Yuma Territorial Prison

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Main Gate
Main Gate
The main guard tower at the park.
The main guard tower at the park.

Coordinates: 32°43′35.5″N, 114°36′51.9″W The Yuma Territorial Prison was a prison in the Arizona Territory in the United States. It accepted its first inmate on July 1, 1876. For the next 33 years 3,069 prisoners, including 29 women, served sentences there for crimes ranging from murder to polygamy. The prison was under continuous construction with labor provided by the prisoners. In 1909, the last prisoner left the Territorial Prison for the newly constructed prison located in Florence, Arizona. It is now operated as an historical museum by Arizona State Parks as Yuma Territorial Prison State Historic Park, a state park of Arizona.

From 1910 to 1914 the Yuma Union High School occupied the buildings. When the school's football team played a game against Phoenix, with Phoenix favored to win, the Phoenix team branded the Yuma team "criminals" when Yuma unexpectedly won; the school adopted the mascot with pride, sometimes shortened as the "Crims"; the school mascot image is the face of a hardened criminal, and the student merchandise shop is known as the Cell Block.

"When the prison was no longer fit to house convicted murderers, we sent our high schoolers there." — A Yuma Union High School Principal, circa 1968.[citation needed]

Cells
Cells
Iron Bunkbeds
Iron Bunkbeds

[edit] Yuma Territorial Prison in popular culture

The Yuma Territorial Prison figured in Three-Ten to Yuma, a 1953 Western short story written by Elmore Leonard, and also in two film adaptations: the 1957 original 3:10 to Yuma (directed by Delmer Daves and starring Glenn Ford and Van Heflin), and the 2007 remake, also entitled 3:10 to Yuma (directed by James Mangold and starring Russell Crowe and Christian Bale). In the 1969 film The Wild Bunch, Pat Harrigan (Albert Dekker) threatens Deke Thornton (Robert Ryan): "You've got thirty days to get Pike, or thirty days back to Yuma." In the 1961 western, The Comancheros, starring John Wayne, Yuma is also referenced.

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