Assaults soar in Newfoundland’s Dickens-era jail: ‘It’s a tinderbox’
ST. JOHN’S, N.L. — It opened in 1859, the year Charles Dickens’ new novel “A Tale of Two Cities” transfixed readers with Dr. Manette’s tormented imprisonment at the Bastille.
Built from stone, Her Majesty’s Penitentiary in St. John’s, N.L., was meant to be “stark, severe, forbidding.”
In its old basement dungeon, shackles were once used to keep inmates in solitary confinement. HMP was the site of at least five hangings.
“It’s not a correctional facility. It’s a penal institution,” said Bob Buckingham, a criminal defence lawyer who often represents clients held at HMP.


