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BRUSHY MOUNTAIN'S INMATE PET - GERONIMO

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I recently came across some old black & white photographs of Brushy Mountain Correctional Complex I took sometime in 1973, while on assignment for a local area newspaper. The complex was then known as Brushy Mountain Prison or simply as “Brushy". Brushy shut down for about 4 years beginning in 1972 and one day I was given the un-escorted run of the deserted prison.

I was really impressed and depressed by the lonely cramped cells, with pictures taped to their walls, and thought about the men and stories that passed over this barber's chair.

As I walked the bases of the baseball diamond, which had a shear bluff for a backstop behind home plate, contemplating the history and silence of the place, Geronimo, a deer brought to the prison by one of the guards and kept as a pet by the inmates, walked up behind me and innocently nudged my arm. Thinking I was all alone in the deserted facility, I was so startled I yelled out loud from fright – luckily no one heard me but Geronimo. He had no fear of me. He was used to lots of attention and was starved for a little companionship and probably wanted a treat.

The cell blocks consisted of 4 caged tiers, the cells contained 4 steel bunks, one toilet, and all the walkways were caged.

Since I could find only brief mentions of Geronimo I thought I would post these shots as proof he lived and spent his life bringing some enjoyment to the inmates of "Brushy". You can see these photos at [http://mushysmoochings.blogspot.com/2006/01/geronimo-brushy-mountains-inmate-pet.html

.

Mushy (talk) 01:21, 26 January 2009 (UTC)[reply]

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Just a note that link 7 (regarding closing of Brushy Mountain) goes to a page, offering the domain name for sale. (And I wanted to see that news about the closing. Oh well...)

Here is a link that works: http://www.tn.gov/correction/institutions/closed/bmcx.html

Thanks! Kenneth Parker, Seattle, WA

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Mountain

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Brushy Mountain State Penitentiary opened in 1896 in the aftermath of the Coal Creek War, an 1891 lockout of coal miners that took place in Coal Creek and Briceville, Tennessee, after miners protested the use of unpaid convict leasing in the mines. This labor conflict was eventually resolved in favor of the coal miners, with a bill passing the Tennessee state legislature to abolish the convict labor system, to be replaced by the Brushy Mountain Mine and Prison.[1][2] The mountainous, secure site was located with the help of consulting geologists, and Brushy Mountain convicts built a railroad spur, worked the coal mines on site, operated coke ovens, or farmed. At the end of all the state's convict lease arrangements on January 1, 1896, some 210 of those prisoners became the first inmates of Brushy Mountain.[3]

The original prison was a wooden structure also built by prisoner labor. It was replaced in the 1920s with a castle-like building constructed from stone mined by prisoners from a quarry on the property.[1][4] As of 2008 Brushy Mountain was the oldest operating prison in Tennessee.

The prison is nearly encircled by rugged wooded terrain in a remote section of the Cumberland Plateau, adjacent to Frozen Head State Park and Natural Area. Escape attempts were infrequent and almost always unsuccessful. Perhaps the best-known escape attempt occurred on June 10, 1977, when James Earl Ray, the assassin of Martin Luther King Jr., escaped with six other inmates by climbing over a fence. Ray was captured less than 58 hours later in rugged mountain terrain 81⁄2 miles from the prison.[5] The prison was closed in 1972 after a strike by prison guards protesting unsafe working conditions. It reopened in 1976.[1][2] Brushy Mountain was the only unionized prison in the state. The union worked closely with state legislators to improve the working conditions for correctional staff across the state. Under governor Lamar Alexander attempts were made to squeeze the union out of existence but his efforts were fruitless. Additional attempts over the years were attempted but they proved fruitless also. Many efforts to close the prison were attempted long before the 2009 closure. In 1998 Brushy Mountain Prison was administratively joined with Morgan County Correctional Complex. With the joining of the two institutions both prisons became unionized.

In the 1980s Brushy Mountain ended its long-standing function as a maximum security prison and assumed a mission as a classification facility.[1] In its final operations, it had a capacity of 584 and was used as the state's reception/classification and diagnostic center for East Tennessee. It housed all custody levels of inmates, although it retained a maximum security designation due to the ninety six bed maximum security annex contained within the prison walls. These ninety six beds were used to house the state's most troublesome inmates. The last warden was Jim Worthington.[6][7]

The prison closed June 11, 2009.[8] Its functions were transferred to the Morgan County Correctional Complex.[1] In 2018, Brushy Mountain was re-opened to the public for tours, private events, car shows, and concerts. Brushy also houses a distillery that produces moonshine, vodka, whisky, and liqueurs.[9] 2600:6C5D:567F:E2E5:7C1E:2E:C96C:3CD9 (talk) 13:40, 6 October 2022 (UTC)[reply]