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| | Victorian London - Prisons and Penal System - Prisons - Fleet Prison |
 | | Here might be seen the turbaned debtor, bewrapped in the dirty relics of his flaunting finery; the ci-devant man of property creeping about in rags, and craving to do the offices of the menial; and the woful wife ministering to cheat sorrow of a smile, yet heart-sick and sore. |
 | | The latter prisoner would then provide himself with a common lodging, by letting which prisoners in the Fleet are known to have accumulated hundreds of pounds in the course of a few years. |
 | | The outer walls were removed Feb.20th, 1846, and the prison abolished, pursuant to 5 and 6 Vict., c22, by which the three prisons, the Fleet, the Queen's Bench, and Marshalsea were consolidated, and made one by the name of the Queen's Prison. |
| www.victorianlondon.org /prisons/fleetprison.htm (954 words) |
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