Mount Eden Prison

Discover Uptown Auckland

Mount Eden Prison

Auckland, Auckland 0622, New Zealand

Created By: Uptown Business Association

Information

Every day, thousands of Aucklanders drive along the Southern Motorway past the cluster of old and new prison buildings on Mt Eden’s lower slopes. The earliest prison on this site, a primitive wooden structure known as the Stockade, opened in 1856. From about 1877 it was replaced, bit by bit, by the much more impressive stone prison which still stands there 150 years later.

In that time Mt Eden Prison has seen numerous hangings, floggings, riots and escapes, and has housed such distinguished inmates as the Tuhoe prophet Rua Kenana, WW1 naval officer Count Felix von Luckner, serial escaper George Wilder, feminist heroine Sandra Coney and former Waitemata mayor Tim Shadbolt. The last inmates were finally moved out in 2011 and the disreputable old relic has stood empty ever since while the Corrections Department contemplates its potential future use or demolition.

The newer and far more secure prison buildings standing directly alongside make a sharp contrast with Mt Eden’s outdated design and decaying materials. Yet the old villain remains an imposing and compelling structure – one of the most instantly recognisable buildings in the country.

The massive stone boundary wall that still surrounds much of the old Mount Eden prison complex is older than the buildings inside it, dating from the period of the old wooden Stockade. This undeniably impressive work of Victorian penal architecture was designed with several features to render it unclimbable. Although the outside surfaces were rough-hewn, all the wall’s interior faces were dressed smooth and its corners were rounded to prevent nimble prisoners from wriggling up inside a right angle. The wall was topped with a coping of smoothly dressed stone to resist grappling irons or frantically grasping hands. Tunnelling underneath was never a realistic possibility given the site’s volcanic rock substratum. The quality of construction, by gangs of prison labourers overseen by highly skilled stonemasons, is apparent more than 140 years later, as the wall still stands tall, straight and regular in all dimensions.

The entire external structure was built from the dark grey basalt that the prisoners quarried nearby. Every door and window opening was topped by an arch with a central keystone, although these magnificent examples of Victorian stonemasonry were mostly replaced later by concrete beams. The windows were heavily barred and the wrought iron cell doors pierced with a small window. At the end of each corridor hot and cold baths were installed, and prisoners were required to use them weekly. An unfortunate dogleg entrance to these bathrooms obscured them from the view of warders in the passageways, and they were favoured locations for numerous rapes and beatings, sometimes fatal, in years to come. The building had no heating, insulation or damp-proofing and proved bitterly uncomfortable in Auckland’s dank winters.

Words: Mark Derby, who is a Wellington historian and writer. These words are adapted from his latest book, Rock College – an unofficial history of Mount Eden Prison (Massey University Press, 2020.)

This point of interest is part of the tour: Discover Uptown Auckland


 

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