Sugar house prisons (New York) (1776–1783), used by British forces to detain prisoners of war during the American Revolution.
Sugar House Prison (Utah) (1855–1951), first built as a territorial penitentiary; it is now a large, jointly-owned municipal park, owned and administered by Salt Lake City and Salt Lake County, Utah.
Topics referred to by the same term
This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title Sugar House Prison. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article.
and 21 Related for: Sugar House Prison information
SugarHousePrison may refer to: Sugarhouseprisons (New York) (1776–1783), used by British forces to detain prisoners of war during the American Revolution...
Sugarhouses in New York City were used as prisons by occupying British forces during the American Revolutionary War. Out of 2,600 prisoners of war captured...
winter. The park was the location of SugarHousePrison, Utah's first state prison, until 1951 when the Utah State Prison was opened in Draper. 10 pavilions...
private prisons for state prisoners. Central Utah Correctional Facility, Gunnison Utah State Correctional Facility, Salt Lake City SugarHousePrison, Salt...
Imperial State Prison Farm and the Central State Prison Farm) was a Texas Department of Criminal Justice (TDCJ) men's prison in Sugar Land, Texas. The...
Burial Places For Some of the American Prisoners, Who Died in the Old SugarHousePrison, in Liberty Street, During the Revolution, Examined and Refuted. New...
reopen) New York Women's House of Detention Queens Detention Complex Raymond Street Jail Spofford Juvenile Center Sugarhouseprisons (New York) Vernon C....
American Revolutionary War. During the war, he was incarcerated in a sugarhouseprison. Blackleach Burritt was born at Ripton Parish, now Huntington, Connecticut...
15, 1852). "Incidents of the Revolution: Recollections of the Old SugarHousePrison" (PDF). The New York Times. Retrieved February 11, 2011. Lewis, Charles...
British for nine and one-half months, including two months in the sugarhouseprisons, before being released in a prisoner exchange. On November 25, 1783...
at the SugarHousePrison in SugarHouse, Salt Lake City on September 15, 1854. From 1951 to 2022, executions were held at the Utah State Prison in Draper...
led by his future brother-in-law. He was held in the notorious "SugarHouse" prison in New York City in 1780, then occupied by British forces. He escaped...
prisoners are herded together in a stockade prison camp and used as slave labor, doing tasks such as cutting sugar cane or digging in a quarry. These films...
The Purple Gang, also known as the SugarHouse Gang, was a criminal mob of bootleggers and hijackers composed predominantly of Jewish gangsters. They...
at the New York City Hall, the Battery, and sugarhouses. She and her son rowed a boat out to the prison ships in the New York Harbor at night to deliver...
was created as State Route 187 in 1935, serving the old SugarHousePrison on SR-4 in SugarHouse. In 1941 it was moved to the current location, and the...
the Revolutionary War, Stephen Weed was released from the infamous SugarHousePrison in New York City in a prisoner exchange. The New Canaan resident then...
The Wonderful Story of Henry Sugar and Six More is a 1977 short story collection by British author Roald Dahl. The seven stories are generally regarded...