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Village Squire, 1976-06, Page 12HISTORIC HURON COUNTY GAOL Thousands now tour the building that most people tried hard to avoid for 130 years At one side of the octagonal jail structure the Governor's house joins the rest of the prison. Inside the contrast is even more stunning. 10, VILLAGE SQUIRE/JUNE 1976 The argument rages periodically: is prison a deterent to crime? If any prison ever was, it is the Huron County Jail in Goderich. More than 15,000 persons toured the jail last year its first year as a national historic monument. It definitely does seem historic, but when one considers that only four years ago prisoners were being kept in the budding, it is even more frightening. Even in summer there is a chilling feeling looking at the dull, barren, ,damp -looking walls of the jail cells. One can perhaps picture people inhabiting the building in 1841 when it first opened, but in the enlightened period 130 years later, it seems barbaric. Yet some things, like a notice on the wall informing prisoners of their right to call for a public defender to appear with them in court are timely reminders that this building is part of the near past as well as the early history of this part of Ontario. The small cells were furnished only with a cot with no mattress, and one grey blanket. Bathroom facilities were far from private, but actually they were quite an improvement from the early days of the jail when privies were set up in the yards to serve when the need arose. The indoor plumbing didn't arrive until the 1920's. Some of the progression in the interior of the jail (or gaol as it was originally called), is shown by the rstoration work that has been carried out this year under a Local Initiatives project. The building was erected between 1839 and 1842.'Before Huron could become a separate district including Perth and Bruce it had to have its own courthouse and jail. So in 1838 William Geary began clearing the land and work began building the gaol. The estimated cost was 2680 pounds sterling but it rose to 4868 and this, and an argument over the incline of the tower roof led the architect, Thomas Young to leave the project before it was completed. The walls were made of stone from the Maitland River quarry, a full two feet thick. Dan Lizars brought the stone for the copings from Port Huron. Since the district needed a courthouse and there was no money for one, the plan for a chapel in the central tower was changed to become the courthouse and the meeting place of the county council. TI:ie first meeting of the county council took