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Since May, the Burlington County Prison Museum in Mount Holly has been undergoing a $2.9 million restoration project, which includes preserving wall art created by prisoners who were housed there nearly seven decades ago.
The graffiti being conserved is from a ten-year period from when the prison walls were last painted in 1955, to when the prison closed in 1965.
“There is quite a bit of religious graffiti in here,” said Stephanie M. Hoagland, principal and senior conservator with Jablonski Building Conservation Inc., a New York City-based architectural conservation firm that specializes in preservation of historic buildings, monuments, and other cultural resources. “There’s also a lot of calendars which are counting off the days until they get out and then there’s love notes.”
Two prisoners shared this tiny cell at the historic Burlington County Prison in Mount Holly. (Emma Lee/WHYY)
The historic Burlington County Prison in Mount Holly housed inmates from 1811 until 1965. Now a museum and a magnet for paranormal investigators, it is undergoing a $2.9 million rennovation. (Emma Lee/WHYY)
A room at the Historic Burlington County Prison Museum in Mount Holly is dedicated to Ellis Parker, known locally as America's Sherlock Holmes. (Emma Lee/WHYY)
A sculpted prisoner occupies a solitary confinement cell at the Historic Burlington County Prison Museum. (Emma Lee/WHYY)
Drawings, messages and inscriptions made on the plaster walls of the historic Burlington County Prison in Mount Holly, provide insights into what life was like for inmates. Burlington County is in the process of preserving this graffiti as part of a $2.9 million renovation project. (Emma Lee/WHYY)
The historic Burlington County Prison in Mount Holly was repainted in 1955. All the prisoner graffiti dates from then until the prison closing in 1965. (Emma Lee/WHYY)
This cell at the historic Burlington County Prison, reserved for debtors, housed up to four inmates. (Emma Lee/WHYY)
In a solitary confinement cell at the historic Burlington County Prison in Mount Holly, a prisoner wrote these words: ''My life is in darkness. Where is god, can you tell me. Where can i go. Will I ever fine him. I hope so.'' (Emme Lee/WHYY)
Jablonski is doing the preservation work under the oversight of New Jersey-based Netta Architects, the company that designed the building improvements.
Hoagland said prison graffiti is similar to military graffiti — it’s the expression of people who are “essentially trapped.”
The Burlington County Prison walls have depictions of God, and Bible verses including a commandment such as “Thou Shalt Not Steal” written in red letters.
“You have lots of time to reflect, you have lots of time to lament,” Hoagland said. “You have a lot of time to think about what you’ve done and how to make your life better.”
“This is their expression of what they were going through at the time or how they needed to express what they’re going through in order to cope with their situation, and we feel like this is worth preserving,” Eckel said.
The Robbinsville temple is one of many built by the Bochasanwasi Shri Akshar Purushottam Swaminarayan Sanstha or BAPS, a worldwide religious and civic organization.
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In addition to graffiti preservation, the prison is also getting a new roof and touch-ups on existing masonry work. The New Jersey Historic Trust has awarded the county a $526,500 grant to assist with the improvements.
Inaugurated in 1811, the Burlington County Prison was one of the first penal institutions in the United States. The building, located on High Street, was designed by Robert Mills, one of the first American-born professional architects, whose works include the Washington Monument, the U.S. Treasury Building in Washington, D.C., and the wings of Independence Hall.
The original prison held about 40 prisoners. At the time of its closure in 1965, it housed more than 100 people. In 1966, the prison re-opened as a museum. It was designated a National Historic Landmark in 1986.
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