History Daily - The End of Alcatraz

Episode Date: March 21, 2025

March 21, 1963. The U.S. federal prison on San Francisco Bay's Alcatraz Island is closed. This episode originally aired in 2022. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-free listening and more.H...istory Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.

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Starting point is 00:00:12 time, and timepyshue cosquette. AJ. tootteilta, you know, calliapacels, and newptuoteet. com. It's June 11, 1962,
Starting point is 00:00:30 at Alcatraz, the maximum security prison in San Francisco Bay. 35-year-old prisoner, Frank Morris, grips the bars of his cell and listens as the prison guards make their final rounds for the night. Then one of the guards barks lights out. The moment the cell block is plunged into darkness, Frank leaps into action. He
Starting point is 00:00:50 slips out of bed and crouches by the sink on the back wall. As his eyes adjust to the darkness, Frank runs his fingers along the bricks till he finds a small grate under the sink. Then just to the side, he pushes his hand through the wall. It's not brick. It's cardboard, painted like bricks. Hidden behind is a small hole, just large enough for a man to squeeze through. On his hands and knees, Frank crawls into the tunnel that runs behind the cells. It's a dusty utility corridor, dominated by a maze of ancient pipework that spiderwebs up the walls to the ceiling 30 feet above. Frank quickly scales the pipes, twisting his body past the rusting metal,
Starting point is 00:01:30 up towards a ventilator cover on the ceiling. As he reaches the top, he can feel a breeze blowing in off the ocean. He can see the stars in the night sky above. And with one big heave, Frank pushes the cover aside. He freezes for a moment as the sound echoes through the corridor beneath him. But no guards shout. No alarms, Blair. All is quiet, so Frank pulls himself up through the hole.
Starting point is 00:01:58 Frank Morris will be joined in his escape attempt by two other prisoners. The men have spent months preparing. They've chiseled out holes in their cells. They've made a raft from stolen raincoats. to cross the vicious waters that surround the island prison. They've even fashioned dummy heads from toilet paper and soap to put in their beds to conceal their absence from the guards. Their prison break will not be discovered until the following morning,
Starting point is 00:02:23 and by then it will be too late. The three prisoners will never be seen again. And their escape will have consequences for the old prison, which for decades has housed some of America's most dangerous criminals. Soon many will call for Alcatraz to be shut down, claiming it's not secure enough. And then finally, the following year, the famed prison will close on March 21, 1963. From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily. History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and
Starting point is 00:03:20 events that shaped our world. Today is March 21, 1963, the end of Alcatraz. It's 1853, more than a century before Alcatraz Federal Penitentiary closes its doors. First Lieutenant Zellis Bates Tower clambers up the steep rocks of Alcatraz Island. Tower can feel the wind from the sea on his face. He can taste the salt in the air. And on the summit above him, scaffolding surrounds a new lighthouse under construction. But Tower, a 34-year-old lieutenant in the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, is not on the island to build a lighthouse. He's been sent here to turn the island into a fortress. The territory of California was part of Mexico until five years ago, when in 1848, the region was ceded to the U.S. following the Mexican-American War.
Starting point is 00:04:11 Soon afterwards, the discovery of gold led tens of thousands of people to descend on the newly acquired land in search of their fortune. In just a few years, the dusty town of San Francisco expanded from just a few hundred residents to a boom town with almost 40,000, and the American government is keen to protect its lucrative new land acquisition and has tasked the U.S. Army with building up San Francisco's defenses. A survey of the area has identified the unoccupied Alcatraz Island as a prime location for a fort. Reaching the island's craggy summit,
Starting point is 00:04:44 First Lieutenant Tower looks out across the water. It's obvious why his superiors have chosen Alcatraz. It's in a commanding spot right opposite the Golden Gate, the channel linking San Francisco Bay to the ocean. Still the young engineer is skeptical. Kneeling, he picks through the thin crust of soil for a hunk of rock that lies beneath. He shakes his head as the brittle sandstone crumbles in his hands. He knows that building a fort here, one made of stone, granite, concrete, and brick
Starting point is 00:05:11 will not be fast or easy. And indeed, the project takes six years. A proper dock is blasted out of the rock at the water's edge. And at the summit, nestled beneath the 50-foot-tall lighthouse, a reinforced citadel is built, ringed with 129 cannon. But almost as soon as the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers finishes Fort Alcatraz, America is plunged into civil war. The rapid development of military technology over the following years
Starting point is 00:05:39 renders the fort obsolete. And after the huge investment in this stronghold, the U.S. government tries to find a new purpose for Alcatraz. It's June 1918, more than 60 years after the U.S. Army began construction on Alcatraz Island. A small government boat cuts through the misty waters of San Francisco Bay. On deck, chained and shackled together in pairs, sit a large group of men. Among them is a 28-year-old Ukrainian named Philip Grosser. Grosser chafes at the irons at his wrists and ankles as he peers out across the water. The port of San Francisco is already disappearing into the fog behind him.
Starting point is 00:06:20 Hiding somewhere out in the murk of the bay is his destination, Alcatraz. Like the other men on board the boat, Grosar is a conscientious objector, a pacifist, on principle of he's refused to join the U.S. Army and fight in the First World War. For this, Grosher was court-martialed and eventually dispatched to Alcatraz. The island is no longer the cornerstone of the defensive for the city of San Francisco. Instead, it's been converted into a detention center for military prisoners. The first were Confederate soldiers captured by the Union Army during the American Civil War, and over the following decades, the prison population grew. By the beginning of the 20th century, there were almost 500 prisoners on the island.
Starting point is 00:07:01 and in 1912, the aging jailhouse was replaced with a gigantic new cell block. The prison was now the largest concrete structure in the world, 500 feet long and three stories high. It was completed shortly before the First World War, just in time to house conscientious objectors like Philip Grosser. On his arrival at Alcatraz, Grosar refuses to recognize the authority of the military. He won't stand in formation.
Starting point is 00:07:29 He won't do any work. Eventually, he's sent to solitary confinement. There, Grasher spends 14 days in a damp and pitch-black dungeon, surviving on bread and water alone. But upon his release, Grosher is once again insubordinate, and once again, he sent back to the dungeon. But the endless days in the dark don't break the man's resolve, so authorities devise a new kind of torture.
Starting point is 00:07:53 A cage, just 23 inches wide and 12-deep is constructed in Grosher's cell. He's forced to stand in it, for eight hours at a time. Grosser will endure this punishment for two months before he finally cracks and submits to the military's authority and discipline. He will spend another two years on Alcatraz. And finally, in December 1920, long after the end of the First World War, he and the other objectors are released. But they will not be the last prisoners on Alcatraz. As a vicious crime wave spreads across America in the 1920s, the U.S. government will look for a new place to house its most dangerous criminals.
Starting point is 00:08:31 A prison that will inspire dread among lawbreakers, where confinement is brutal and escape all but impossible. We AJ2twebts, we'll give us tootteelm's seven-vodden taku. In fact-of-dochewater
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Starting point is 00:10:04 Alcatraz prison closes. In a basement room of the island cell block, The flash of a camera illuminates the smirking face of a 35-year-old Italian-American. Every prisoner who steps foot in Alcatraz gets his mugshot taken. But this convict, number 85, is one of the most infamous gangsters in American history.
Starting point is 00:10:23 He's stocky and balding, with long scars that slice along his left cheek, earning him a notorious nickname, Scarface. Al Capone is a symbol of America's recent descent into lawlessness. The Chicago gangster became rich and powerful during the Prohibition, in the 20s when alcohol was banned, an organized crime flourished on the trade of bootlegged booze. As the government fought back against this violent crime wave, Al Capone became public enemy number one. A five-year undercover investigation finally led to his conviction on charges of tax evasion in 1931. Capone was sentenced to 11 years in prison. For a time, he was able to use his wealth
Starting point is 00:11:03 and influence to secure preferential treatment. At Eastern State Penitentiary in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, His cell was equipped with a radio, carpet, houseplants, and expensive antique furniture. But earlier this year, the authorities clamped down. Capone was transferred away from his plush cell to the brutal conditions of the newly opened federal penitentiary on Alcatraz Island. The prison has been renovated and modernized. Guard towers now dot the landscape, and the cells have been reinforced, making escape authorities claim impossible.
Starting point is 00:11:35 By transferring Capone to Alcatraz, the government is sending a clear message to to America's crime world. Lawbreakers will be locked away, no matter who, how powerful, or how wealthy they are, and they will serve every minute of their sentence. After Capone's mugshot is taken, the guards strip and search him. The doctors give him a brief medical examination. Then Capone is hosed down and marched naked through the corridors of Alcatraz, carrying his dark prison-issue clothes. Capone's new quarters sell B-181. Do not have the comforts Capone has grown used to. There are no rugs on the hard concrete floor, no antiques, no potted plants. The only furniture is a stiff bed and a cold metal table. Capone steps inside the cell. As the thick steel bars slammed
Starting point is 00:12:21 shut behind him, the gangster is not smirking anymore. During the four long years he spends at Alcatraz, Capone will try to bribe the guards and corrupt the warden, but his efforts will be in vain. To many, the staff at Alcatraz seem incorruptible, and their steadfastness will help the prison earn a reputation as the toughest in America. It's May 2nd, 1946, 12 years after Alcatraz first opened as a maximum security federal prison. In the main cell block on the island, a 46-year-old convict named Bernard Koi is sweeping the floor. Other prisoners cook in the kitchens or do manual labor in workshops. Bernard's assignment is to keep the cell block tidy. Bernard works his way to the far end of the cells. There he sees a prison officer patting down a fellow convict,
Starting point is 00:13:11 Marvin Hubbard. Marvin's just returned from his cleaning duties in the kitchen, and the officer is searching him to make sure he hasn't stolen anything. But with the prison guard distracted, Bernard makes a move. He drops his broom, grabs hold of the officer, and pins his arm back, while Marvin unleashes a barrage of blows. Soon the officer slumps on the floor, meekly groaning. Bernard and Marvin drag him into an empty cell. They take his keys, lock him up, and go release some other inmates. Bernard, Marvin, and their accomplices have been planning this escape for months. They've been watching the guards closely, studying their routines, and identifying wheat points in their security regimen. In the 12 years the prison has been open, there have been nine escape attempts.
Starting point is 00:13:54 None have succeeded. But that hasn't stopped men like Bernard Coy from dreaming of slipping away from their concrete cells, reaching freedom across the waters of San Francisco Bay. After springing the other inmates, Bernard and Marvin make their way to the gun gallery. There, the convicts quickly overpowered the lone guard and load up with arms and ammunition. Next, they release more prisoners and capture more guards before moving on to the final phase of their plan, using these hostages to seize the prison boat and get off the island. But soon, the plan goes sideways. In order to get outside, the convicts need to open the locked door to the outdoor recreation area. When they searched their hostages, none of the guards seem to have the key they
Starting point is 00:14:37 need. By now, the authorities have learned of their escape attempt. Sirens, Blair, as two platoons of U.S. Marines are dispatched from a nearby base with orders to storm the cell block. For two nights, the besieged prisoners will hold off their attackers. But eventually, on the morning of May 4, 1946, the Marines will push inside, killing Bernard Coy, Marvin Hubbard, and one other prisoner. Bernard's plan failed. But the Battle of Alcatraz, as this violent incident is known, does little a stave off future escape attempts. Just a few years after Bernard's death, a bank robber named Frank Morris
Starting point is 00:15:13 will be sentenced to 14 years for armed robbery. Eventually, he will end up on Alcatraz Island. Once there, he will succeed where Bernard Coy failed, and his daring escape will lead the authorities to close Alcatraz for good. Lapset moved to omitted and we're now now in the time
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Starting point is 00:16:38 A turvallinan Asuntacoppa. It's March 21st, 1968, at the dock on Alcatraz Island. Dozens of journalists and photographers watches the line of shackled prisoners waits to board a boat
Starting point is 00:17:00 that bobs up and down on the water. These guests have been invited here to witness the last day of Alcatraz prison. Alcatraz is three times more expensive to run than any other prison in America. The remote island, surrounded by water, once seemed an ideal location to house criminals.
Starting point is 00:17:17 But exposure to the high winds and salt spray from the ocean meant the buildings required constant maintenance. And over time, prison began to deteriorate. By the early 1960s, most engineers considered it beyond repair. Then in 1962, Frank Morris and his accomplices exploited the dilapidated state of the structure and escaped from the prison. Though many believe the men drowned in the waters of San Francisco Bay,
Starting point is 00:17:42 no bodies were ever found, and the suspicion lingered that the once inescapable prison was no longer. Before long, a decision was made to close Alcatraz for good. So on the morning of March 21st, the last 27 men incarcerated there lined up as normal for their breakfast at 6.55 a.m. The strict regulations that had governed life on the island for decades continued right until the end. After breakfast, the men were taken back to their cells, handcuffed, shackled, and made ready to live. leave the prison for the last time. At the dock, under the watchful eyes of guards, the inmates board the boat one by one. Last in line is 25-year-old Frank Weatherman, inmate number 1576, the last official prisoner of Alcatraz. As Weatherman waits his turn to shuffle onto the gangway,
Starting point is 00:18:32 a journalist shouts out a question. He asks Weatherman about his feelings today, and what he makes of the prison that has been his home for so long. Weatherman turns to look at him and says, In a low voice, Alcatraz was never good for anybody. Then, the last prisoner of the island steps onto the boat. Alcatraz will go on to become a popular tourist attraction. Every year, thousands of visitors will mimic the journey once taken by hardened criminals like Frank Morris, Bernard Coy, and Al Capone. These travelers board a boat in San Francisco, crossing the waters to the rocky island out in the bay,
Starting point is 00:19:07 drawn by the notorious prison and its story that came to an end on March 21st, 1963. Next on History Daily, March 24th, 1603, the Tudor dynasty comes to an end with the death of the English Queen Elizabeth I. From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham, audio editing by Molly Bach, sound design by Misha Stanton, music by Lindsay Graham. This episode is written and researched by William Simpson. Executive producers are Stephen Walters for airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser. Newcotio, Ki-Kiris.
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