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Sunday, January 30, 2022

Wednesday, February 2: Rare Books Open House!

Come out to the Riesenfeld Center's first rare books open house of the semester, this Wednesday, 12 p.m. to 3 p.m.!

Enjoy snacks and drinks, and see treasures from the library's rare books and special collections.  If you would, please indicate the visit time frame that would be most convenient on this form.

When: Wednesday, February 2, 12 p.m - 3 p.m.
Where: Riesenfeld Rare Books Research Center*
What: Rare books, individually bagged snacks and Valentine's candy, and refreshments!


(*The Riesenfeld Center is in N30, on the subplaza past Student Orgs. in N20.)


 

 


Friday, January 28, 2022

Rare Books Collection: Early American Criminal Law Reform

View of Walnut St. Prison
The Riesenfeld Center holds an interesting range of works on early American criminal law. Some of these highlight new approaches to crime and punishment in the colonies and early republic. 
The material offers food for thought on the history of American criminology and penology, and reveals trends that influenced philosophical shifts in the later 18th century, particularly around Philadelphia, which found itself at the forefront of innovation.   
 
England's criminal laws featured more than 200 capital offenses by the late 18th century and had a natural influence in early America. Penalties in the colonies were also harsh, even if executions were less frequent, due to a smaller population and a more inchoate legal administration, and in some places more restrictive statutes and interpretation. In the colonies and under English common law, public shaming, including wearing a visible letter, bearing a permanent mark of the crime, or being kept in a pillory or stocks, was not uncommon, together with whipping. Fairly steep fines for lesser offenses were also common. 
 
Prisons had a long history by then, but the movement toward prisons as a particular supervisory system supported by theories of work and rehabilitation coalesced around practical and religious concerns. In early modern England, workhouse prisons were constructed for individuals considered the "idle poor," to make them more productive. The movement was strengthened by a religious belief that vagrants and the idle, as well as certain criminals with whom they were often grouped, could be morally improved by work in a disciplined setting. Still,
not unusually, early prisons threatened the lives of their inmates with unsanitary conditions, neglect and worse.
 
In early America, Quakers were leading voices for moral rehabilitation. In Quaker William Penn's "Frame of Government" for Pennsylvania of 1682, the outlined penal regime provided that "all prisons shall be workhouses for felons, vagrants, and loose and idle person; whereof one shall be in every county." Another clause had it that "all prisons shall be free, as to fees, food and lodging," taking aim at practices that tended to the extortion of inmates. Penn's workhouse provision for felons was significant in a legal system that prescribed hanging for felonies. In the first statutes passed by Penn's assembly in 1682, death was decreed only for murder, though the colonial assembly's moderate criminal laws were rejected by the English government. Felons in the colonies, however, as in England, sometimes got off more lightly for first offenses. They availed themselves where they could of "benefit of clergy," even as laymen, and could receive a lesser penalty (often branding). This legal fiction, along with pardons, sometimes mitigated the harshest criminal penalties. 
 
The Enlightenment also contributed new strands of thought. Most importantly, the Milanese jurist Cesare Beccaria (1738-1794), in his famous Essay on Crimes and Punishments in 1764, deeply questioned the rationality and efficacy of the death penalty and judicial torture, and argued that penalties must be made proportionate to crimes. Punishment beyond what was strictly necessary was tyranny. Beccaria's work was quickly translated from Italian and became an instant classic in Europe. As Professor John Bessler has demonstrated, the Essay also had a profound impact in the colonies, where it was read by the likes of Adams and Jefferson. In attempting to reform Virginia laws in 1776, Jefferson proposed a bill that would allow the death penalty only in cases of murder or treason; it was defeated by one vote. Some states at least adopted
language in their early constitutions that sought to reduce and avoid "sanguinary laws."
 
Criminal law reform and prison reform were enduring issues in the early republic. One center of innovation was Philadelphia, where strands of Enlightenment and Quaker reformist thought met. There leading intellectuals, like James Wilson and Benjamin Rush, inveighed against harsh punishments, particularly the death penalty, and pressed on arguments for greater proportionality. Philadelphia's Walnut Street Prison became an early experiment in a new penology. Built in 1773, it was modified in 1790 to treat serious felons (who were subject earlier to the death penalty) to solitary confinement. This was the original idea behind a "penitentiary." The Quakers who championed the project thought that intense personal reflection would lead to repentance and moral rehabilitation, and were ignorant of the damage caused by isolation.

Visitors to the prison, like Robert Turnbull in A Visit to the Philadelphia Prison (1796), observed work done in skilled workshops of "carpenters, joiners, turners, shoemakers, weavers and taylors," whose maintenance was paid for by the profit of their labor. Turnbull praised the system and the newly sanitary conditions, but noted the silence imposed on prisoners and the extent of prison segregation. In his On the Prisons of Philadelphia (1796), European observer the Duc de la Rochefoucauld (1747-1827) lauded the absence of physical punishment from guards or violence between inmates. He found the meals, which included meat, commendable, and explained a system whereby those judged as rehabilitated by overseers were released with some money from their labor. Despite the praise, the system was draconian in new ways. But it appealed to contemporaries and influenced the design of many other prisons, being later partly modified by the "Auburn system," which shared similar features.
 
These and other works permit some comparison of these systems in their idealized forms, and show development, decay, variations, criticism, and legislation that attempted further reforms. Recent work sheds good light on these issues of early American criminology and criminal law reform, including several below:
 
Bessler, John D. The Celebrated Marquis: An Italian Noble and the Making of the Modern World. Durham, N.C.: Carolina Academic Press, 2018; and idem, The Baron and the Marquis: Liberty, Tyranny, and the Enlightenment Maxim That Can Remake American Criminal Justice. Durham, N.C.: Carolina Academic Press, 2019.
 
Rubin, Ashley T. The Deviant Prison: Philadelphia's Eastern State Penitentiary and the Origins of America's Modern Penal System, 1829-1913. Cambridge: Cambridge UP, 2021.
 
Shapiro, David M. "Solitary Confinement in the Young Republic." Harvard Law Review 133, no. 2 (2019): 542-98.    


   - Ryan Greenwood, Curator of Rare Books and Special Collections

Monday, December 6, 2021

Finals Study Break: Thursday, December 9!

Come out this Thursday, December 9, from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., for a study break before finals! 

Grab some coffee and tasty freshly-baked donuts outside of the Riesenfeld Rare Books Center in N30.  The Rare Books Center is on the subplaza, at the end of the hallway past the Student Orgs in N20.

When: Thursday, December 9, 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.
Where: Outside the Riesenfeld Rare Books Center (N30, subplaza level). 
What: Coffee and donuts!

Good luck on finals, and best wishes for the holidays from the Law Library!

decorative snowflakes


Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Rare Books Collection: A Rare Volume of Cherokee Laws

Copy of document from the collection
The Riesenfeld Center has a strong collection of American Indian law, with holdings of treaties concluded between the United States government and native tribes in the nineteenth century. Featured in the collection are also letters, petitions, reports, and other communications between various tribes and the federal government; constitutions and laws made by native communities; and other publications that deal with important questions related to sovereignty, land rights, and internal organization, among others. Together the material chronicles the difficult, often painful, history of relations between American indigenous communities and the government. At the same time, it sheds light on tribal lawmaking, courts, and important aspects of social and political self-determination in the 19th and 20th century.


A man in a turban, smoking a pipe, holding a syllabary
Among this rich material, laws relating to the Cherokee Nation in particular are varied and notable. Many items reflect attempts by the nation to maintain autonomy and communal land in Indian Territory (IT), today part of Oklahoma, to which most Cherokee were forcibly removed as a result of the Trail of Tears. A collection item (above) that captures the significance of printed law within the Cherokee community is a very rare compilation of laws, produced in 1852 in Tahlequah, IT, the nation's capital from 1839. The laws are printed in the Cherokee language, based on a syllabary developed by the famed Sequoyah, who developed a writing system for the language in the early 1800s. Sequoyah was revered for the work: Cherokee printers published in Cherokee and many Cherokee learned to read it in the 1820s. The printing of laws at Tahlequah began in 1841. From the beginning, legal texts could be found in English and Cherokee, though Cherokee language editions are particularly scarce today. Our 1852 volume, collecting earlier laws, was printed by John Candy and Mark Tyger (Damaga). The translation into Cherokee was likely by Hercules T. Martin together with Joseph Blackbird. In our copy, and as in some family Bibles, the names of one generation of the Fodder family are written out (on left-hand page above), including Sequoyah, who was likely named after the founder of the writing system. The book suggests the personal, familial, and tribal significance that a collection of law could carry, particularly one produced in the Cherokee language. 

   - Ryan Greenwood, Curator of Rare Books and Special Collections  


Cherokee syllabary
Original Cherokee syllabary

       

  


     

Monday, October 25, 2021

Wednesday, October 27: Halloween Rare Books Open House!

All are invited to the Riesenfeld Rare Books Center's special Halloween Open House this Wednesday, from 12 p.m. to 3 p.m.! 

Come out to see spooky treasures from our collection (including witch trials, gruesome murders, and tomes about wicked judges), and pick up snacks, drinks, and Halloween candy!

Come out in costume and get a picture on our Tumblr page!

When: Wednesday, Oct. 31st, 12 p.m - 3 p.m.
Where: Riesenfeld Rare Books Center*
What: Rare books, snacks, drinks, candy!


(*The Riesenfeld Center is located in N30 on the sub plaza, past Student Orgs in N20.)

Invitation with pumpkin basket filled with candy


Tuesday, October 5, 2021

Wednesday, October 6: Rare Books Open House!

Come out to the Riesenfeld Center's first rare books open house of the semester, this Wednesday, 12 p.m. to 3 p.m.!

Enjoy snacks and drinks, and see new and favorite treasures from the library's rare books and special collections:

When: Wednesday, October 6, 12 p.m - 3 p.m.
Where: Riesenfeld Rare Books Research Center (Rm. N30 on the Subplaza past N20).
What: Rare books, snacks and refreshments!

old map










Thursday, September 23, 2021

New Exhibit Open House: Tuesday, Sept. 28

All are invited to an open house for a special new Law Library exhibit, which commemorates and celebrates the life and career of Walter F. Mondale:


When: Tuesday, September 28, from 12 p.m. - 4 p.m.
Where: Riesenfeld Rare Books Research Center (N30 - subplaza level)

Cookies, brownies, bagged snacks and drinks will be available. 

Walter F. Mondale
Walter Mondale ('56) (1928-2021) left an indelible legacy on the national political landscape. His achievements in Congress, the White House, and in Minnesota are a testament to his great skill, courage, and integrity. The Vice President’s enduring contributions were driven by his vision for a country bound by its commitments to fairness, justice, and opportunity. Mondale’s passing this year marked the loss of a great friend, particularly for the Law School’s wide community. Though we grieve his death, we also commemorate his outstanding life of leadership and service.
 
Through photographs, documents, and quotations, the Law Library’s new exhibit traces the Vice President’s career from his formative years in Minnesota to his service as a U.S. Senator, Vice President of the United States, and as an elder statesman. The exhibit also highlights the Vice President's close relationship with the Law School whose building bears his name. For more than sixty years, Mondale's deep involvement in the life of the Law School reflected his generous commitment to his alma mater, rooted in an unshakeable faith in education as the path to a better society. In the same spirit, the current library exhibit honors Walter Mondale’s monumental career and legacy. 

For more about the exhibit, please see this link.

Display cases with Walter F. Mondale exhibit