Sing Sing Prison Museum

Sing Sing Prison Museum The proposed museum will display, for the most part, the Sing Sing story unfolded over time. A library was installed, along with classrooms for the inmates.

The Sing Sing Prison Museum's mission is to share stories of incarceration and reform, past and present, and bring people together to imagine and create a more just society. Chronological organization will help visitors connect what for many may be a very unfamiliar part of American history to the more commonly known succession of American events and ideas. As visitors learn how America, as a new

nation with its own identity to establish, was compelled to – and continues to – grapple with ideas of crime and punishment – they will also learn how central this history is to the understanding of our culture. An exhibit of the 1825 Cellblock will be recreated in the taller section of the Power House. In 1825, $20,100 was appropriated to buy the 130-acre site on the Hudson River for what is now the Sing Sing Correctional Facility. By May of that year, 100 convicted criminals were transported from the Auburn Prison to the new site in the town of Mount Pleasant (also the prison's original name), but without "a place to receive them or a wall to enclose them." Prisoner labor was used to excavate marble from a nearby quarry and construct the prison. The initial construction included a cellblock 476 feet long, 44 feet wide and four tiers high, with a capacity of 800 cells, all built of Sing Sing marble. Each cell was 7 feet deep, 3 feet 3 inches wide and 6 feet 7 inches high. On November 26, 1828, the convicts were locked into their cells for the first time. Once the prison was completed, the prisoners continued to mine Sing Sing marble, which was shipped to New York City and used in the construction of notable buildings such as New York University, Grace Church, the New York State Capitol Building and the United States Treasury Building. Two additional buildings were built at the prison by 1830, one containing a hospital and a kitchen, and the other a chapel for 900 men. At the advent of the 20th Century, prison reform made dramatic changes in the way inmates were treated. The lockstep was abolished in 1900, and the striped uniform followed four years later. Inmates were gradually permitted "freedom of the yard," and baseball was introduced on the recreation field. For many years, the New York Yankees visited the jail to play a game with the inmates. It is reported that Babe Ruth made his longest home run hit on the prison field. Overseers of Sing Sing in the first half of the 1900s witnessed the construction of new cellblocks, a new chapel, an administration building, storehouse, mess hall, bath house and barber shop. Warden Lewis E. Lawes allowed a former New York City newspaper editor convicted of murder to build a large birdhouse within the prison grounds. Sing Sing also became a popular movie backdrop during the 1930s and 1940s, especially for films featuring James Cagney, and was used in 1995 for remakes of "Kiss of Death" and "Bullet."

04/14/2026

Link to donate:
singsingprisonmuseum.org/plantsforprisons

A partnership between Sing Sing Prison Museum & Teatown Lake Reservation

With support from Hudson Link for Higher Education in Prison

Your contribution will help us get hundreds of plants into the gardens of New York correctional facilities.

Today marked the launch of our 2026 season. It’s been a beautiful day hosting the community for our first public walking...
04/11/2026

Today marked the launch of our 2026 season. It’s been a beautiful day hosting the community for our first public walking tour along the Hudson.

​Thanks to everyone who joined us for the kickoff!

With a $10 donation you can impact so many people's lives this summer! Please check out this SSPM project.
04/09/2026

With a $10 donation you can impact so many people's lives this summer! Please check out this SSPM project.

Sing Sing Prison Museum and Teatown present Plants for Prisons to bring the restorative power of gardens to local correctional facilities.

As part of our 2026 Season Opening, join us for a free Tea & Talk at 4 PM, Sunday April 12th, at Hudson Valley Books for...
04/09/2026

As part of our 2026 Season Opening, join us for a free Tea & Talk at 4 PM, Sunday April 12th, at Hudson Valley Books for Humanity. Rev. Dr. Emma Jordan-Simpson, Auburn Theological Seminary (ATS) President, will be in conversation with Dr. Brent Glass, the Executive Director of Sing Sing Prison Museum and Director Emeritus of the Smithsonian’s National Museum of American History, to talk about religion and communities impacted by incarceration, systemic injustices that are solved by incarceration, and how to build a more just society.

Tea and cookies will be served.
Recommended for ages 12 & up
https://www.singsingprisonmuseum.org/calendar.html

Exciting news for our community! 🎉The Greater Ossining Chamber of Commerce (GOCC) is thrilled to invite you to the FIRST...
03/09/2026

Exciting news for our community! 🎉

The Greater Ossining Chamber of Commerce (GOCC) is thrilled to invite you to the FIRST-EVER Ossining Nonprofit Expo (O.N.E.)! Come discover the incredible organizations that make our region thrive and learn how we can all work together for the greater good.

Make sure to stop by and speak with Amy Hufnagel, Assistant Director of the Sing Sing Prison Museum! Amy beautifully captures why this event is so important:

"There is an intrinsic link between nonprofit organizations and for-profit businesses in healthy small communities. The Sing Sing Prison Museum is as committed to education and public engagement as it is to promoting economic development for the greater Ossining and regional community. We are grateful to join this beautiful event..."

Here are the details:

📅 Date: Sunday, March 29

⏰ Time: 2:00 PM – 5:00 PM

📍 Location: Grace Episcopal Church, St. Paul’s Campus (40 Ganung Dr, Ossining)

Whether you are looking to network, volunteer, or just learn more about the amazing work happening right in our backyard, we can't wait to see you there! Drop a 👋 in the comments if you plan on coming!


The Greater Ossining Chamber of Commerce (GOCC) is hosting its first ever Ossining Nonprofit Expo (O.N.E.). The inaugural event is Sunday, March 29 from 2-5PM at Grace Episcopal Church, St […]

On this valentine's day, the museum is thinking of those who can't be with their loved ones now and in the past. Julius ...
02/14/2026

On this valentine's day, the museum is thinking of those who can't be with their loved ones now and in the past.

Julius Rosenberg to Ethel Rosen, February 15, 1952
Excerpt from Michael Meeropol, ed., The Rosenberg Letters: A Complete Edition of the Prison Correspondence of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg (New York and London: Garland Publishing, 1994), 308.

12/30/2025

“Memory is a way to reach a more just society.” Amy Hufnagel, our Assistant Director, reflects on a year of growth at Sing Sing Prison Museum. 2025 has been a year of great success. We are so thankful for everyone who was part of our story this year.

Watch the full video to see our journey this year. See you in 2026!

12/19/2025

New Year, New Visitor Center! We have a lot to look forward to in 2026, including our Visitor Center opening on April 10th. Feeling grateful for everyone who believes in our mission. Thank you from the Sing Sing Prison Museum team. Onward, together!

12/12/2025

Reliving our First Look Fundraiser last week. A warm thank you to our soon-to-be neighbors Hudson Valley Books for Humanity for hosting the evening. We appreciate everyone who attended, sharing our vision and the updates on our Visitors Center with you was so meaningful.

We invite you to continue supporting our momentum—your generosity will help strengthen our work in the year ahead. Donate at: singsingprisonmuseum.org/donate

12/03/2025

At Sing Sing Prison Museum, we bring people together to imagine and create a more just society.

Historical research and statistical data can complicate how we learn about crime and punishment in New York. This is the last in a series of animations created by Sam Weldon, SSPM's 2025 Teshuvah Fellow and a junior at Columbia University's Information Science program. Sam's animations help us make statistics and research accessible to museum audiences.

Please consider giving today. Your gift enables us to continue translating complex information into impactful stories about incarceration and reform.

Donate here: https://www.singsingprisonmuseum.org/donate.html

12/02/2025

At Sing Sing Prison Museum, we bring people together to imagine and create a more just society.

Historical research and statistical data can complicate how we learn about crime and punishment in New York. Sam Weldon, SSPM's 2025 Teshuvah Fellow and a junior at Columbia University's Information Science program, created this visual animation to help us make statistics and research accessible to museum audiences. Today we are sharing all of Sam's videos in honor of Giving Tuesday.

Please consider giving today. Your gift enables us to continue translating complex information into impactful stories about incarceration and reform.

Donate here: https://www.singsingprisonmuseum.org/donate.html

Address

Project Office, Ossining Riverworks, 30 State Street
Ossining, NY
10562

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