When the Prisoners Ran Walpole: 50 Years Later | Session Three

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When the Prisoners Ran Walpole: 50 Years Later

Session Three: Friday, March 24 at 1:00pm | Blurring the Prison Wall: The NPRA, Commissioner John Boone, and Prison Abolition

Speakers:
Bobby Dellelo, NPRA President (1973)
Jim Isenberg, Mass. Dept. of Health and Human Services (1973)
Hon. Paul A. Chernoff (ret.), Boston College Law School
Tony Van Der Meer, Senior Lecturer in Africana Studies, UMass-Boston
Moderator: DeAnza Cook, Ph.D. Candidate in History, Harvard University

In the fall of 1972, the men incarcerated at the state prison in Walpole, Massachusetts organized themselves into a labor union—the National Prisoners Reform Association (NPRA). In March of 1973, when Walpole’s guards went on strike, the NPRA took over the prison and ran it peacefully for two months. Seizing on the opportunities provided by the guards’ strike and by a radical new Commissioner of Correction, Walpole’s prisoners launched an extraordinary struggle for self-determination and an important chapter in the movement for prison abolition.

Marking the 50th anniversary of these events, this symposium brings together the people who made them happen. Panels will include former members of the NPRA and other prison organizations, colleagues of commissioner-turned-abolitionist John O. Boone, and civilian observers. It will also bring a new generation of abolitionist activists into conversation with these speakers.
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