Whips to Walls: Naval Discipline from Flogging to Progressive Era Reform at Portsmouth Prison

Author:   Rodney K. Watterson ,  Rear Adm John D Hutson, USN (Retired)
Publisher:   Naval Institute Press
ISBN:  

9781612514451


Pages:   272
Publication Date:   30 March 2014
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Whips to Walls: Naval Discipline from Flogging to Progressive Era Reform at Portsmouth Prison


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Author:   Rodney K. Watterson ,  Rear Adm John D Hutson, USN (Retired)
Publisher:   Naval Institute Press
Imprint:   Naval Institute Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.50cm , Height: 2.20cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.281kg
ISBN:  

9781612514451


ISBN 10:   1612514456
Pages:   272
Publication Date:   30 March 2014
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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As a local historian I wince like a flogged sailor every time a tour guide tells visitors that the white cement prison on the hill was the inspiration for Walt Disney's fantasy castle. It wasn't, but a good myth dies hard. Thankfully, Rod Watterson's new book not only kills old rumors about the mysterious naval prison, but also adds a critical new chapter to the 400-year maritime history of Portsmouth Harbor. <b>--J. Dennis Robinson, Portsmouth historian</b>


Captain Rodney Watterson has written an engaging scholarly study concerning an important but neglected part of American naval history. The book examines the men who were early naval recruits as well as what measures were used to establish and maintain shipboard discipline and its evolution in the face of moral and political pressures. --International Journal of Naval History As a local historian I wince like a flogged sailor every time a tour guide tells visitors that the white cement prison on the hill was the inspiration for Walt Disney's fantasy castle. It wasn't, but a good myth dies hard. Thankfully, Rod Watterson's new book not only kills old rumors about the mysterious naval prison, but also adds a critical new chapter to the 400-year maritime history of Portsmouth Harbor. --J. Dennis Robinson, Portsmouth historian The brooding hulk of the abandoned naval prison still dominates the harbor in Portsmouth, NH, a monument to nearly a century of military discipline. Now through meticulous research in little-used sources, Rod Watterson has reconstructed the evolution of the U.S. Navy's experiment with progressive prison reform, much of which occurred in that castle-like prison. This is military cultural history at its finest--detailed, lively, and surprising. --W. Jeffrey Bolster, author of The Mortal Sea: Fishing the Atlantic in the Age of Sail Portsmouth prison remains as dark and cold now as it has been for half a century. The story behind the Castle is as silent and unknown today as the story of naval discipline since the abandonment of the lash. Watterson changes all that. He takes you from the navy's shipboard discipline of 1800 to the 20th century when the cells of Portsmouth prison, commanded by a turnkey hand-picked by FDR, miraculously returned 1563 rehabilitated sailor prisoners to the fleet in a single year. Who was this magician? How did he do it? How did the fleet receive his reformed seamen? The answers are all here, and in the answering is a tale you'll not soon forget. --Vice Adm. George W. Emery, USN (Ret.), author of In their Own Words. The Navy Fights the War of 1812 Rod Watterson's Whips to Walls gives fresh insight into an under-appreciated period of naval history--the transition of naval discipline from mid-nineteenth century flogging to a much-needed naval prison system, including the ambitious experiment in Progressive reform at Portsmouth prison. The author has thoroughly researched and clearly documented the Navy's journey between these two extremes in naval discipline. Making excellent use of charts to illustrate historical trends and personal testimonies and anecdotes to round out the narrative, Watterson has written a compelling account of a most curious era of naval history. --Rear Adm. Hugh Don Campbell, USN (Ret.), Judge Advocate General (Navy), 1986-88


Portsmouth prison remains as dark and cold now as it has been for half a century. The story behind the Castle is as silent and unknown today as the story of naval discipline since the abandonment of the lash. Watterson changes all that. He takes you from the navy's shipboard discipline of 1800 to the 20th century when the cells of Portsmouth prison, commanded by a turnkey hand-picked by FDR, miraculously returned 1563 rehabilitated sailor prisoners to the fleet in a single year. Who was this magician? How did he do it? How did the fleet receive his reformed seamen? The answers are all here, and in the answering is a tale you'll not soon forget. --Vice Adm. George W. Emery, USN (Ret.), author of In their Own Words. The Navy Fights the War of 1812


Author Information

Capt. Rodney K. Watterson USN (Ret.) is the author of 32 in '44: Building the Portsmouth Submarine Fleet in World War II. He lives in Hampton, NH.

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