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Rusk Penitentiary Building, Avenue
A and US 69
The abundance of iron ore for use in manufacturing prompted
a commission appointed by Gov. Richard Coke in 1875 to
select this region for a state penitentiary. In 1877 this
19,000-acre tract was purchased form T. Y. T. Jamison and
his wife. Contractors Kanmacher and Denig of Columbus, Ohio,
built this structure the following year. The walls are of
two-and-a-half foot thick sandstone. The administrative
offices, a hospital, chapel, dining area, and cells were
housed here. The prisoners helped construct the Texas State
Railroad from Rusk to Palestine. They built the "Old Alcalde"
iron ore smelting furnace adjacent to this structure. The
furnace produced iron products for construction throughout
the United States and for use in the erection of many state
buildings. Convict labor was used in the area at contract
prices. In 1917 the Texas Legislature changed the facility
to a state hospital for the mentally ill. The building was
renovated and ready for occupancy by 1919 and operated under
the name of Rusk State Hospital. The Department of Mental
Health and Mental Retardation was designated as the
governing body in 1963. This structure became the
administrative center for the hospital.
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