Treasure of the Month
Early Foot Stocks on Galveston Island
As part of the reopening celebration on Saturday, July 11th, 2009, the
museum featured an original set of foot stocks from the old
Galveston County Jail as the first “Treasure of the Month” display since
Hurricane Ike.
For more information, please contact Nikkie Ferre,
Museum Collections Manager, by email at
nferre@rosenberg-library.org or by phone at 409-763-8854 x 125.
“Stocks”
were hinged timbers which held offenders of petty crimes for relative
amounts of time or until an official sentence could be carried out.
Although the stocks are one of the most publicized and well known
medieval forms of punishment, most people get them confused with the
“pillory.” Stocks were meant to restrain an offender’s feet, while the
pillory restrained the arms and head. This form of punishment was
commonly used across Europe from the 14th century until the mid 19th
century. Its use in America began with the colonists and was still
practiced when Galveston was founded in 1839. Stocks were most commonly
built either at the entrance to a town or on a public green, and no
village was considered complete without them as they were essential to
law and order.
There were several reasons one could be confined to the stocks which
might include: not attending church, gambling, being intoxicated,
singing ballads, fortune-telling, wife-beating, hedge-tearing, swearing,
jesting, and even oversleeping. Punishments could last anywhere from one
hour to several days. As well as being verbally abused by the general
public, offenders in the stocks often had an array of items thrown at
them such as rotten eggs, “filth” from the streets, dead cats, rats,
stones, and other unpleasant remains. The worst humiliation one could
suffer though was having the bottom of one’s feet exposed to the public.
Stocks eventually were replaced with make-shift jails and other
confinement buildings as they were considered a more reasonable and
humane punishment. Today the stocks have taken on a lighter image, and
are mostly found at Renaissance Fairs where the public can experience a
form of “stock entertainment.”
The set of stocks on display at the library would have accommodated
three persons seated on a bench with their feet secured through holes,
and then latched with a lock. The top section was removed before it was
donated, but the hinge is still present. There are a number of
possibilities as to which Galveston County Jail location the stocks
originated from because between the 1840s through the 1920s, the jail
was rebuilt and relocated several times, but the first known jail on the
island was the hull of the German brig “Elbe” that had been stranded
after a storm in 1837.