What is now called Auburn Correctional Facility has been open in Auburn
since 1817, and it is the oldest continually operating prison in the
country. Auburn's claim to being the preeminent American prison is
bolstered by its many firsts. Auburn was the first prison in the world
to house convicts in individual cells and the first prison in the
country to employ a chaplain and put a matron in charge of the women
prisoners. Auburn Prison developed the widely duplicated system of
inmate management that became known as the Auburn System, a totally
silent regimen of forced labor and complete control. Auburn was the
first prison to separate mentally unstable inmates from the general
population and was the site of the world's first use of the electric
chair for capital punishment. The prison was at the front line of the
prison reform movement in the early 20th century when Thomas Mott
Osborne was voluntarily incarcerated and helped found the Mutual Welfare
League in Auburn Prison in 1913.