City Directories and History: The 1823 Lancaster County Jail (Palladian style architecture), is a significant example of Robert Mills architecture and reflects his innovative ideas on the proper construction of penal
institutions. The jail is a stuccoed brick building of three stories with Palladian style stone quions and string courses. It features a gable roof, iron grates, first floor windows and doors within recessed arches, and gable parapets with coping and a raised center section. Although Mills never signed his buildings and often failed to sign his plans, a number of building characteristics and facts substantiate the 1823 jail is his design. Some characteristics of Mills’ work are the following: Mills advocated free circulation of air in jail construction, and this was achieved in the Lancaster County Jail by placing barred cages for prisoners in the middle of the room; the absence of a dungeon reflects a Mills innovation in penal reform; classifying prisoners according to their crime was a Mills recommendation, and this was achieved in the Lancaster County Jail by placing prison rooms for debtors on the first floor and other cells were on the second floor; Mills was a member of the Board of Public Works for the State of South Carolina from 1820-1830, and he was referred to in public documents of that period as the “State Engineer and Architect.” Listed in the National Register August 9, 1971; Designated a National Historic Landmark November 7, 1973. [Courtesy of the SC Dept. of Archives and History]
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