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Bloody Angola Podcast by Woody Overton & Jim Chapman

1954 Through the Inmates Eyes

Bloody Angola Podcast by Woody Overton & Jim Chapman

Envision Podcast Studios

Documentary, Society & Culture, True Crime

4.9665 Ratings

🗓️ 31 August 2023

⏱️ 58 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode of Bloody Angola: A Podcast by Woody Overton and Jim Chapman you are brought back to the 50's as Woody and Jim cover some of the more infamous stories regarding Louisiana State Penitentiary as told through the pages of the Angolite Prison Newspaper.#TheAngolite #1954throughtheinmateseyes #bloodyangolapodcast #convictGET 50% OFF PLUS FREE SHIPPING AT HELLOFRESH!HelloFresh delivers step-by-step recipes and fresh, pre-portioned ingredients right to your door. First, you set your meal plan preferences with options for carnivores, vegetarians, calorie-counters, and more. You'll choose from 30+ delicious weekly recipes carefully put together by the amazing chefs!Click Here to Take advantage of 16 FREE MEALS and FREE SHIPPING!www.Hellofresh.com/BloodyAngola501954 THROUGH AN INMATES EYES: Bloody Angola Podcast Transcript
Jim: Hey everyone and welcome back to Bloody-
Woody: -Angola.
Jim: A podcast 142 years in the making.
Woody: The Complete Story of America's Bloodiest Prison.
Jim: And I'm Jim Chapman. 
Woody: And I'm Woody Overton.
Jim: And we got some Angolites.
Woody: Right? I love these stories, man. True, true history from the past. Before we get started, we want to say our thoughts and prayers are with all our people in Florida and Georgia that are getting slammed right now, or got slammed yesterday and came ashore as a Category 3.
Jim: And continue to get slammed. 
Woody: And it's just bad. And they said they haven't seen a storm like that in 125 years. So, just prayers for them. I guess you call it Idalia, I-D-A-L-I-A. It's just bad, prayer for them. We know what they're going through.
Jim: Yeah, we've been through a few of those ourselves. So, our hearts and prayers and thoughts are with those folks and the road to recovery. You will recover. It'll seem like you won't, but you'll come back. Look, we've done a lot of historical podcasts with relation to the Angolite, the prison weekly paper that Angola has put out for so many years. This is an award-winning paper all over the world.
Woody: And actually turned into a magazine because I had a subscription to it back in the 90s. 
Jim: Absolutely. Some of the stories from back in the day, y'all, you just won't believe until we read them. We've had a lot of people ask for us to do another one. Got a lot of messages. So, we're bringing you another one today because we got our hands on a lot of them from the 50s and 60s. So, we kind of cherry pick what we feel like are the best stories out of those magazines, and we go over those with y'all. And I'll start it off. And this is an Angolite from April 21st, 1956. 
Woody: Wow.
Jim: Yeah. That was a heck of a time in America, and even in Angola, as you're about to hear. 
Woody: Definitely Bloody Angola, man. 
Jim: Yes, for sure. And as a matter of fact, we're going to start off with a bloody story at Bloody Angola, and it was a headline. It said, "Two Dead, One Hurt. Tragedy trip hammered a triple blow at Angola last weekend, leaving two inmates dead and another maimed for life." It says one of the two dead suffered fatal injuries in an accident. The second died of a heart attack. Maimed with his right hand amputated at the wrist was a third.
Woody: Wow. 
Jim: The dead Charles D. Clarkson, 24, of Caddo Parish. He had fallen under the wheels of a tractor last Friday. A broken rib punctured his lung. He died enroute to Charity Hospital, New Orleans. Lawrence Virgil Turley, 55, a carpenter, died Sunday afternoon at the General Hospital of a heart attack. Injured only a half hour after he had been assigned to work on the Mammoth Press at the Tag plant, Venice Landry, 20, had his right hand mangled under the giant bolster ram. 
Woody: Wow. 
Jim: Which is the thing, y'all, that stamps it. 
Woody: Slams.
Jim: Yeah, slams that steel and stamps those plates. His hand was amputated at General Hospital Saturday. Pretty, pretty wild stuff going on at Angola. And look, these days, they don't give you those reports. Typically, you really got to dig for them.
Woody: The General Hospital really wasn't a hospital. That's when the nurse, the angel-- they call her angel, was there, there was no doctor and all that. It's crazy, right? 
Jim: That's right. 
Woody: And the language they use in these, y'all, is really comical. 
Jim: And you've got to remember, this was a different time. So, you'll hear things like colored and whites. 
Woody: It's their words, not ours. 
Jim: That's right. 
Woody: All right, so the next one says, "Two Fail in Brief Freedom. Wallace McDonald and Norman Stroupe are in a tight, locked cells today following a brief bid for liberty Tuesday night. Security officials said the two took off from the transportation department in Downtown Angola-" That's funny. "In Downtown Angola Tuesday about noon. They were recaptured within a six-hour period by local authorities, both formerly bedded down at Camp H2," the report said. 
Jim: [laughs] 
Woody: Kind of brief on that. 
Jim: Yeah. Basically, they turned a jet-- and that's what I really like about these, is they do tell you about the escapes and stuff. I mean, they don't hold back.
Woody: Downtown Angola.
Jim: Yeah. [chuckles] Well, how about this one? "Cleaver in an attack tried," says, "John Newton, a new prison kitchen worker, was jailed Monday on a charge of felonious assault with a meat cleaver." Yes, sir. "Newton is said to have sliced Albert Johnson upside his head following an argument. Johnson was hospitalized with lacerations." 
Woody: Jeez Louise.
Jim: Yeah. So, Mr. Johnson got a--
Woody: Meat cleaver to the head. 
Jim: You don't attack people with meat cleavers.
Woody: Bloody Angola for sure. 
Jim: That's right. 
Woody: So crazy. And then this next one, y'all says, "Heavy equipment acts to rush free houses. Using earth from the miles long embankment of the old Louisiana and Arkansas right of way, the LSP Heavy Equipment department-" That's funny. "Under Superintendent Dennis Johnson was last week engaged in an all-out operation to fill a five-acre plot of ground for the construction of 21 new free personnel houses. The plot is located on the B-Line at the foot of the old receiving station hill. It is to be filled to a depth of 36 inches. Johnson says he expects his department will wind up with the earth fill operation within two weeks. Construction houses will then start, he said." It's funny. They're talking about building part of the B-Line, another 21 houses added.
Jim: Yeah. So, this is back, y'all, for those that may just be joining us, the B-Line is where all the free people live. 
Woody: Inside the wire. 
Jim: Inside the wire. And this was during the construction of that way back in 1956.
Woody: And my mama lived there during that time.
Jim: And we'll go on to another page of this one. And there's an article, it says, "More crippled birds. A second group of crippled pelicans, each with the wings broke by hail in the recent storm, were sighted last Sunday by deck passengers on the Angola ferry. The birds have roosted on the log a few feet from the shore and near the middle of the ferry landing. Observers said the wings will heal in time and that it is no rescue operation."
Woody: That's crazy. 
Jim: And the reason we included that one is, it's interesting that they try to keep you up to date with what's going on the outside. And the only way they know that is to look out those bars in that wire and actually see it. A little story on pelicans. Who knew hail could injure their wings? 
Woody: The news of the day, right? 
Jim: Yeah. 
Woody: All right. This one says, "O, let us spray. An old-fashioned mattress spraying bee was held at Camp E last Monday, under the eagle eye of the unit captain, A. Couvillon. The action was aimed at eliminating any wandering insects who had hoped to make the unit their dwelling place this summer." 
[laughter] 
Woody: It's spraying for bedbugs, basically.
Jim: Yeah.
Woody: That’s funny.
Jim: And something that you had to do up in Angola for sure. 
Woody: It had to be really bad for them to do it for the convicts. 
Jim: That's right. And then, we'll continue on. And there's one that says, "Falls upstairs, breaks his jaw." 
Woody: Uh-oh.
Jim: That's right. "Joseph Tornabene, Camp H-1 juvenile, fell upstairs one day last week and broke his jaw in three places."
Woody: I bet that didn't happen. 
Jim: [laughs] "The adolescent was returning to his bunk after a shower, according to the story told to the hospital. He was taken to Charity Hospital in New Orleans for treatment." So, they're basically trying to say-- 
Woody: They beat his ass.
Jim: [laughs] Broke his jaw--[crosstalk]  
Woody: "You better tell them you fell up the stairs, boy."
Jim: Yeah, that's it. 
Woody: That's funny. 
Jim: Broke his jaw in three places from a slip. That was one that I really thought painted a picture of the times in prison. 
Woody: Funny. I think that's when they had the convict guards too. All right, so here we go. The title of this is "Pocketed Razor Draws Jail Time." Says, "He told arresting officers he was just going to shave, but they didn't believe him. He is James B. Shivers of the STU, and he was caught with a straight razor. The board assessed a term on bread and duck because they said only blades for a razor are lawful."
Jim: [laughs] [crosstalk] Jesus Christ. And when they caught him, he said, "Well, I was just using it to shave." 
Woody: "Yeah, I was just using it to shave." 
Jim: "What's wrong with that?" All right, how about this one? "Fresh fish leave sheltered cloister a

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

I walk a straight line

0:17.3

shackled chain

0:20.6

Oh, glarsome girding line shackle chain oh

0:22.7

glues and gertie

0:24.4

is calling my name

0:27.5

there is no mercy

0:30.9

and it's been a tentury

0:33.9

just ask the hill string gang

0:38.2

Rangled of three

0:40.7

I'm here for life

0:44.7

I'm here to die

0:47.8

Inside these walls

0:51.5

Inside the wild

0:54.7

And when the wolf cries

0:58.4

I know it's over

1:01.6

Oh, bloody Angola

1:08.1

Oh, oh, bloody Angola.

1:36.1

A podcast, 142 years in the making.

1:39.0

Complete story of America's bloodiest prison.

1:41.8

And I'm Jim Chapman.

1:43.3

I'm Woody Overton.

1:45.1

And we got some of Angolites.

...

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