Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Center

The Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Center is a juvenile correctional facility of the North Carolina Department of Public Safety located in unincorporated Cabarrus County, North Carolina, near Concord.[2]

Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Center
Stonewall Jackson Training School Historic District
Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Center is located in North Carolina
Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Center
Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Center is located in the United States
Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Center
LocationSR 1157, Concord, North Carolina
Coordinates35°21′51″N 80°35′54″W
Area800 acres (320 ha) (58 acres (23 ha) still used)
Built1909
ArchitectLouis H. Asbury
Architectural styleColonial Revival
NRHP reference No.84001966[1]
Added to NRHPMarch 15, 1984

The Stonewall Jackson Manual Training and Industrial School was established by an act of the state legislature in 1907 and opened in 1909 as the first juvenile detention facility in North Carolina. The school was named for Confederate General Stonewall Jackson. The institution is located three miles (5 km) from Concord. Walter Thompson was the first principal. Originally encompassing 290 acres (1.2 km2),[3][4] the campus is 800 acres (3,200,000 m2), 58 acres (230,000 m2) of which are still used, with 5 buildings on the property. As of 2018–19, the Youth Development Center had 107 residents and the Juvenile Detention Center had 26, with full-time equivalent staff of 257.[5]

Due to the school's pioneering status and the quality of several of its early buildings, the Stonewall Jackson Training School Historic District has been listed on the National Register of Historic Places. This designation includes 71 acres and 50 buildings.[5]

It was previously operated by the North Carolina Department of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention.

History

Established to provide a place for troubled youths separate from adult prisoners, this was considered a progressive institution. Its founding was the result of twenty years of organizing by white women's groups in North Carolina. They lobbied for construction of a reformatory for white boys as part of prison reform.

Particularly influential were the King's Daughters (North Carolina) from 1902 on, and the Women's Christian Temperance Union (WCTU). The North Carolina Federation of Women's Clubs (NCFWC) and the United Daughters of the Confederacy (UDC) also participated in campaigning strongly to raise funds and influence the legislature. When the King's Daughters promised to name the school after General Stonewall Jackson, many Confederate veterans in the legislature finally approved the project, which was authorized in 1907. As a sign of their influence, four women were named to the board of the school.[6]

Boys were generally incarcerated for relatively minor scrapes with the law, including school truancy.

At the school, the young men lived in a series of dormitory style buildings, and received an academic education as well as learning a trade. Students worked in industries including shoemaking, printing, barbering, textiles, and a machine shop. Many of the young men worked on the school's farm, learning modern agricultural techniques, and maintaining the fields and cattle herds that supported the school. The print shop produced a small newspaper called The Uplift.[7]

Both white and African-American women's groups pressed the legislature for similar facilities for white girls, and for African American boys and girls. Such facilities were not constructed for several years: the first, for white girls, was built in 1918 in Moore County and called Samarcand.[8]

Post-World War II

In 1948 as part of continuing statewide efforts to limit "feeblemindedness" and improve the population, the Stonewall Jackson Training School was the site of sterilization by vasectomy of six teenage white males, in operations authorized by the state Eugenics Board. Most sterilizations were performed on girls and women rather than boys or men. North Carolina was one of the last states that continued to perform sterilizations on people under state care.[9]

During the decades of its existence, the School was criticized for abuses common in many detention facilities, such as overcrowding and prisoner violence. At its peak the facility held about 500 youths. At times there were inhumane conditions in which youths were attacked and raped by other inmates. Prison activist Russell Smith stated he suffered such attacks there when imprisoned in the 1960s from age 13–15. As an adult (and after time in state and federal prisons), Smith became an activist against prison violence, founding both the National Gay Prisoners Coalition (NGPC) and, in 1980, People Organized to Stop Rape of Imprisoned Persons (POSRIP).

In the 1970s, ideas about treating youths changed, and they were seldom incarcerated for offenses as minor as delinquency. The state reduced the population at the facility. The size of the campus had been reduced earlier when the extensive agricultural program was dropped. Later called the Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Facility, it was used for serious offenders involved in drug abuse and weapons-related charges. About 150 young men were generally held there. Sixty acres of the facility were enclosed by a 15-foot (4.6 m)-high fence.[7]

Starting in 1992 the center had a Pet Therapy Program, in which youth learned to care for dogs. Animals were sometimes made available for adoption outside the center.[10]

Architectural historian Peter Kaplan, speaking to a 2014 meeting of the Historic Cabarrus Association, called the historic campus "which I understand is now completely vacant ... a remarkable collection of Colonial Revival buildings and one of Cabarrus County’s most impressive architectural groupings."[11]

As of 2015 23 of the 60 structures were used, and most of them were used for storage purposes.[12]

As of 2019 the Youth Development Center served "at-risk youth", allowing them to attend high school or receive a GED.[13] The latest figures show 107 residents.[5]

In 2020, North Carolina State Senator Paul Newton sponsored a bill transferring the historic campus to Cabarrus County along with 238-acre (960,000 m2) Frank Liske Park, which was a farm used by the school and became a park in 1979, leased to the county since then. Demolition of the historic buildings would cost $3.8 million but selling the buildings increases the chance for preservation. This bill has become law.[14][5]

Citations

  1. "National Register Information System  (#84001966)". National Register of Historic Places. National Park Service. March 13, 2009.
  2. "Youth Development Centers Archived 2013-05-17 at the Wayback Machine." North Carolina Department of Juvenile Justice and Delinquency Prevention. Retrieved on August 8, 2010. "Contact Information: 1484 Old Charlotte Road Concord, N.C. 28027"
  3. "Jackson's history dates back to 1909", The Independent Tribune, 2006-09-04, Retrieved on 21 Aug 2008
  4. Peter R. Kaplan and David William Brown (January 1984). "Stonewall Jackson Training School Historic District" (PDF). National Register of Historic Places - Nomination and Inventory. North Carolina State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved August 1, 2014.
  5. "Conveying Historic Stonewall Jackson Campus to Cabarrus County and Selling Adjacent Surplus Property Would Ensure Preservation and Be State Revenue Neutral" (PDF). North Carolina General Assembly. April 13, 2020. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
  6. Anastasia Sims, The Power of Femininity in the New South, Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 1997, pp.119-122
  7. "Stonewall Jackson Training School", North Carolina Historical Marker Program, accessed 8 Jan 2009
  8. Anastasia Sims, The Power of Femininity in the New South, Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 2006, pp.119-122
  9. John Railey and Kevin Begos, "DETOUR: In '48 state singled out delinquent boys", JournalNow/Winston-Salem Journal, 2002, accessed 8 Jan 2009
  10. Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Center, Petfinder, accessed 9 Jan 2009 Archived 29 April 2011 at the Wayback Machine
  11. Knox, Michael (May 16, 2014). "Historian: Save Stonewall Jackson school buildings". Independent Tribune. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
  12. "Youth Development Centers Archived 2015-12-22 at the Wayback Machine." North Carolina Department of Public Safety. Retrieved on December 16, 2015. "Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Center 850 Holshouser Road Concord, N.C. 28027"
  13. "Three Rivers Land Trust awards Stonewall Jackson Youth Development Center with grant". Independent Tribune. November 8, 2019. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
  14. Newton, Paul (July 10, 2020). "Cabarrus County gets Stonewall Jackson property, Frank Liske Park land". Independent Tribune. Retrieved July 12, 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.