Yuma Territorial Prison:
Prison Hill Cemetery

Marker:               
Prison Hill Cemetery at Yuma Territorial Prison

Location:           
220 Prison Hill Road
Yuma, Yuma County, Arizona
32.727093, -114.615098

Historical Significance:     
The Yuma Territorial Prison was the first state penitentiary in Arizona. On July 1, 1876, the first seven inmates entered the prison and were locked into the new cells they had to build themselves.

The prison was under continuous construction, with labor provided by the prisoners. Over the next 33 years, the prison would become home to 3,026 prisoners. When the prison ran out of land to build on, a new facility was built in Florence, Arizona. On September 15, 1909, the last prisoners were transferred to Florence. The prison is on the National Register of Historic Places.

Dedicated:    
1961

Sponsor:   
Yuma Chapter, NSDAR

A collage of two snapshots. (1) An arched entrance to a fenced area containing a low building. This is in a park-like setting with a flagpole flying flags of the United States and Arizona. (2) A desert setting of a fenced area without plants. Several rows are laid out with what appears to be about 20 graves, each covered with large rocks.
Prison Hill, March 2019.
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