Thomas Goree Unit Explained

Thomas Goree Unit
Pushpin Map:USA Texas
Pushpin Map Caption:Location in Texas
Location:Huntsville, Texas
Coordinates:30.6739°N -95.5153°W
Status:Operational
Classification:G1–G3
Capacity:Unit: 1000 Trusty Camp: 321
Opened:1907
Managed By:TDCJ Correctional Institutions Division
Warden:Cynthia Tilley
Street-Address:7405 Hwy 75 South
City:Huntsville
County:Walker County
State:TX
Zip:77344
Country:US

The Thomas Goree Unit (GR) is a Texas Department of Criminal Justice men's prison, located in Huntsville, Texas, 4miles south of downtown Huntsville on Texas State Highway 75 South. The Goree Unit is located within Region I.[1] First opened in 1911, it served as the only women's correctional facility in Texas until 1982, after the women were moved to state prisons in Gatesville. For a period Goree held the state's sole female death row inmate, until her conviction was changed to a non-capital offense. There was more than one death row female at Goree in 1979.

History

The unit was named after Major Thomas J. Goree, who, in the late 19th century, served as a prison superintendent.[2] The unit was first established in 1907,[1] and it opened in 1911 as the Goree State Farm for Women, a women's prison. The facility had separate portions for White and African-American women. White and Hispanic women worked in the garment factory, while Black women worked in the fields.[3]

In the 1930s Goree included the main building, separate sets of dormitories for black and white prisoners, an orchard, a cannery, a barn, crop fields, a hen house, and a cemetery for prisoners who had not been taken by surviving relatives. The dormitories had bars bolted onto the windows. During that decade, 150 prisoners resided at Goree. The Goree All Girl String Band, a group of prisoners from the unit, performed in the 1940s.[4]

Goree, within a short driving distance from the Texas Department of Criminal Justice headquarters, had been rebuilt and expanded during the administrations of O. B. Ellis and George Beto. Robert Perkinson, author of , said that Goree's main building "showcases a bygone nod to rehabilitation."[5] The main building has dormitories which face gardens. Instead of bars, the residential rooms use decorative latticework. A visitor stated that Goree appeared "more or less like a college dormitory."[5]

On one occasion Goree held a female death row prisoner, Mary Anderson,[6] Texas Department of Corrections (TDC)# 607. Anderson was sentenced to death on October 31, 1978,[7] but her death sentence was reversed in 1982.[8] The sentence was changed to murder and Anderson, who received a 50-year sentence, became TDC#285253. She was paroled on January 14, 1991.[7]

In the 1980s the state moved women prisoners to facilities in Gatesville.[3] In 1982 Goree was converted into a men's prison. The prison authorities placed wire mesh on the dormitory windows. Prisoners are not permitted to be in the gardens. The prison gained a single perimeter fence with concertina wire; previously the area was unfenced.[5]

Notable inmates

Male:

Female:

External links

Notes and References

  1. "Goree Unit"; . Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Retrieved on September 29, 2011.
  2. "1995 Annual Report." Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Retrieved on July 21, 2010.
  3. "The Goree State Farm for Women." Texas State Library & Archives Commission. Retrieved on July 18, 2010.
  4. Hollandsworth, Skip. "O Sister, Where Art Thou?" Texas Monthly. May 2003. 1. Retrieved on October 20, 2011.
  5. Perkinson, Robert. . First Edition. Metropolitan Books, 2010. p. 252. .
  6. Jackson, Bruce and Diane Christian. In This Timeless Time: Living and Dying on Death Row in America. University of North Carolina, 2012., 9780807835395. p. 143.
  7. "Offenders No Longer on Death Row." Texas Department of Criminal Justice. Retrieved on January 25, 2016.
  8. O'Shea, Kathleen A. Women and the Death Penalty in the United States, 1900-1998. Greenwood Publishing Group, 1999., 9780275959524. p. 340.
  9. Perkinson, Robert. . First Edition. Metropolitan Books, 2010. p. 251. .
  10. "Strip-teaser Candy Barr given parole." The Press-Courier. Saturday March 25, 1963. Page 20. Retrieved from Google News (1 of 10) on October 20, 2011.