Ships & Auburn Style Penitentiary
- 1850 — September 9, California became the 31st state
- 1851- Convicted men and women were kept aboard ships. The Waban was one of the most famous, purchased by San Francisco Sheriff John Coffee “Jack” Hays
- 1851- California legislature calls for the establishment of the state’s first prison using a convict lease system (or system of profit-driven private prison management) that rejects the congregate penitentiary model or Auburn system that was practiced in the Eastern States.
- 1852- San Quentin State Prison was built on a site known as Point San Quentin in Marin County. Built under the convict lease system system, prisoners were housed in damp, squalid and overcrowded conditions on the prison ship Waban, during construction.
- 1855– Convict lease system is abolished following public outcry over mismanagement, inhumane conditions and frequent escapes. A three person Board of Trustees that included the Lieutenant Governor, is appointed to assume control.
- 1856 — Convict lease system temporarily reinstated on allegations that the Board of Trustees mismanaged and overspent the legislature’s budget allocations, while attempting to address horrific prison conditions.
- 1857 — California legislature authorizes the building of a second state prison.
- 1858 — Legislature permanently abolishes convict lease system and mandates that the state assume full responsibility for prison management.
- 1860s - Reformatory prison movement emerges in the Eastern United States under the leadership of prison reformers Enoch Wine and Theodore Dwight.
- 1870 — Representatives of the California Prison Commission attend the reformatory prison conference in Cincinnati Ohio and embrace ideals for new reformative prison design, classification, indeterminate sentencing, and discretionary parole.
- 1870 – 1877 — Debate over design of second state prison and whether the state should implement an Auburn style penitentiary model or establish a reformatory prison.
- 1879 — Convict labor law passed forbidding the manufacture and sale on the open market of products produced by prison labor. Later legislation decreed that products produced through prison labor in California could only be used for state agencies.
- 1880- Folsom State Prison opens as an Auburn style prison rejecting efforts by advocacy groups such as the California Prison Commission to establish a reformatory style facility.
- 1900 — Women’s Christian Temperance Union becomes involved in California prison issues over the sexual abuse of women prisoners housed at San Quentin.
- 1903 — Legislature launches investigation over allegations of the cruel treatment of people incarcerated in San Quentin and severe crowding throughout the system.
- 1903 — Warden John Thompson argues for the expanded use of extreme and horrific methods for controlling incarcerated people including the expanded use of the notorious full-body strait jacket.
- 1916 — State adopts indeterminate sentencing.
- 1933- California Institution for Women established, the state’s first women’s prison.
- 1941- California Institution for Men established as the state’s first reformatory prison. Noted prison reformer Kenyon Scudder appointed as first director.
- 1942- Earl Warren elected Governor with a promise to reform troubled youth and adult prison systems

