Skip to content
Home
Favourites
0
Advanced search
Shopping cart
0
Register
Log in
Images of Edinburgh
Browse map
Area A - Z
Browse by date
Exhibitions
Current exhibition
All exhibitions
Collections
About the collections
Browse by theme
Subject A - Z
The image library for the collections of Edinburgh Libraries and Museums and Galleries
Images of Edinburgh
Browse map
Area A - Z
Browse by date
Exhibitions
Current exhibition
All exhibitions
Collections
About the collections
Browse by theme
Subject A - Z
Act of Parliament for the building the Bridewell, 1791
Document, Paper
Act of Parliament for the building the Bridewell, 1791
Act of Parliament for the building the Bridewell, 1791
Add to favourites
Share
Item record
About this image
Related
Location
Category
Museums & Galleries Item
Item no
52304
Title
The Act of Parliament for the building and maintaining of the 'Bridewell and Correction-house, in and for the City and County of Edinburgh', enacted on the 25th November 1790
Description
One Act of Parliament for the building and maintaining of 'Bridewell and Correction-house, in and for the City and County of Edinburgh'. Produced at Westminster on the 25th Day of November 1790, in the 35th year of the reign of our Sovereign Lord George the Third. Fourteen pages, without a cover, appear to have been removed from a larger book. The terms of the type of building and the way in which it would be run and maintained are set out in forty-eight sections or paragraphs.
Type
Document
; Paper
Accession number
HH6402/2004-010
Copyright
The City of Edinburgh Council Museums & Galleries
The Bridewell was Scotland’s first ‘new’ penitentiary where facilities and treatment of prisoners were far removed from those of the dilapidated and overcrowded old Tolbooth. This new model prison put prisoners to work in activities such as spinning and weaving, and the sale of this work helped to pay for the prison. The Bridewell and its surrounding site were remodelled and extended throughout the 19th century, becoming part of the Calton Jail facility until the site closed in 1927 and all the buildings, except the Calton Jail Governor’s House, were demolished in 1935 to make way for the construction of St Andrew’s House.
Overcrowding in prisons has always been a problem. Throughout the 1780s early attempts were made to design a new facility. Plans were approved on the 25th of November 1790, with this Act of Parliament laying out the terms of the type of building and the way in which it would be run and maintained.
The prolific Scottish architect Robert Adam was appointed as the designer of the new gaol and bridewell. He presented several elaborate plans for the site including a design to build a bridge linking the Old and New Towns of the City but eventually a less ambitious plan was accepted, and a site was selected on Calton Hill for its construction.
No doubt economic factors played a significant part in the selection of his pared down design and although the 1790 Act of Parliament set out plans to build a Bridewell, a house of correction and a prison, only the Bridewell was constructed.
Exhibitions with this item
Auld Reekie Retold ; New Stories of an Old City
Other views of this item
Related images
Related subjects
Rights and purchasing
Option
Price
Digital File
Electronic file 72 dpi JPEG
£7.32
(inc. VAT 20%)
Add
Digital File
Electronic File 300 dpi TIFF
£37.20
(inc. VAT 20%)
Add
You can view and use digital images for personal and educational use. For more information, read our
policy on image use
.
If you wish to use our images for commercial use, please
contact us
.