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Alcatraz: A Definitive History of the Penitentiary Years Part 10

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The Birdman of Alcatraz.

The Life and Imprisonment of Robert Franklin Stroud.

Burt Lancaster portrayed Robert Stroud in the 1962 cla.s.sic motion picture Birdman of Alcatraz.

Robert Stroud was perhaps one of the most unique and interesting of all the prisoners in the annals of American penology. He remains a historical icon and his legend is woven into the fabric of Alcatraz and its colorful past. However, despite his worldwide fame and notoriety, the public never came to know the real Stroud. His soft image as a gentle bird doctor was the romanticized product of a Hollywood Motion Picture, which largely fictionalized his life story. The true face of Stroud was violent, intricate, mysterious and multi-layered. He was far more complex than the handsome and humbled character that actor Burt Lancaster portrayed in the film chronicling Stroud's life. The movie blended gentle images of small frail canaries tangling their feet in Lancaster's hair into a caring and tender portrait. His real life Alcatraz guardians failed to see or understand the Hollywood parallels. Many of the officers who guarded Stroud depicted him as a genius whose personality was "composed, manipulative, and calculated with vicious, predatory and murderous ideals." By the time Stroud had arrived on Alcatraz in 1942, he was fifty-two years old and had already served thirty-three years in prison.

Robert Franklin Stroud was born on January 28, 1890, in Seattle, Was.h.i.+ngton, to Elizabeth McCartney Schaefer and Benjamin Franklin Stroud. Elizabeth was much older than Benjamin and was a widow with two daughters from a previous turbulent marriage. Robert was the third of four children and he was born into an extremely quarrelsome and tense household. His father had apparently despised the very idea of Elizabeth's pregnancy and some sources indicate that he beat his son frequently from a very young age. Stroud developed a deep-rooted hatred for his father which progressively grew worse as he transitioned into adulthood. His mother, however, had a special protective bond with her young son and favored him over her other children. The scenario was further complicated in 1898 with the birth of Marcus McCartney Stroud, Robert's new baby brother. Robert's father was pleased with the birth of Marcus. Benjamin Stroud had been steadily employed for some time and the family's financial future was much brighter at the time of Marcus's birth.

At age eleven Robert contracted a serious case of typhoid fever and was confined to his bed for several months. Throughout his repeated bouts of retching illness, his mother always stayed by his bedside. Her loyalty further cemented the bond between them and this sealed their already close relations.h.i.+p.

By the age of thirteen, Stroud had become a desperately troubled youth and left home without a penny to his name. Young Bob set out for the small fis.h.i.+ng town of Anacortes, Was.h.i.+ngton, begging for food and money. He would later claim it was here that he first started having s.e.xual relations with prost.i.tutes and venturing into the red light districts. Bob also learned to ride the romanticized train rails and lived by evening campfires with hobos and other runaways. At sixteen Bob finally returned home and offered fabulous stories of his adventurous escapades to his wors.h.i.+ping younger brother Marcus. At this time, Bob attempted to put his life back on track by working at a series of menial jobs. But despite his best intentions, this would prove to be a barren attempt.

In 1908, at eighteen years of age, Stroud drifted up to Juneau, Alaska, where he fell in love with saloon prost.i.tute and cabaret dancer named Kitty O'Brien. Kitty was thirty-six, and she acted as a somewhat motherly figure to Stroud. One article derived from early Alaska oral histories described O'Brien as a "faded, wrinkled, blonde who was a wild-living drug addict, alcoholic and wh.o.r.e." The Daily Record in January of 1909 wrote "Her face is badly marred with sores at the present." She was known by locals for robbing drunks and disorderly conduct, but she had somehow developed a close bond with Stroud. The Record wrote, "They were both degenerates and criminally inclined."

When Robert developed a severe case of pneumonia, Kitty took care of him and helped nurse him back to health, but dark clouds were on the horizon.

Charlie F. Dahmer, was a 33-year old bartender at the Montana Saloon, a popular tavern where Kitty hustled. It was rumored that Dahmer was an ex-boyfriend who was still in love with her. Whatever their relations.h.i.+p may have been, it was to play a decisive role in the events that followed. Notes from Stroud's Alcatraz admission file would later state that "Kitty was addicted to the use of dope" and it was suggested that young Robert might also have been addicted.

The first crucial turning point in Stroud's life came on January 18, 1909, when he murdered Dahmer. There are several narratives of the events surrounding the murder, but the official account given in the Alcatraz Warden's Notebook stated the facts as follows: There are two stories connected with the killing, one of which is that this woman (Kitty O'Brien) did not come home one night; that when she returned to her crib in the morning she told Stroud that she had spent the night with one Charles F. Dahmer, a local bartender in a local saloon; that Dahmer abused her and only paid $2.00 whereas the usual and customary fee was ten dollars; that Stroud thereupon proceeded to a local hardware store, now extinct, and asked to buy a few sh.e.l.ls for his pistol; that the proprietor of the store refused to sell him anything but a full box of sh.e.l.ls; that he thereupon left and returned some time later in the afternoon, purchased a box of sh.e.l.ls, went into the residence of Dahmer, fired five shots at him, three of which took effect in his body, proceeded to rob him of whatever money he had on his person and returned to this woman's crib and gave her the money he had taken from Dahmer. The other story is to the effect that he waited several days before committing the murder, but that the reason was the same in both stories. For this crime, Stroud was sentenced to 12 years in the USP, McNeil Island, Was.h.i.+ngton (rec'd at McNeil about 8-23-09).

Stroud later claimed that Dahmer had beaten Kitty savagely, almost killing her. Furthermore, he alleged that Dahmer had stolen a gold locket that Stroud had given her as a special gift. He later described that when he had walked into her room she was almost dead and that when he had taken her into his arms, she begged: "Kill him Robert... please kill him..." Stroud maintained that he went to Dahmer's small cottage demanding an answer as to why he had a.s.saulted Kitty. Dahmer was resistant and Stroud a.s.serted that Dahmer charged at him and that "it was either him or me." Dahmer suffered a fatal gunshot wound to the head and died instantly. After the killing, Stroud turned himself into the U.S. Marshal's Office. He was subsequently tried and convicted of manslaughter. During his trial, the Daily Record reported that Stroud "appeared to glory in the notoriety that he obtained by the killing." Since the crime had been committed on federal territory, Stroud was sent to McNeil Island, the U.S. Penitentiary located in Puget Sound, Was.h.i.+ngton. Kitty had also been indicted, but charges were dropped due to a lack of evidence.

Robert Stroud in 1909, at eighteen years of age.

Stroud arrived at McNeil on August 23, 1909 as inmate #1854-M and had to learn to live under the rigid prison regulations. The silent system was in full force and the prison rule resembled that of a tough military establishment. Prisoners moved about the penitentiary in drill formation and those who violated the rules were thrown into a dark and unsanitary solitary confinement cell, and fed only rations of stale bread and water. The prison was old and poorly ventilated and lacked any type of modern plumbing. At McNeil, Stroud worked in the prison laundry and quickly became known as a problematic inmate. His records indicate that he was violent and difficult to manage. There were ceaseless complaints of threats made against other inmates.

After serving nearly twenty-eight months at McNeil, Stroud violently stabbed a fellow inmate who allegedly "snitched" on him for sneaking food back to his cell. He was sent to serve time in solitary confinement and received an additional six-month sentence for his hostile act. On September 5, 1912, Stroud was transferred by train to the United States Penitentiary in Leavenworth, Kansas. Robert Stroud had now become inmate L-17431. Leavenworth was known simply as the "Big Top" and was considered as one of America's toughest prisons. The move to Leavenworth also further complicated Stroud's personal life. His family was still in Alaska which isolated him even more from any close personal contact. It is recorded that his mother would not make the trip to Kansas for nearly five years.

Leavenworth Federal Penitentiary in Kansas.

Stroud's first mug shot at Leavenworth, taken in 1912.

Despite his growing reputation as an inmate with a violent disposition, it was at Leavenworth that Stroud started to attend school. His initial foundation studies were primarily in Math and English, but later he undertook more intensive subjects such as astronomy and engineering. Self-study became a newfound outlet for Stroud's energy. But along with his legitimate studies, Stroud also pursued courses in the art of survival, and he crafted weapons under the cover of night from items he obtained covertly. Over the next few years, Stroud would land himself in solitary confinement several times when guards discovered his crudely fas.h.i.+oned weapons and escape tools.

The next turning point in Stroud's prison career began on Sat.u.r.day, March 25, 1916, where Stroud has recounted that he attended a motion picture show in the prison auditorium. Following the film, he was escorted to the mess hall for supper. Stroud would later contend that he didn't feel well and had lost his appet.i.te. To maintain order, correctional officers strolled up and down the aisles, carefully monitoring the activities in the mess hall. A prison guard named Andrew F. Turner made repeated pa.s.ses by Stroud's table, allegedly delivering hard stares each time. Stroud apparently voiced his observation of the guard's behavior to a fellow inmate, thus violating the strict rule of silence. Turner quickly walked over to Stroud and sharply demanded his prisoner number. Stroud had been put on notice.

Stroud's second murder victim, Leavenworth Correctional Officer Andrew F. Turner. This wedding portrait was used during the murder trial.

The following day on March 26th, Stroud returned to his cell after supper to find a basket of fruit and candy on his cot. The armory guard had left a note for Stroud indicating that his eighteen-year-old brother Marcus had come to visit him from Alaska. Stroud learned that his brother had been turned away simply because he had been in the auditorium at the time, watching a movie. He was enraged that Marcus had traveled all the way from Alaska, only to be told to come back the following Monday.

Stroud would later claim he became worried that Turner would report him for breaching the silence rule during the previous meal and that the warden would then take away his visitation privilege with Marcus. He a.s.serted that his only option was to speak with Turner again during the next meal period, to ask whether he had reported him. He said that he planned to plead with Turner for leniency.

The dining hall at Leavenworth, where Turner was murdered by Stroud.

Stroud later recounted his story to fellow inmate Joseph Duhamel, stating that during the next dinner meal and in sight of nearly two thousand fellow inmates; he simply raised his hand to talk with Turner. The true sequence of events that unfolded from this point forward is somewhat sketchy. The two started to exchange words and Turner apparently drew his club from under his left arm. Witnesses state that Stroud aggressively attempted to wrestle away Turner's club, and in a manic rage, pulled a homemade knife and stabbed him violently in the upper chest. Turner fell hard to the cement floor and gasped a final breath before succ.u.mbing to the fatal knife wound. All of the men in the mess hall rose to their feet in shocked silence.

Stroud had just murdered a guard and everyone immediately knew the ramifications. Stroud would surely die by execution. The Captain of the Guard calmly approached the prisoner and asked him in a soft voice to drop his knife. As Stroud started to explain why he had stabbed Turner, he followed the Captain's order and dropped the bloodied knife onto the floor.

In the timeless cla.s.sic Birdman of Alcatraz by Thomas E. Gaddis, Turner is described as a "club happy screw" that was in constant conflict with inmates. Turner and Stroud are said to have had a long history of problematic encounters. However, it should be noted that there is no doc.u.mented proof that Stroud and Turner had any prior conflicts beyond those stated here. At age twenty-six, Stroud had committed his second murder and he was now destined to face the death penalty.

Stroud's trial began in May of 1916, with Federal Judge John C. Pollack presiding. Stroud entered a plea of self-defense, in front of what would ultimately prove to be an unsympathetic jury. The trial lasted for only a few weeks. On May 22, 1916, Stroud was sentenced to death by hanging, to be carried out on July 21st, 1916. However, the judgment was successfully appealed. That appeal began what would be a series of trials and pet.i.tions to have his death sentence reduced to life imprisonment. Stroud's mother Elizabeth hired two prominent attorneys and a skilled psychiatrist but her attempts ultimately proved futile in the courtroom. On March 5, 1920, by order of Federal Judge James Lewis, Robert F. Stroud was sentenced to be executed on April 23, 1920. The hanging was to be performed at Leavenworth, and the prison began construction of his gallows.

Nevertheless, Elizabeth Stroud did not lose hope and launched large-scale campaigns to save her son's life. She enlisted the help of women's groups in letter-writing campaigns addressed to President Woodrow Wilson and the First Lady, hoping to secure an executive order commuting his sentence to penalty without death. Stroud's mother was unrelenting and pa.s.sionately lobbied the White House to review her son's case. She would base her line of reasoning on the argument that her son suffered from mental illness and that this was a genetic trait that ran in her family. Stroud's older sister had been inst.i.tutionalized and his mother cited case histories in which other convicts had been granted leniency for mental disorders.

Her valiant efforts proved successful; only five days before he was scheduled to hang, Stroud was issued a commutation by the President of the United States. It read: NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT KNOWN, THAT I, WOODROW WILSON, President of the United States of America, in consideration of the premises, drivers other good and sufficient reasons me thereunto moving, do hereby commute the sentence of Robert F. Stroud to imprisonment for life in a penitentiary to be designated by the Attorney General of the United States. Signed April 15, 1920, by President Wilson.

The commutation was a tough blow for prison officials. The official notebook of the Alcatraz Warden noted: Rumors were that Stroud was to serve his life sentence in Solitary Confinement. There is no wording, phrases, or riders attached to indicate just how the subject is to serve while confined for the remainder of his life. Such detail was apparently left to the Attorney General or Warden of the Penitentiary.

With no specific direction from the courts or the President, Stroud would have to serve his time under the terms of his original sentence, which stated that he should remain in solitary confinement until his execution. The Warden issued a single statement to reporters that read: "Stroud is to be kept in the segregated ward during his sentence, which is for life. He will never be permitted to a.s.sociate with other prisoners, and will be allowed the customary half hour each day for exercise..." It was a perfectly clear and concise message to the public Stroud would pay his debt. But some recall that Bob Stroud actually embraced the idea of being kept out of the general prison population.

Stroud's fragile family unit began to dissolve after the trial was over. His parents divorced and his father moved to California to look for work. Marcus Stroud was now leading an eccentric lifestyle in vaudevillian shows as Marcus the Great, performing a successful Houdini-like escape act, in which he made use of skills learned from his brother. He formally changed his name to Lawrence Gene Marcus and traveled throughout the country with his act.

Now confined to a small and dimly-lit solitary cell, Stroud worked to better himself through correspondence courses and also took to painting and sketching. There is little doc.u.mentation regarding his activities prior to beginning his bird research. Stroud's biographer Tom Gaddis wrote that Elizabeth had taken a twelve-dollar-a-week job sewing satin casket linings and that Bob started to craft holiday cards to help supplement his mother's income. It was also Gaddis who best captured the beginning of Stroud's interest in birds. He claimed that Stroud found a baby sparrow in the isolation yard during a storm and brought the bird back to his cell to nurture it. Gaddis wrote that Bob would place a sock over the warm light bulb in his cell to create a warm bed, and would feed crushed c.o.c.kroaches to the sparrow with a toothpick.

Before Stroud began studying birds, he hand-painted holiday cards to help support his mother.

Stroud was persistent with his new hobby, and persuaded the warden to allow him to keep and breed birds in his solitary cell. He slowly grew obsessed with this newfound interest, and began collecting materials to make cages, and rearranging his cell in efforts to accommodate his birds. Visitors to Leavenworth were often paraded past Stroud's cell, and were shown the circus-style tricks performed by his small canaries. The guards however were not impressed by his antics. Former Alcatraz Captain Phil Bergen stated that the majority of the custodial staff at Leavenworth felt some level of resentment toward the prison administration for allowing Stroud the freedom to breed canaries.

Stroud launched into a new project of a.s.sembling a small laboratory in his cell, soon after some of his birds fell ill and died. He had become completely consumed with his birds and their needs. He maintained an observation journal to help understand how the various diseases affected his ever-growing canary population. As well as doc.u.menting his observations in detail, he began experimenting with birdseed blends and other pharmaceutically based mixtures. Stroud was allowed to subscribe to a variety of bird magazines, and wrote remarkably detailed theories based on his observations.

Stroud's position was unique. He lived with the birds in a single room twenty-four hours a day and was unable to leave his study. Gradually the bird-fancying community began to take notice of this interesting new enthusiast named Bob Stroud. By late 1929 he was breeding his birds in a lucrative business, and he was able to fully support his mother. In addition to his bird sales, Bob also began marketing Stroud Effervescent Bird Salts and Stroud's Prescription and Salts No.1, which rapidly became popular remedies for bird ailments. He claimed that the Stroud Specific remedies were the first treatments ever marketed to treat avian diphtheria. Stroud performed detailed autopsies to study the causes of death for his stricken birds and composed amazingly detailed ill.u.s.trations of their organs and anatomy. What the public didn't know was that the name and address in Leavenworth, Kansas, belonged to a twice-convicted murderer working from a solitary confinement cell in federal prison.

Della Mae Jones was a widowed middle-aged bird lover who exchanged letters with Stroud after he won a bird that she had offered in a magazine contest. She became intrigued when she learned that the seemingly gentle bird enthusiast who had written so many articles on bird ailments was actually a federal prisoner. Bob and Della began a steady stream of correspondence and quickly developed a close friends.h.i.+p. After a few years of exchanging letters, Della traveled to Kansas to meet Stroud in April of 1931. After one visit, she immediately began making plans to move to Kansas City and help with the bird business. She moved into the same building as Elizabeth, but soon she found herself in conflict with Stroud's dominant mother.

In late August of 1931, Leavenworth Warden Thomas White was directed by the newly formed Bureau of Prisons to disband Stroud's mail order business and to revoke all privileges that allowed him to keep birds in his cell. It was a serious blow to Stroud to have all of his avian studies brought to a halt by prison bureaucracy. He pleaded directly to the B.O.P. with little success. Della and Elizabeth flooded newspaper and magazine offices with plaintive appeals and sorrowful press releases that Bob had written from his cell. Bob's plight drew national attention and public empathy forced the B.O.P. to change its position. The Bureau's newly appointed Director, James V. Bennett, who was only thirty-seven years of age, was sent to Leavenworth to negotiate new terms with Stroud. After Bennett's visit, the Bureau modified its ruling to state that Stroud would no longer be able to conduct private business ventures from his prison cell. His profitable business of bird remedies and breeding would now fall under the umbrella of prison industries. As a result, Stroud would go from making nearly ten dollars per bird to earning only ten dollars a month as a noncommissioned salary.

An article written by Della Mae Jones in 1931, pet.i.tioning for leniency and a reinstatement of privileges so that Stroud could keep his birds while in prison.

Hollywood Actress Betty Field's original contract to play the role of Stella in the motion picture Birdman of Alcatraz. The character was based on Della Mae Jones.

Though this was widely considered to be a harsh ruling, the Bureau did make some concessions. They cla.s.sified Stroud as a special prisoner of the Bureau and provided him with an additional cell adjacent to his own which included additional electrical outlets to help accommodate his research. The prison even went so far as to hire a construction crew to jackhammer a doorway between the two cells. Stroud once again became engrossed in his research and his self-taught explorations into avian behavior, illness and scientific theory.

Stroud's cell with birdcages strewn about, as it was depicted in the biographical film, looked quite similar to his actual solitary cell at Leavenworth.

In 1933 Stroud's first book, ent.i.tled Diseases of Canaries,was published by Canary Publishers. It was based on his magazine articles and his independent research techniques, and was intended to be marketed as a comprehensive and authoritative text on canary care for owners and breeders. His well-written reference was as meticulously researched and structured as an avian encyclopedia. The book was, however, not without its critics. Some of the remedies were later found to be harmful to birds. It also drew skeptical responses from some circles in the veterinarian community. Stroud and his publisher E.J. Powell soon clashed over the book's lack of success. Stroud argued that it was Powell who had been responsible for the book's failure and later attempted to file a lawsuit against him.

Meanwhile Stroud and Della grew closer and they sought to marry, even though Stroud was incarcerated for life. After reading an out-of-date law book from the prison library, Stroud interpreted the Treaty of Paris, struck in 1803, as granting inhabitants of the Louisiana Purchase (which also included the Kansas territory) the right to marry by signing an officiated contract. Stroud typed the contract on the old Remington typewriter he had in his cell, and the following day their unofficial marriage was published in the Kansas City Star, in October of 1933. Della Mae then started penning her name as Della Mae Stroud. Prison officials were furious that Stroud was publicly maneuvering around prison regulations and it was around this time that rumors started to surface regarding his eventual transfer to Alcatraz.

During the next few years, Stroud would lose many of his closest contacts and would leave the cell that had been his home and laboratory for so long. In 1934 Elizabeth Stroud ceased her efforts to support the cause of her son and relocated back to Metropolis, Illinois, along with her daughter Mamie. Elizabeth would have no further contact and she died only four years later in August of 1938. Meanwhile, prison officials began to complicate the visiting procedures for Stroud and Della. By 1936, their relations.h.i.+p had also dissolved. To make matters worse, Ida Turner, the widow of the slain guard, had publicly criticized the Prison Bureau for giving Stroud special liberties and had established a small group of followers.

In spite of these setbacks, the intrepid prisoner continued to conduct and expand his avian research. Stroud had been given professional tools to perform his autopsies, including scalpels and other sharp instruments. He had educated himself in the use of an old microscope that had been donated to the prison by Wesleyan University and claimed that he had logged more than 3,000 hours at the eyepiece. It was also reported that Stroud had made a microtone from sc.r.a.ps of metal and a discarded razor blade which could slice tissue to 1/12,000 of an inch and that he had studied literally thousands of homemade slides. He had spent countless hours sketching his observations in detailed pen-and-ink ill.u.s.trations.

Stroud spent hundreds of hours studying and sketching his avian observations in detailed pen-and-ink ill.u.s.trations. These sketches were a.s.sembled for his book Digest on the Diseases of Bird," published in 1943.

Stroud's Alcatraz D-Block cell, located on the top tier. This was the cell Stroud occupied during the aborted 1946 escape attempt by inmates Bernard Coy, Joseph Cretzer, Marvin Hubbard and Miran Thompson. Following these events, he was moved to cell D-4 on the flats.

Then in the early morning of December 16, 1942, Stroud was awakened without any warning by two guards and was advised him to get dressed and prepare for rea.s.signment to Alcatraz. Now fifty-two years old and having spent over twenty-years in his solitary confinement cell at Leavenworth, he would be traveling by train to California. Stroud had been restricted from taking any of his birds and would only be allowed to carry his books and note journals. His journey to Alcatraz would be one of wonderment as he peered at the landscape through the barred windows of the train. He was viewing a world that he hadn't seen in nearly twenty years.

Stroud arrived on Alcatraz on December 19, 1942, and would now be known as AZ-594. He bypa.s.sed quarantine and was immediately taken to the Treatment Unit with all of his accustomed privileges revoked. There would be no birds on Alcatraz and no special visitors. The press would be left with only rumors about the famous prisoner. Stroud was a.s.signed to Cell #41 in D Block, located at the far end of the uppermost tier. His cell on Alcatraz was considerably smaller than the one at Leavenworth and his privileges were the same as those permitted to his fellow inmates, with the one exception that he was allowed to finish his ma.n.u.script on bird diseases. This change was a tough adjustment for Stroud and he spent the majority of his time proofing the ma.n.u.script for his next book. Following his Alcatraz arrival, staff members at Leavenworth reported that they had found numerous contraband articles, including a still to make alcohol and various crudely fas.h.i.+oned knives all carefully hidden within hollowed sections of his worktables.

LIST OF PERSONAL BOOKS OF ROBERT STROUD #594-AZ STORED IN "A" BLOCK. April of 1959.

Atlas of Avian Anatomy Chamberlain- Stroud's Digest of the Diseases of Birds Stroud.

Annual Review of Biochemistry Vol. VIII 1939, Vol. I 1940, Vol. I 1941, Vol. III 1943, Vol. IIII 1944, Vol. XIV 1945, Vol. IV 1946.

Handbook of Hematology, Vols. I, II, III, IV.

Textbook of Biochemistry, 3rd Edition by Harrow.

Yearbook of Agriculture for 1936 and Vol. For 1943.

Annual Review of Physiology: Vol. I, 1939; Vol. II, 1940; Vol. III; 1 941;Vol. IV, 1942; Vol. V, 1943, Vol. IV, 1944; Vol. VII, 1947; Vol. VIII, 1946; Vol. II, 1945.

Fundamental Principles of Bacteriology Snell Gould's Medical Dictionary, 4th Edition.

Diseases of Poultry Giester, 1944 Perspectives of Biochemistry Cambridge, 1937.

United States Dispensatory, 24th Edition.

Veterinary Medicine (Paperbacks) 19 copies.

Symposia in Quant.i.tive Biology Gold Springs Bio. Laboratories, 1942 Practical Methods in Biochemistry Cambridge, 1937.

Biology of Bacteria Henrici, 1939.

United States Code, t.i.tle #8 and t.i.tle 9 in one Vol.

United States Code, t.i.tle #18 (Paper).

15 Pamphlets University Articles on Birds & Bird Diseases.

Approximately 50 lbs of personal and legal writings in Bores 8 inches X 14".

1 Box Legal Papers.

1 Bundle Personal Correspondence.

1 Box Business Correspondence.

University Courses in Bacteriology, Part 1 & 2.

1 Box Containing Ma.n.u.script to "The Seeds of Destruction" 30 Individually Bound Chapters.

1 Box Containing Ma.n.u.script of "The Mulberry Bush", 28 Individually Bound Chapters.

1 Box Containing Ma.n.u.script of "The Band Wagon", 22 Bound Chapters.

1 Box of Personal Childhood Biography.

1 Box Containing Ma.n.u.script of "The Voice from The Grave" 18 Bound Chapters.

2 Boxes of Original Ma.n.u.scripts of "The Voice from The Grave" and "The Band Wagon."

In late 1943 with the approval of the Bureau and with his brother Marcus acting as his agent, Stroud self-published the 500-page reference ent.i.tled Stroud's Digest on the Diseases of Birds. Marcus had run advertis.e.m.e.nts in various bird hobby magazines, lobbying for advance orders. His efforts had proved successful and he had thus acquired enough funds to publish the treatise to mostly favorable reviews. Though this book was written using scientific terms and carefully indexed as an informational reference, it also served indirectly as a platform to communicate Stroud's personal opinions, which were sometimes overtly arrogant. In the introduction he attacked E.J. Powell, the publisher of his first book, by stating in part, "... my former work, DISEASES OF CANARIES, was hastily executed and badly garbled in the hands of the publisher...." In this book he also contributed to his own image as a gentle bird doctor. In an interesting chapter discussing post-mortem examinations, Stroud wrote: Years of work, of study, of careful observation; the lives of literally thousands of birds, the disappointments and heartbreaks of hundreds of blasted hopes have gone through these pages; almost every line, every word, is spattered with sweat and blood. For every truth I have outlined to you, I have blundered my way through a hundred errors. I have killed birds when it was almost as hard as killing one's own children. I have had birds die in my hand when their death brought me greater sadness than that I have ever felt over the pa.s.sing of a member of my own species. And I have dedicated all this to the proposition that fewer birds shall suffer and die because their diseases are not understood.

The book itself created significant controversy within avian circles. Although it is widely debated whether his remedies were actually effective, he was still able to make scientific observations that would later advance research for the avian species. It is likely that his exhaustive observations were of more benefit to other pract.i.tioners with formal training in avian medicine than his remedy theories would ever be. Nevertheless, many considered him to be a pioneer in his own right.

Not long after the release of this book, the public lost interest in Stroud and his homespun campaigns. He would now spend the majority of his time on Alcatraz studying and learning several languages, including Italian and French. He was also honing his interest in criminal law. He began work on another ma.n.u.script, which would be a 200,000 word a.n.a.lytic history of the federal prison system. This ma.n.u.script became a new obsession for Stroud. He would spend years carefully printing his opus onto legal writing pads. The work was a lengthy manifesto that was highly critical of the prison system of the time and it presented biased theories on penology.

Stroud also spent time playing chess with neighboring inmates and boasting extensively about his endeavors while imprisoned at Leavenworth. Prison reports at Alcatraz continued to describe him as a troublemaker. In one report that required multiple-choice responses, the following items were noted regarding Stroud: Interest and application:... Very lazy and avoids work Ability as worker:... Poor.

Att.i.tude:... Resistant / Obstructive.

Disposition:... Defiant / Agitator.

In May of 1946, the bloodiest and most significant escape attempt ever to occur on Alcatraz left five men dead and several others severely injured. In the course of this explosive event, Stroud would further etch his name in the history of the island prison, as he negotiated with Lieutenant Philip Bergen (who was barricaded in the West Gun Gallery) to help bring an end to the cellhouse barrage of grenades and gunfire. Stroud also would donate several hundred dollars to the defense of the inmates who stood trial for the murder of a correctional officer during the escape attempt. Many believed that this was yet another way in which Stroud communicated his rebellious att.i.tude toward the administration.

In August of 1948, Stroud helped to instigate a hunger strike with fellow D-Block inmates which didn't sit well with prison officials. As a result, Warden Swope, who had the reputation of being a tough disciplinarian, ordered Stroud to be moved into a permanent deep lockdown status inside the prison hospital. Once again, without receiving any notice or explanation, Stroud was walked through the cellblock and up the stairs leading from the mess hall to a new cell.

Stroud's wardroom cell in the Alcatraz Hospital Wing. Initially Stroud was forced to use a bedpan to relieve himself, until his attorneys successfully lobbied the Bureau of Prisons to install a toilet. Stroud spent eleven years locked down in this cell with only one visit to the recreation yard per week, usually by himself.

Stroud's cell as it appears today. Little has changed from the days when he occupied this cell.

His new cell was s.p.a.cious, as it had originally been designed as a hospital wardroom to accommodate up to four patients. The room was painted a hospital style green, typical of the 30's and 40's. It contained little more than a sink, two beds, a steel utility cabinet for storage and a hard metal-framed chair. For the first eight years there was no toilet, and Stroud was forced to use a bedpan designed for non-ambulatory patients, except on the occasions when he was permitted to leave his cell under escort to use neighboring facilities. The only benefit in these new accommodations was that the room had a window facing the Golden Gate Bridge and it was also the only single-inmate cell with running hot water.

Stroud would spend his years there in strict isolation, with only an occasional opportunity to speak with an inmate when his outer door was left open during sick call. His primary link to the outside world was from a sometimes-yielding officer who would consent to a game of chess or checkers and would endure his longwinded stories and perverse opinions. Former correctional officer George DeVincenzi, who served at Alcatraz from 1950 until 1959, was a.s.signed to the hospital ward for several years. George recalled that playing board games and interacting with inmates on a recreational level was firmly prohibited by the administration.

"I could only play a game of checkers with Stroud if the West Gun Gallery Officer was a friend of mine. The gallery officer frequently peered through the port window located at the end of the hallway in the Hospital Ward to ensure I was okay. If the officer was a friend, I could sit at the front of Stroud's cell and play through the bars. It helped pa.s.s the time for both of us..."

Stroud spent his time in isolation absorbed in his ma.n.u.script, and in later years he began exhibiting signs of unusual behavior. During his weekly bathing periods, Stroud would shave all of his body hair, including his face, hands and fingers. He was still considered dangerous by the correctional staff and no one let down their guard with him. Lieutenant Bergen would later comment during an interview, "I can't say I wasn't afraid of Stroud... We all used caution; knowing his capabilities." Fellow prisoner Jim Quillen stated that he frequently conversed with Stroud when pa.s.sing by his cell during the course of his duties as an X-Ray technician, a prestigious job a.s.signment for an inmate. "His outer door was usually open and he would be standing there like an excited dog, anxious to talk with anyone who walked by." A memo addressed to correctional officers on December 20, 1948 sought to end Stroud's freedom to communicate with other inmates. It also implied that on various occasions he was found outside his cell wandering the corridor and talking with other inmates: From time to time it has been noticed that Stroud is permitted to be out of his a.s.signed quarters when other inmates are in the hospital for outpatient treatment. It has also been noticed that he has been able to carry on a conversation with other inmates. It is of course necessary to administer to him as prescribed by the Medical Department, out treatments, baths, taking care of toilet needs or for any other reason it may be necessary to take him from his quarters is to be done when there is no traffic in the Hospital. Under no circ.u.mstances is he to be taken from his quarters when an inmate from "D" Block is in the Hospital for outpatient treatment. He is not to be permitted to carry on conversations with other inmates, and when he is out of his quarters he is to be under constant surveillance by a custodial officer.

Signed, R.H. Tahash.

Captain.

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