Prison where Capote interviewed killers for 'In Cold Blood' will open to tourists
The First Art Newspaper on the Net    Established in 1996 Sunday, November 10, 2024


Prison where Capote interviewed killers for 'In Cold Blood' will open to tourists
Truman Capote at Random House offices in New York, April 10, 1969. The historical society in Lansing, Kan., hopes to attract tourists by welcoming visitors to the former Kansas State Penitentiary where Capote interviewed killers for “In Cold Blood.” (Wiilliam E. Sauro/The New York Times)

by Michael Levenson



NEW YORK, NY.- Truman Capote once described the Kansas State Penitentiary in Lansing as a “turreted black-and-white palace” with “a dark two-storied building shaped like a coffin,” where prisoners were held on death row, awaiting execution.

Now, tourists will be able to get a glimpse for themselves of the fortresslike sandstone prison, where Capote interviewed Dick Hickock and Perry Smith, two drifters who were convicted of murdering four members of the Clutter family on their farm in Holcomb, Kansas, on Nov. 15, 1959.

Those gruesome murders formed the basis of “In Cold Blood,” the book that cemented Capote’s status as a literary celebrity and helped propel the enduring American fascination with the true crime genre.

Hoping to save the former penitentiary from demolition, the Lansing Historical Society recently reached an agreement with the Kansas Department of Corrections to open the former prison for tours, beginning Friday. The historical society also plans to hold a car show at the prison Sept. 28.

The historical society hopes the tours will attract visitors to Lansing, a city of about 11,000 residents, 25 miles northwest of Kansas City, Missouri.

Debra Bates-Lamborn, president of the Lansing Historical Society, said that visitors would learn how prisoners were fed, how they were handcuffed and how the inmates who were deemed dangerous were segregated from other prisoners.

She said the society also hoped to acquire the prison gallows where Hickock and Smith were hanged April 14, 1965, from the Kansas Historical Society and reassemble it for public viewing.

“We want to present that whole picture here,” Bates-Lamborn said. “We want to focus on the history of the prison and the people who made that history, and that would be both sides — your inmates and your correctional officers.”

The prison has a long history, dating to the 1860s, when it was built by prisoners who were held in wooden stockades. In the 1880s, prisoners worked in a coal mine there, fueling growth in an area that came to be known as the Town of Progress, according to the Kansas Department of Corrections.

Thousands of inmates were incarcerated there, and generations of Lansing residents worked in the prison as guards before it closed in 2020. Among those held on death row there were Hickock and Smith, after they were convicted of killing the Clutter family.

In November 1959, Capote stumbled on a short UPI article published in The New York Times about the murders and set out to write about them.

Accompanied by his friend Harper Lee, the author of “To Kill a Mockingbird,” he traveled to Kansas to investigate the crime. Capote later told a biographer, Gerald Clarke, that he had paid a prominent person to gain access to death row at the Kansas State Penitentiary and interviewed Hickock and Smith there several times, Clarke said.

“He pretty much had carte blanche to go in,” Clarke said in an interview.

Capote also exchanged many letters with Hickock and Smith that reveal he felt some sympathy for the men, Clarke said. He then traveled to the prison to witness their execution, Clarke said.

“He didn’t really want to, but he did,” Clarke said. “It was a very traumatic experience for him.”

Capote turned the murders into “In Cold Blood,” published as a four-part series in The New Yorker in 1965 and as a book in 1966. The book has been widely credited with helping to establish the literary genre of the nonfiction novel.

It also helped to make a literary star of Capote, whose own life was later dissected in a biography by Clarke, movies starring Philip Seymour Hoffman and Toby Jones and a recent television series, “Feud: Capote vs. the Swans,” starring Tom Hollander.

“The whole thing changed his life entirely — in a way it made him, and in a way it unmade him, too,” Clarke said. “He had mixed feelings about the whole thing.”

The prison hosted other significant moments. In 1970, Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash performed for an enthusiastic crowd of inmates there, Bates-Lamborn said.

Kyle Deere, who was a deputy warden at the prison from 1988 to 2014, said he planned to lead some of the tours at the prison, where he said his grandfather, who was a guard, had been held hostage by prisoners during an escape in the 1930s.

Deere said he had also heard from former inmates who were interested in leading tours of the prison, which was later renamed the Lansing Correctional Facility.

“It’s going to be a great experience for those that maybe have some history within the facility, whether they worked there, they had family members who worked there or whether they lived there,” Deere said. He added, “Everybody’s really excited about it, especially in the Lansing community.”

This article originally appeared in The New York Times.










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