Thomas mott osborne biography of martin

          Society and Prisons: Some Suggestions for a New Penology is a book by Thomas Mott Osborne that was first published in by Yale University Press.

        1. Society and Prisons: Some Suggestions for a New Penology is a book by Thomas Mott Osborne that was first published in by Yale University Press.
        2. Osborne was born in in Auburn, New York.
        3. The enfant terrible of progressive thought and of a town whose land and sustenance derive from settler colonialism, white supremacy.
        4. A narrative of personal experience during a week of voluntary confinement in the state prison at Auburn, New York by Thomas Mott Osborne.
        5. Since this excerpts presentation focuses on Thomas Mott Osborne, the lists for the letters in Osborne Family papers from his three eras to , to.
        6. The enfant terrible of progressive thought and of a town whose land and sustenance derive from settler colonialism, white supremacy..

          Thomas Mott Osborne

          American prison officer and reformer (1859–1926)

          Thomas Mott Osborne

          Osborne, c.

          1910

          In office
          December 1, 1914 – December 31, 1915
          Appointed byJohn B. Riley
          Preceded byGeorge S. Weed
          Succeeded byGeorge Washington Kirchwey
          Born(1859-09-23)September 23, 1859
          Auburn, New York, US
          DiedOctober 20, 1926(1926-10-20) (aged 67)
          Auburn, New York, US
          Spouse

          Agnes Devens

          (m. 1886; died 1896)​
          Children4, including Lithgow
          EducationHarvard University, Harvard Law School

          Thomas Mott Osborne (September 23, 1859 – October 20, 1926) was an American prison officer, prison reformer, industrialist and New York State political reformer.[1] In an assessment of Osborne's life, a New York Times book reviewer wrote: "His career as a penologist was short, but in the interval of the few years he served he succeeded in revolutionizing Am