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San Francisco:
Popular Alcatraz Tour Gets an Update
A $3.5-million renovation at "The Rock" has added several new tour features to the former
federal prison and made it more accessible to
elderly and disabled visitors.
Darwin Coon is constantly reminded of his time
on Alcatraz. The former bank robber can see the
notorious island prison from just outside his
front door in the city's North Beach district.
Coon remembers thinking he'd never get out alive,
and was among the last inmates to leave when U.S.
Attorney General Robert Kennedy closed the federal
penitentiary in 1963. Years later, when a niece
asked him to show her his old cell, he responded:
"I never wanted to go back there."
Now 74, Coon finally did go back, and his recollections
of daily life on "The Rock" are now
part of an updated audio tour unveiled this month
as part of a $3.5-million renovation aimed at
making Alcatraz more accessible.
The improvements also include an elevator that
gives access to the elderly and disabled and allowed
the National Park Service to open another floor
of the prison. And visitors now enter Alcatraz
the same way new inmates did: through the dank
shower room where "fresh fish" were
hosed off before being issued their jail clothes.
Getting Coon and the others to share their stories
was vital because many Alcatraz alumni are dying,
said Rich Weideman, spokesman for the Golden Gate
National Parks Conservancy, a nonprofit that helps
to preserve Bay Area parks.
Updating the 20-year-old prison tour also provided
an opportunity to inject new perspectives that
had previously been ignored.
"In the housing of inmates at Alcatraz it
was deemed necessary to keep blacks away from
whites," Phillip Bergen, a captain of the
guards at Alcatraz, says on the audio tour.
While other federal prisons integrated their
inmate populations, Alcatraz never did.
"They tried (integration), and they opened
up, and they had such a high population of hostile
rednecks, and such a low population comparatively
of blacks, that they soon found out they couldn't
do it," Bergen says.
And of the 100 or so guards who served, only
a few blacks were ever hired, including tour contributor
Ron Battles. He says life on The Rock mirrored
American culture of the 1950s and that he faced
persistent discrimination from white colleagues.
Listening to stories from inmates and guards
while strolling through the cold, gray prison
has long been part of the experience that draws
that brings 1.3 million visitors to Alcatraz each
year. The original, groundbreaking audio tour
was created in 1987.
"It was the first major audio tour in a
historic site to use first person (stories),"
Weideman said of the earlier tour. "It changed
the audio tour industry."
In addition to providing a multicultural perspective
on the Alcatraz experience, the updated tour also
highlights guards' stories in greater detail than
before.
The new features at Alcatraz also include new
museum displays of artifacts that have never been
on public view. A collection of shivs, or knives
honed secretly by prisoners from kitchen utensils
or smuggled scrap metal, shows how dangerous the
prison was for guards.
The park service and conservancy have also uncovered
remnants of the island's pre-prison past, including
gardens from the 1800s when the island was a military
fort. These gardens were later tended by guards
and inmates being rewarded for their good behavior.
But Alcatraz was designed to break down its inhabitants,
and those who lived to tell their tales don't
mince words when describing their lives on The
Rock.
"Everybody wants to be an individual,"
former inmate Jim Quillen says. "They want
to be a human, and you weren't at The Rock."
If you go:
ALCATRAZ TOURS: www.nps.gov/alcatraz
. There is no entrance fee for visiting Alcatraz,
but you must buy round-trip tickets for the ferry,
which departs daily from Alcatraz Landing at Pier
33, San Francisco (near Fisherman's Wharf). Tickets:
www.alcatrazcruises.com/
or 415-981-7625. Tours offered throughout the
day starting at 9 a.m., adults, $21.75; children
5-11, $13.75.; seniors 62 and over $20.75. Night
tours, 6:10 p.m. and 6:40 p.m., adults, $28.75;
ages 12-17, $27.75; ages 5-11, $17.25.; seniors
62 and over, $26.25. Some tours sell out so reservations
are recommended.
By Jason Dearen, AP
From MSN Travel
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