
Main entrance
'HM Prison Pentridge' was an
Australian prison built in
1850 and located in
Coburg,
Victoria. The prison officially closed on
May 1 1997.
Pentridge was often known by the nickname 'The Bluestone College'.
The prison has since been partly demolished to make way for a housing development. The front gate area remains. While the wall around the back has been lowered to a more friendly level for the new homes.
The
1994 Australian film ''
Everynight ... Everynight'' details prison life inside Pentridge's H Division.
Divisions
The prison was split into many divisions, named using letters of the alphabet.
★ A - short and long-term prisoners of good behavior
★ B - long-term prisoners with behavior problems
★ D - remand prisoners
★ E - similar to “A”
★ F - remand and short-term
★ G - psychiatric problems
★ H - high security, discipline and protection
★ J - long-term with record of good behavior
★ Jika Jika - maximum security risk and for protection, later renamed to K Division
Jika Jika high security unit
'Jika Jika' was the name of a 'gaol within a gaol' maximum security section, designed to house Victoria's hardest and longest serving prisoners. It was awarded the 'Excellence in Concrete Award' by the Concrete Institute of Australia before being closed in the middle of controversy after the deaths of five prisoners in 1987.
The design of Jika Jika was based on the idea of six separate units at the end of radiating spines. The unit comprised electronic doors, closed-circuit TV and remote locking, designed to keep staff costs to a minimum and security to a maximum. The furnishings were sparse and prisoners exercised in aviary-like escape proof yards.
In 1983 four prisoners escaped from ‘escape proof’ Jika Jika. When two prison officers were disciplined in relation to the Jika Jika escape a weeklong strike occurred.
1987 Jika Jika prison fire
In a protest initiated by conditions in Jika Jika, inmates Robert Wright, Jimmy Loughnan, Arthur Gallagher, David McGauley and Ricky Morris - from one side of the unit - and
Craig 'Slim' Minogue and three other inmates on the other side sealed off their section doors with a tennis net. Mattresses and other bedding were then stacked against the doors. The windows in the day room were then covered with paper so the prison officers couldn't identify which prisoners caused the ensuing damage. Plumbing was then torn from the walls in the cells to enable the prisoners to breathe after the fire started, as Jika Jika was a climate controlled division and devoid of any fresh air circulation.
In spite of the men's attempts to avoid the toxic black smoke by breathing through the plumbing, prisoners Robert Wright, Jimmy Loughnan, Arthur Gallagher, David McGauley and Ricky Morris died in the fire. Convicted
Russell Street bomber Craig Minogue and 3 other inmates survived.
Victorian Attorney General and Minister for Corrections
Jim Kennan ordered the closure of Jika Jika immediately afterwards.
Grave sites

Ned Kelly the day before his execution by hanging. His remains are buried at the former 'Pentridge Prison' site.
The grave site of bushranger
Ned Kelly and also
Ronald Ryan lies within the former walls of Pentridge Prison. Kelly was executed by
hanging at the
Melbourne Gaol in
1880 and his remains moved to Pentridge Prison in 1929, after his skeleton was disturbed on
April 12,
1929, by workmen constructing the present
Royal Melbourne Institute of Technology (RMIT) building. The gravesite, as of 2005, is covered in many weeds and is largely unkept by the developers, who have fenced off the area until a decision is made on its upkeep. Reverend
Peter Norden, former
prison chaplain at Pentridge Prison is campaigning for the sites restoration. Now, they can't find them.
Notable prisoners
★
Dennis Allen, oldest member of the
Pettingill family. (d. 1987)
★
Garry David, (d. 1993), also known as Garry Webb, responsible for the
Community Protection Act 1990
★
Peter Dupas, Australian serial killer
★
Christopher Dale Flannery, aka Mr Rent-a-Kill, hitman
★
Ned Kelly,
bushranger
★
Julian Knight, murdered 7 people in the
Hoddle Street Massacre
★
Eddie Leonski, the Brownout Strangler
★
Derryn Hinch, Author and broadcaster
★
Clarrie O'Shea, trade unionist
★
Craig 'Slim' Minogue,
Russell Street Bomber
★
John Nicholls,
Carlton footballer
★
Kevin Murray,
Fitzroy footballer,
Brownlow Medal winner
★
Frank Penhalluriack
★
Victor Peirce, member of the Pettingill family, acquitted of the 1988
Walsh Street police shootings. Killed in 2002.
★
Tracy Pew, bass player for
The Birthday Party
★
Harry Power,
bushranger
★
Mark Brandon "Chopper" Read, Ex-criminal and author
★
Gregory David Roberts, Author of
Shantaram, escapee of Pentridge who fled to
India
★
Ronald Ryan - last person to be executed in Victoria in
1967
★
Maxwell Charles Skinner, constant escapee, infamous for commandeering a Coburg Tram in one of his escapes
★
Squizzy Taylor, gangster
★
Stan Taylor, actor and convicted
Russell Street bomber
★
John Zarb, first person to be found guilty of having failed to comply with his call up notice during the
Vietnam War
Timeline
★ 1850's 'F' Division opened
★ 1870's 'G' Division opened as an Industrial Reformatory School
★ 1894 Female prison at Pentridge ('D' Division)
★ 1951 Last woman executed in Australia, Jean Lee is hanged.
★ 1967 Last execution in Australia -
Ronald Ryan (between 1842 and 1967, 186 prisoners were executed)
★ October 1987 - Five prisoners die in a fire in Jika Jika during riots over prison conditions.
Craig Minogue and 3 other inmates survived the fire.
★
May 1,
1997 - Pentridge Prison is closed.
External links
★ http://www.jikamemorial.com/
References