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FPC Alderson

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'''Federal Prison Camp, Alderson''' ('''FPC Alderson''') is a minimum-security United States federal prison for female inmates located in Alderson, West Virginia. Operated by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, the facility has the distinction of being the first federal prison for women in the United States, having opened in 1927.<ref>[https://www.bop.gov/locations/institutions/ald/ "FCI Alderson"], Federal Bureau of Prisons.</ref>
{{PrisonInfobox
|name = Federal Prison Camp, Alderson
|security_level = Minimum
|gender = Female
|population = Approximately 667 (per Wikipedia, citing Bureau of Prisons)
|rdap = No
|address = Glen Ray Road, Box A, Alderson, WV 24910
}}


==History==
'''Federal Prison Camp, Alderson''' ('''FPC Alderson''') is a minimum-security United States federal prison for women near Alderson, West Virginia. The Federal Bureau of Prisons runs it. The camp sits in the Allegheny Mountains, split across Monroe and Summers counties in the southern part of the state.<ref name="bop">[https://www.bop.gov/locations/institutions/ald/ "FPC Alderson"], Federal Bureau of Prisons. Accessed June 3, 2026.</ref>
FPC Alderson was established on November 14, 1927, as the first federal prison exclusively for women in the United States. The facility was constructed in response to the need for a dedicated institution to house female federal offenders, who had previously been held in state prisons or local jails under contract with the federal government. The prison was designed with a reformatory philosophy emphasizing rehabilitation rather than punishment, reflecting progressive penological thinking of the era.


The facility is located on approximately 95 acres in the Allegheny Mountain region of southern West Virginia, near the town of Alderson in Greenbrier County. The prison complex initially consisted of cottages and buildings arranged in a campus-like setting, a departure from the fortress-style architecture typical of male prisons at the time.
Alderson was the first federal prison built for women in the country. The first inmates arrived on April 30, 1927. The formal opening came on November 14, 1928. Before it existed, women convicted of federal crimes were held in state prisons, county jails, and the women's units of men's penitentiaries.<ref name="wiki">[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Federal_Prison_Camp,_Alderson "Federal Prison Camp, Alderson"], Wikipedia. Accessed June 3, 2026.</ref><ref name="history">[https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/november-24/the-first-federal-prison-for-women-opens "The first federal prison for women opens in West Virginia"], History.com.</ref>


==Facility==
The press nicknamed the facility "Camp Cupcake" after Martha Stewart was sentenced there in 2004.<ref name="wboy">[https://www.wboy.com/news/west-virginia/americas-oldest-federal-womens-prison-is-in-west-virginia-and-has-had-some-famous-inmates/ "Celebrities like Martha Stewart did time at America's oldest federal women's prison in West Virginia"], WBOY.</ref>
FPC Alderson operates as a minimum-security prison camp and is part of the larger Federal Correctional Institution, Alderson complex. The facility houses female inmates who have been assessed as low security risks and typically have non-violent criminal histories. The prison camp environment features dormitory-style housing rather than cells, and inmates have greater freedom of movement within the facility compared to higher security institutions.


The facility provides various educational, vocational, and recreational programs designed to prepare inmates for reintegration into society. These programs include adult continuing education, English as a Second Language courses, parenting classes, and occupational training in areas such as food service and building maintenance. Inmates also participate in work assignments that support the operation of the facility and provide practical job skills.
== Overview ==


==Notable inmates==
FPC Alderson holds female inmates classified as minimum security. These are women judged to be low flight and safety risks, most of them serving time for nonviolent offenses. There are no walls or armed towers. Housing is dormitory style rather than cells. Inmates move around the grounds with more freedom than they would have at a higher-security institution.<ref name="bop"/>
Throughout its history, FPC Alderson has housed numerous high-profile female inmates. Axis Sally (Mildred Gillars), who broadcast Nazi propaganda during World War II, served time at Alderson in the 1950s. Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme, a member of the Manson Family who attempted to assassinate President Gerald Ford, was incarcerated at the facility. Martha Stewart, the lifestyle entrepreneur and television personality, served five months at Alderson in 2004 and 2005 following her conviction for obstruction of justice and making false statements. Billie Holiday, the jazz singer, served a sentence at Alderson in the 1940s on drug-related charges.


==Administration==
The camp runs education, vocational, and work programs aimed at reentry. Inmates take adult continuing education classes, work jobs that keep the facility running, and train in trades. Most spend their days assigned to a work detail on the grounds.<ref name="bop"/>
FPC Alderson is administered by the Federal Bureau of Prisons, an agency of the United States Department of Justice. The facility operates under federal guidelines and regulations governing minimum-security institutions and is subject to regular inspections and oversight. The prison employs correctional officers, case managers, counselors, educators, medical staff, and administrative personnel to manage daily operations and provide services to the inmate population.


==References==
The original campus was built to resemble a boarding school. It opened with fourteen cottages laid out in a horseshoe on two tiers of hillside. There were no armed guards. The buildings carried the names of social reformers. A contemporary federal judge called it a "fashionable boarding school." The design reflected a reform-minded view of how a women's prison should work, in contrast to the fortress architecture of the men's penitentiaries of the day.<ref name="wiki"/><ref name="history"/>
{{reflist}}


==External links==
== History ==
* [https://www.bop.gov/locations/institutions/ald/ Official FCI Alderson page at Bureau of Prisons]


[[Category:Federal Bureau of Prisons]]
The push for a separate federal prison for women came from Mabel Walker Willebrandt, the assistant U.S. attorney general who oversaw federal prisons in the 1920s. She argued that women in federal custody needed their own institution rather than space borrowed inside men's facilities. Congress authorized the prison, and West Virginia was chosen for the site. The location was remote enough to discourage escapes and still within reach of Washington.<ref name="wiki"/><ref name="wvenc">[https://www.wvencyclopedia.org/entries/165 "Alderson Federal Prison Camp"], e-WV: The West Virginia Encyclopedia.</ref>
[[Category:Prisons in West Virginia]]
 
[[Category:Buildings and structures in Greenbrier County, West Virginia]]
The institution opened as the Federal Industrial Institution for Women. Dr. Mary B. Harris served as its first superintendent. She ran the prison on a rehabilitative model built around education and work rather than punishment. The approach drew national attention as an experiment in prison reform.<ref name="history"/><ref name="wvenc"/>
[[Category:Women's prisons in the United States]]
 
[[Category:1927 establishments in West Virginia]]
Over the following decades the institution's role and name shifted as the federal prison system grew. The Bureau of Prisons now classifies the site as Federal Prison Camp, Alderson, with an attached satellite camp and a Federal Satellite Low. It remains one of the oldest women's facilities in the federal system.<ref name="bop"/>
 
== Notable Alumni ==
 
Alderson has held a number of well-known women across its history. The list below covers inmates whose incarceration there is documented in reliable sources.
 
{| class="wikitable"
! Name !! Offense !! Dates at Alderson
|-
| [[Martha Stewart]] || Conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and false statements (ImClone stock case) || October 8, 2004 – March 4, 2005
|-
| Billie Holiday || Narcotics possession || 1947–1948
|-
| Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme || Attempted assassination of President Gerald Ford || Entered 1975
|-
| Mildred Gillars ("Axis Sally") || Treason, for Nazi propaganda broadcasts || 1950–1956
|-
| Iva Toguri D'Aquino ("Tokyo Rose") || Treason, for wartime broadcasts for Japan || 1940s–1950s
|}
 
Martha Stewart served five months at Alderson after her 2004 conviction in the ImClone stock case, followed by five months of home confinement. She was released on March 4, 2005.<ref name="stewart-history">[https://www.history.com/this-day-in-history/march-4/martha-stewart-is-released-from-prison "Martha Stewart is released from prison"], History.com.</ref>
 
Singer Billie Holiday served time at Alderson in the late 1940s on a narcotics conviction.<ref name="wiki"/>
 
Lynette Fromme, a member of the Manson group, was sent to Alderson after she attempted to assassinate President Gerald Ford in 1975. She was later moved to other facilities and was paroled in 2009.<ref name="wiki"/>
 
Mildred Gillars, known during World War II as "Axis Sally," was convicted of treason for broadcasting Nazi propaganda and served at Alderson during the 1950s. Iva Toguri D'Aquino, identified in wartime reporting as "Tokyo Rose," was convicted of treason for broadcasts aimed at American troops in the Pacific and also did time at the camp.<ref name="wiki"/>
 
== Location and Visitation ==
 
FPC Alderson is on Glen Ray Road outside the town of Alderson, West Virginia, in the southern Allegheny Mountains. The grounds straddle the Monroe and Summers county line.<ref name="bop"/>
 
The mailing address for inmate correspondence is:
 
Inmate Name and Register Number
FPC Alderson
Federal Prison Camp
Glen Ray Road, Box A
Alderson, WV 24910
 
Visiting days, approved visitor lists, dress requirements, and entry procedures are set by the Bureau of Prisons and can change. Visitors should confirm the current schedule and rules with the facility before traveling. Current details are posted on the Bureau of Prisons institution page.<ref name="bop"/>


== References ==
== References ==
<references />
<references />
{{DEFAULTSORT:Alderson, Facilities/FPC}}
[[Category:Federal Prisons]]
[[Category:Minimum-Security Facilities]]
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|title=Federal Prison Camp, Alderson (FPC Alderson) — Women's Federal Prison | Prisonpedia
|description=FPC Alderson is a minimum-security women's federal prison in West Virginia and the first federal prison for women. History, notable inmates, and visitation.
|type=Article
|site_name=Prisonpedia
|locale=en_US
|modified_time=2026-06-03
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{{MetaDescription|Federal Prison Camp, Alderson (FPC Alderson) — minimum-security women's federal prison in West Virginia, the first federal prison for women. History, notable inmates, and visitation details.}}

Latest revision as of 14:08, 3 June 2026

Female
Gender
Minimum
Security Level
Approximately 667 (per Wikipedia, citing Bureau of Prisons)
Population (Nov. 2025)


Federal Prison Camp, Alderson (FPC Alderson) is a minimum-security United States federal prison for women near Alderson, West Virginia. The Federal Bureau of Prisons runs it. The camp sits in the Allegheny Mountains, split across Monroe and Summers counties in the southern part of the state.[1]

Alderson was the first federal prison built for women in the country. The first inmates arrived on April 30, 1927. The formal opening came on November 14, 1928. Before it existed, women convicted of federal crimes were held in state prisons, county jails, and the women's units of men's penitentiaries.[2][3]

The press nicknamed the facility "Camp Cupcake" after Martha Stewart was sentenced there in 2004.[4]

Overview

FPC Alderson holds female inmates classified as minimum security. These are women judged to be low flight and safety risks, most of them serving time for nonviolent offenses. There are no walls or armed towers. Housing is dormitory style rather than cells. Inmates move around the grounds with more freedom than they would have at a higher-security institution.[1]

The camp runs education, vocational, and work programs aimed at reentry. Inmates take adult continuing education classes, work jobs that keep the facility running, and train in trades. Most spend their days assigned to a work detail on the grounds.[1]

The original campus was built to resemble a boarding school. It opened with fourteen cottages laid out in a horseshoe on two tiers of hillside. There were no armed guards. The buildings carried the names of social reformers. A contemporary federal judge called it a "fashionable boarding school." The design reflected a reform-minded view of how a women's prison should work, in contrast to the fortress architecture of the men's penitentiaries of the day.[2][3]

History

The push for a separate federal prison for women came from Mabel Walker Willebrandt, the assistant U.S. attorney general who oversaw federal prisons in the 1920s. She argued that women in federal custody needed their own institution rather than space borrowed inside men's facilities. Congress authorized the prison, and West Virginia was chosen for the site. The location was remote enough to discourage escapes and still within reach of Washington.[2][5]

The institution opened as the Federal Industrial Institution for Women. Dr. Mary B. Harris served as its first superintendent. She ran the prison on a rehabilitative model built around education and work rather than punishment. The approach drew national attention as an experiment in prison reform.[3][5]

Over the following decades the institution's role and name shifted as the federal prison system grew. The Bureau of Prisons now classifies the site as Federal Prison Camp, Alderson, with an attached satellite camp and a Federal Satellite Low. It remains one of the oldest women's facilities in the federal system.[1]

Notable Alumni

Alderson has held a number of well-known women across its history. The list below covers inmates whose incarceration there is documented in reliable sources.

Name Offense Dates at Alderson
Martha Stewart Conspiracy, obstruction of justice, and false statements (ImClone stock case) October 8, 2004 – March 4, 2005
Billie Holiday Narcotics possession 1947–1948
Lynette "Squeaky" Fromme Attempted assassination of President Gerald Ford Entered 1975
Mildred Gillars ("Axis Sally") Treason, for Nazi propaganda broadcasts 1950–1956
Iva Toguri D'Aquino ("Tokyo Rose") Treason, for wartime broadcasts for Japan 1940s–1950s

Martha Stewart served five months at Alderson after her 2004 conviction in the ImClone stock case, followed by five months of home confinement. She was released on March 4, 2005.[6]

Singer Billie Holiday served time at Alderson in the late 1940s on a narcotics conviction.[2]

Lynette Fromme, a member of the Manson group, was sent to Alderson after she attempted to assassinate President Gerald Ford in 1975. She was later moved to other facilities and was paroled in 2009.[2]

Mildred Gillars, known during World War II as "Axis Sally," was convicted of treason for broadcasting Nazi propaganda and served at Alderson during the 1950s. Iva Toguri D'Aquino, identified in wartime reporting as "Tokyo Rose," was convicted of treason for broadcasts aimed at American troops in the Pacific and also did time at the camp.[2]

Location and Visitation

FPC Alderson is on Glen Ray Road outside the town of Alderson, West Virginia, in the southern Allegheny Mountains. The grounds straddle the Monroe and Summers county line.[1]

The mailing address for inmate correspondence is:

Inmate Name and Register Number
FPC Alderson
Federal Prison Camp
Glen Ray Road, Box A
Alderson, WV 24910

Visiting days, approved visitor lists, dress requirements, and entry procedures are set by the Bureau of Prisons and can change. Visitors should confirm the current schedule and rules with the facility before traveling. Current details are posted on the Bureau of Prisons institution page.[1]

References