Dec. 1, 1898. | ||
+ | 1897. Boys. Girls | ||
+ | December—Silver Bow 1 | ||
+ | 1898. | ||
+ | January—Silver Bow 2 | ||
+ | January—Missoula | ||
+ | February—Silver Bow 1 | ||
+ | February—Park 1 | ||
+ | March—Lewis and Clarke 1 | ||
+ | March—Custer 2 | ||
+ | March—Silver Bow 1 | ||
+ | April—Gallatin 2 | ||
+ | April—Lewis and Clarke 1 | ||
+ | May—Deer Lodge 1 | ||
+ | May—Gallatin 1 | ||
+ | June—Lewis and Clarke 1 | ||
+ | July—Park 1 | ||
+ | July—Silver Bow 1 | ||
+ | August—Park 1 | ||
+ | September—Custer 1 | ||
+ | September—Teton 1 | ||
+ | October—Gallatin 1 | ||
+ | October—Custer 1 | ||
+ | October—Deer Lodge 1 | ||
+ | October—Lewis and Clarke 1 | ||
+ | October—Flathead 1 | ||
+ | November—Yellowstone 1 | ||
+ | Total 25 3 | ||
+ | STATE PRISON COMMISSIONERS. 49 | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 12. | ||
+ | Showing Those Received at Institution from Following Named Counties, for | ||
+ | Year Ending Dec. 1, 1897. | ||
+ | 1896. Boys. Girls. | ||
+ | December—Silver Bow 1 2 | ||
+ | December—Meagher 1 | ||
+ | 1897. | ||
+ | February—Silver Bow 1 | ||
+ | March—Silver Bow 2 | ||
+ | March—Cascade 2 | ||
+ | March—Custer 1 | ||
+ | March—Missoula 1 | ||
+ | April—Deer Lodge 1 | ||
+ | April—Missoula 1 | ||
+ | May—Lewis and Clarke 1 | ||
+ | May—Silver Bow 1 | ||
+ | May-—Yellowstone 1 | ||
+ | June—Cascade 1 | ||
+ | July—Cascade 1 | ||
+ | July—Lewis and Clarke 1 | ||
+ | September—Ravalli 1 | ||
+ | September—Gallatin 1 | ||
+ | October—Gallatin 1 | ||
+ | October—Sweet Grass 1 | ||
+ | November—Lewis and Clarke 1 | ||
+ | . Total 19 | ||
+ | 50 REPORT OF BOARD OF | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 13. | ||
+ | Showing Number of New Garments Made in Sewing Room from Sept. 4, 1897, | ||
+ | to Dec. 1, 1898. | ||
+ | Coats 87 | ||
+ | Pants .. ... 108 | ||
+ | Vests 57 | ||
+ | Boys' shirts 181 | ||
+ | • Night shirts 95 | ||
+ | Dresses : 37 | ||
+ | Nightdresses 29 | ||
+ | Aprons 106 | ||
+ | Mittens 76 | ||
+ | Kitchen aprons 30 | ||
+ | Petticoats 25 | ||
+ | Shirt sleeves 18 | ||
+ | Pillow cases ...:...... 99 | ||
+ | Sheets 18 | ||
+ | Towels .. ... 69 | ||
+ | Apron sleeves 28 | ||
+ | Waists 6 | ||
+ | Drawers 3 | ||
+ | Dress skirts 5 | ||
+ | Sun bonnets . . 1 | ||
+ | Total ......1,077 | ||
+ | STATE PRISON COMMISSIONERS. 51 | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 14. | ||
+ | Showing Number of Garments Repaired in Sewing Room from Sept. 4, 1897, | ||
+ | to Dec. 1, 1898. | ||
+ | Coats 181 | ||
+ | Pants 593 | ||
+ | Vests 117 | ||
+ | Overalls 124 | ||
+ | Shirts , 1,340 | ||
+ | Night shirts 715 | ||
+ | Under shirts 506 | ||
+ | Socks ...., 3,880 | ||
+ | Drawers 587 | ||
+ | Dresses ... 63 | ||
+ | Night dresses 22 | ||
+ | Dress skirts 10 | ||
+ | Aprons . | ||
+ | . | ||
+ | 124 | ||
+ | Kitchen aprons 31 | ||
+ | ' Sheets 147 | ||
+ | Pillow cases . . 69 | ||
+ | Table cloths 14 | ||
+ | Mittens 7 | ||
+ | Hose '. 102 | ||
+ | Petticoats .:.- 77 | ||
+ | Dress waists 13 | ||
+ | Towels 32 | ||
+ | Hats 13 | ||
+ | Sleeves 2 | ||
+ | Wash clothes 4 | ||
+ | Sweaters 2 | ||
+ | Miscellaneous 32 v | ||
+ | Total 8,808 | ||
+ | 52 REPORT OF BOARD OF | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 15. | ||
+ | Showing Amount of Work Done in Laundry from Aug. 23, 1897, to Nov. 27, | ||
+ | 1898. | ||
+ | —Clothes Washed | ||
+ | — | ||
+ | Sheets 5,045 | ||
+ | Pillow slips 7,995 | ||
+ | Aprons 2,400 | ||
+ | Socks 7,550 | ||
+ | Shirts 3,488 | ||
+ | Towels 4,587 | ||
+ | Night dresses 719 | ||
+ | Under shirts 925 | ||
+ | Boys' underwear 1,110 | ||
+ | Napkins 4,550 | ||
+ | Table cloths 585 | ||
+ | Night shirts 3,861 | ||
+ | Gollars 238 | ||
+ | Spreads 210 | ||
+ | Dresses 260 | ||
+ | Waists 130 | ||
+ | W. Skirts 580 | ||
+ | Doileys 130 | ||
+ | Sun bonnets 195 | ||
+ | Table covers 65 | ||
+ | Total 45,869 | ||
+ | —Clothes Ironed | ||
+ | Sheets 980 | ||
+ | Pillow slips 7,995 | ||
+ | Aprons 1,530 | ||
+ | Napkins 4,545 | ||
+ | Table cloths 585 | ||
+ | Collars 238 | ||
+ | Dresses 260 | ||
+ | Waists 130 | ||
+ | Doylies 130 | ||
+ | Towels 3,640 | ||
+ | White skirts ; . . | ||
+ | . | ||
+ | 580 | ||
+ | Under skirts 925 | ||
+ | Table covers 65 | ||
+ | Sun bonnets 195 | ||
+ | Total 21,893 | ||
+ | i | ||
+ | STATE PRISON COMMISSIONERS. 53 | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 16. | ||
+ | Showing Products of Farm, Garden and Stock for Year Ending Dec. 1, 1897, | ||
+ | Potatoes, pounds 44,400 | ||
+ | Stock beets, pounds 82,000 | ||
+ | Table beets, pounds 5,000 | ||
+ | Onions, pounds 3,000 | ||
+ | Carrots, pounds 4,000 | ||
+ | Parsnips, pounds 800 | ||
+ | Navy beans, pounds 1,700 | ||
+ | Pork, pounds 4,000 | ||
+ | Summer squash 1,000 | ||
+ | Hubbard squash 320 | ||
+ | String beans, bushels 30 | ||
+ | Cucumbers, bushels 15 | ||
+ | Water melons 1,050 | ||
+ | Musk melons 384 | ||
+ | Garden lemons, bushels 15 | ||
+ | Green corn, dozen ears 150 | ||
+ | Young onions, dozen 200 | ||
+ | Apples, bushels 4 | ||
+ | Plums, bushels 4 | ||
+ | Alfalfa and millet hay, tons 32 | ||
+ | Oat hay, tons 6 | ||
+ | Corn fodder, tons 20 | ||
+ | Milk, quarts 7,300 | ||
+ | Tomatoes, bushels 15 | ||
+ | Pumpkins, wagon loads 18 | ||
+ | Currants, bushels 8 | ||
+ | Gooseberries, bushels 10 | ||
+ | Cabbage, heads 1,500 | ||
+ | Raspberries, quarts 40 | ||
+ | Pie plant, pounds 300 | ||
+ | Pickels, barrel 1 | ||
+ | Canned currants, quarts 760 | ||
+ | Pickled beans, quarts 320 | ||
+ | Pickled apples, quarts 48 | ||
+ | Pickled wild plums, quarts 40 | ||
+ | Catsup, quarts . 160 | ||
+ | Chow chow, quarts 120 | ||
+ | Jelly, glasses 200 | ||
+ | Dried pumpkin, pounds 50 | ||
+ | Live stock, 6 calves and 65 pigs. | ||
+ | 54 REPORT OF BOARD OF . | ||
+ | TABLE NO. 17. | ||
+ | Showing Products of Farm, Garden and Stock for Year 1898. | ||
+ | Potatoes, pounds 20,000 | ||
+ | Stock beets, pounds 57,620 | ||
+ | Table beets, pounds 13,923 | ||
+ | Onions, pounds 2,400 | ||
+ | Carrots, pounds 8,613 | ||
+ | Parsnips, pounds 1,473 | ||
+ | Turnips, pounds ; | ||
+ | . 13,655 | ||
+ | Cabbabge, heads 2,550 | ||
+ | Summer squash 1,500 | ||
+ | Hubbard squash 3,250 | ||
+ | Navy bean j, pounds 1,500 | ||
+ | String beans, bushels 12 | ||
+ | Cucumbers, dozen 115 | ||
+ | Water melons 1,250 | ||
+ | Musk melons 365 | ||
+ | Garden lemons, bushels 3 | ||
+ | Green corn, dozen ears 140 | ||
+ | Young onions, dozen 165 | ||
+ | Apples, bushels 8 | ||
+ | Plums, bushels 6 | ||
+ | Alfalfa hay, tons 33 | ||
+ | Oat hay, tons 4 | ||
+ | Corn, bushel ears 395 | ||
+ | Corn fodder, tons 7 | ||
+ | Pumpkins, wagon loads 15 | ||
+ | Radishes, dozen 20 | ||
+ | Tomatoes, bushels 40 | ||
+ | Raspberries, quarts 20 | ||
+ | Pie plant, pounds 500 | ||
+ | Milk, quarts 6,500 | ||
+ | *Pork, pounds 1,182 | ||
+ | Currants, bushels 10 | ||
+ | Gooseberries, bushels 15 | ||
+ | Currant jelly, quarts 196 | ||
+ | Crab apple pickles, quarts 64 | ||
+ | Crab apple jelly, quarts 62 | ||
+ | Catsup, quarts 144 | ||
+ | Canned gooseberries, quarts 2*6 | ||
+ | Gooseberry sauce, quarts 164 | ||
+ | Currant jelly, glasses 198 | ||
+ | Currant sauce, quarts 112 | ||
+ | Crab apple marmalade, quarts 41 | ||
+ | Canned apples, quarts 14 | ||
+ | Crab apple jelly, pints 13 | ||
+ | STATE PRISON COMMISSIONERS. 55 | ||
+ | Crab apple sauce and pickles, quarts 64 | ||
+ | Plum preserves, quarts 72 | ||
+ | Plum jelly, quarts : . . | ||
+ | . | ||
+ | 23 | ||
+ | Sauer kraut, barrels 3 | ||
+ | Live stock, 6 calves and 45 pigs. | ||
+ | *The pork will amount to about 4,000 pounds, as there are 35 hogs and pigs | ||
+ | yet to kill. | ||
+ | The herd of tcows now on the farm should be disposed of and a more | ||
+ | suitable breed purchased. The cows are small and not well adapted to the | ||
+ | needs of the institution. | ||
+ | —Sold from Farm | ||
+ | — | ||
+ | 1897. | ||
+ | Received for pigs $23.00 | ||
+ | Received for 4 head cattle 80.00 | ||
+ | Received for 1 horse 20.00 | ||
+ | Received from J. H. Strevell, balance on hog 4.19 | ||
+ | 1898. | ||
+ | Received for pigs, Miles City Club 20.00 | ||
+ | Received for buggy painting 12.75 | ||
+ | Received for pigs 8.50 | ||
+ | $170.44 | ||
+ | Credit. | ||
+ | Expended from said fund for school, in paints, | ||
+ | books, flags, postage, bats, hardware, express, | ||
+ | etc $170.75 | ||
+ | 170.44 | ||
+ | Dr. to balance 31 | ||
+ | The above account has been examined and approved. | ||
+ | J. W. STREVELL, President | ||
+ | JOHN S. TRUSCOTT. | ||
+ | JAMES B. HAWKINS. | ||
+ | |||
+ | 56 REPORT OF BOARD OF | ||
+ | Physician's Biennial Report of Health Department of | ||
+ | the Montana State Reform School, Ending | ||
+ | Dec. 1, 1898. | ||
+ | During the last two years it is a remarkable fact that there has been no | ||
+ | cases of illness or injury, other than trivial diseases of youth and childhood, | ||
+ | and no fatalities to record during that period. | ||
+ | This pleasing state of affairs is due, in a great measure (in my opinion) | ||
+ | to two facts—namely, the perfecting and operating of a sewerage system to | ||
+ | the Yellowstone river, and the efficient manner in which the sanitary condition | ||
+ | of the school and belongings have been superintended. | ||
+ | I would suggest, as a matter of vital importance, relative to perfect sanitation, | ||
+ | that the present heating plant in vogue in the building occupied by | ||
+ | the female inmates be abolished, and be replaced by a steam heating plant, | ||
+ | as, in my opinion, numerous cases of throat and other troubles are due | ||
+ | in a great measure, to the inefficiency of the present heating system. In all | ||
+ | other respects, the health department of this institution is all that could be | ||
+ | desired. | ||
+ | Respectfully, | ||
+ | W. W. ANDREWS, | ||
+ | Physician to State Reform School. | ||
+ | To Hon. T. S. HOGAN, Secretary of State. | ||
+ | STATE PRISON COMMISSIONERS. 57 | ||
+ | Trustees Report. | ||
+ | To His Excellency, the Governor of the State of Montana. | ||
+ | Sir:—The undersigned, the trustees of the Montana State Reform School, | ||
+ | have the honor to transmit to you their biennial report for the years 1897 | ||
+ | and 1898, in compliance with the laws of this state. | ||
+ | The officers and employes connected with the school are as follows: | ||
+ | B C. White, Director of the institution; Mrs. Isadore White, wife of the | ||
+ | Director, Matron of the institution; J. P. Duffy, engineer; Fred Christopher, | ||
+ | cook; Clark Dickinson, teacher; Mrs. Fannie Densmore, teacher; Mrs. N. A. | ||
+ | Castor, seamstress; Miss M. Ella Savage, laundress; Mrs. D. D. Shy, cook; | ||
+ | Clarence Elswoeck, superintendent of boys' building; John Krause, night | ||
+ | watchman; William Butler, overseer; N. A. Castor, overseer. | ||
+ | The present number of inmates of the institution is 62 boys and 12 girls. | ||
+ | The number admitted to the institution during the year 1897 was 19 | ||
+ | toys and 5 girls; and in 1898, 25 boys and 3 girls. | ||
+ | The number dismissed during 1897 was 19 boys and 3 girls; the number | ||
+ | paroled in 1898 was 12 boys and 4 girls. | ||
+ | An account of the expenditures incurred and the purpose for which such | ||
+ | expenditure was made is shown by the report of the director of the institution | ||
+ | to this board, to which reference is respectfully made, and which shows | ||
+ | the amount and for what purpose such expenditures were made. A recapitulation | ||
+ | of them in the several items would make this report cumbersome | ||
+ | to your honor and without any special purpose, further than the report of | ||
+ | the Director shows. | ||
+ | The gross amount of expenditures for 1897 was $20,118.79, and the gross | ||
+ | amount for 1898 was $19,541.27. | ||
+ | In relation to the advancement made by the inmates of the institution, we | ||
+ | can say with absolute confidence that the institution in its workings has fully | ||
+ | met the expectation of its most sanguine friends. All of the work of the | ||
+ | institution since the first of April, 1897, has been under the immediate direction | ||
+ | of Mr. B. C. White, the Director of the institution. The discipline has | ||
+ | been good and the advancement of many of the pupils in such industries as | ||
+ | we are able to carry on has been, in general, good, and in many instances | ||
+ | marvelous. | ||
+ | It will be generaly understood that we do not get the better elements of | ||
+ | youth in this institution, and yet with strict discipline, tempered with kind | ||
+ | treatment, we find that very many who come here under the cognomen of | ||
+ | incorrigible, develop into excellent characters. We find the girls more | ||
+ | amenable to discipline than the boys. | ||
+ | The purpose of the institution, as you well know, in its main object, is to | ||
+ | teach the inmates and those who are confided to its charge, that it is better | ||
+ | 58 REPORT OF BOARD OF | ||
+ | to do right than wrong, and in accomplishing this we think the institution | ||
+ | and its management deserve the highest commendation. | ||
+ | Your honor will remember that in 1896 and the early part of 1897 the | ||
+ | institution suffered from a very severe epidemic of typhoid fever; all who | ||
+ | were connected with the institution and its management could very readily | ||
+ | trace this epidemic to a lack of sewerage. By the appropriation made for | ||
+ | this purpose we were enabled to accomplish a proper sewerage of the | ||
+ | institution, and since that was accomplished the health of the institution | ||
+ | has been really marvelous. There has been but one serious case of sickness | ||
+ | within the period covered by this report, and not an instance of death, so | ||
+ | that without making this report unnecessarily prolix, we can state to you | ||
+ | that the institution is at present in a most satisfactory condition. | ||
+ | In relation to the needs of the institution for the coming two years, the | ||
+ | Director has very carefully gone over such necessities and fully states them | ||
+ | in his report, which we believe to be as nearly correct as possible. | ||
+ | The girls' building is in very great need of a new heating plant. This | ||
+ | building is heated by the old hot air system, which, however successful it* may | ||
+ | be in other localities, is not by any means a success with us in this institution. | ||
+ | It creates a vast amount of dust and gas, which renders the building | ||
+ | exceedingly unpleasant. The necessary appropriation for this item our Director | ||
+ | estimates to be $2,500, which we believe to be sufficient to accomplish | ||
+ | a good system of steam heating. | ||
+ | We endorse the Director's request for a gymnasium. This could be | ||
+ | accomplished by an expenditure of probably $250. | ||
+ | During the entire existence of the institution we have been controlling | ||
+ | the inmates without any fencing or any special means to prevent escape. | ||
+ | The Director is of the opinion that the fencing of 40 acres would be a vast | ||
+ | benefit to the institution, if it can be fenced in such manner as to prevent | ||
+ | escape by the inmates. We most cordially endorse this recommendation, and | ||
+ | there is no doubt, if this can be done, much better results can be attained | ||
+ | in the institution than without it. It would very considerably lessen the | ||
+ | number of employes, because under our present system the escape of the | ||
+ | inmates is prevented only by persons having charge of them and keeping | ||
+ | them under constant control and under their eye. Under this system it is | ||
+ | inconsistent with safety to allow any number of boys to work at any distance | ||
+ | from the person having them in charge. The fence which the Director desires | ||
+ | would obviate in large measure this constant danger of escape. The | ||
+ | manner of fencing proposed would be by barbed wire and posts. The cost of | ||
+ | this item would be, as nearly as we can estimate, $600. | ||
+ | There is adjoining the institution a tract of 20 acres of land which the | ||
+ | institution very much needs in order to have sufficient land to raise the | ||
+ | products necessary for the institution in providing for stock and teams for | ||
+ | the working of the ground. This land could be purchased probably at $50 | ||
+ | per acre. We recommend an appropriation of $1,000 for this purpose. The | ||
+ | price of the land will very soon be saved by the product which it would yield | ||
+ | STATE PRISON COMMISSIONERS. 5y | ||
+ | the institution. Our Director says the amount would be reimbursed within | ||
+ | two years. | ||
+ | There ought to be some manufacturing connected with the institution. | ||
+ | All that we can teach now is farming and the care and attention of stock. | ||
+ | Desirable as this branch of instruction is, it is one of the safest and best | ||
+ | means of reformation, yet we should have something in the line of manufac | ||
+ | tnring for those who do not take to farming, and who would perhaps never | ||
+ | make a success of it. We ask for $1,000 in order that we may start in a small | ||
+ | way the manufacture of boots and shoes, making perhaps at first only such as | ||
+ | are used by the institution. We believe this could be done with perfect success | ||
+ | and with great benefit to the inmates of the institution. If this amount | ||
+ | could be accorded the institution, we have no hesitation in saying that it | ||
+ | would be of very great benefit. | ||
+ | These are the only special items that the Board of Trustees have thought | ||
+ | it advisable to suggest to you. | ||
+ | An electric plant, if we could have $3,000 to establish it, would be a very | ||
+ | great saving to the institution, as our lights now cost of nearly $1,000 a year. | ||
+ | The amounts necessary to sustain the institution we believe to be as follows | ||
+ | : | ||
+ | For the year 1899, $20,000; for the year 1900, $21,000. | ||
+ | In conclusion, the Board of Trustees desire to express their appreciation | ||
+ | of the considerate manner in which the institution has been treated by the | ||
+ | Governor of the State and the officers of the State Board. We have the | ||
+ | honor to be, | ||
+ | Your obedient servants, | ||
+ | J. W. STREVELL. | ||
+ | JOHN S. TRUSCOTT. | ||
+ | JAMES B. HAWKINS. |