The Dictionary of Sydney was archived in 2021.
Darlinghurst Gaol and the National Art School
 Entrance to Darlinghurst Gaol 1887, Mitchell Library, State Library of NSW (SPF/169)
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Construction of the gaol started with convict labour in 1822, the position of the gaol on the high ridge overlooking the town meant to be a reminder to those labouring below of the power of the state. A lack of funds however saw it sit idle, with no prisoners inside its massive walls for the next nineteen years. Building restarted in 1836, with a new model prison design: a central round observation building, with seven radiating arms and the Governor’s office in the shape of a panopticon. Although built using convict labour, by the time it was ready for use in 1841 the convict system had finished. Located at Taylor Square at the top of Oxford Street, the transfer of male and female prisoners from the old gaol near Circular Quay was done by parading them through the town and up to the new gaol, one of the first parades on a street that would become world famous for parades. The new gaol was to house all classes of prisoners, from debtors and drunks, through hardened old lags and murders, to the condemned waiting to be executed inside its walls – 76 in total. Men and women shared the gaol; their prison blocks separated from each other by high walls, although notes were thrown over them as well as between floors in the segregated chapel. One love letter was found, still wrapped around a piece of slate in the rafters of the chapel during restoration in the 1980s. In 1912 the gaol was replaced by the new Long Bay penitentiary and the prisoners were transferred leaving the site empty. During World War I it was used by the military and as an internment camp for enemy aliens, but once the conflict was over, new uses were sought. It was proposed that it be demolished to make way for a large high school for girls, but the presence of the Darlinghurst Courthouse saw this dropped. Instead the gaol was handed over to the Sydney Technical College for classrooms.
Art student Tom Bass at work on a sculpture at East Sydney Technical College 1948 by Bob Rice, Mitchell Library, State Library of NSW (ON 388/Box 006/Item 066)
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