Fulham Refuge

The prison was located on land between Burlington Road and Fulham Road that had previously held a school (Burlington Academy), which closed in 1853, with the prison constructed on the site of the school's former cricket pitch.

[3] The prison included a large building, which consisted of workshops, schoolrooms, dormitories, a bakery and wash house; officers' accommodation, and an infirmary.

[4] Fulham Refuge was initially used as part of a three-stage rehabilitation process championed by Sir Joshua Jebb, the Director General of Prisons,[3] as women worked their way up from Millbank Prison, to Brixton Prison, before finally arriving at Fulham with a view to being reintegrated into the wider community.

[4] Fulham was the "most distinctively feminine of the early convict prisons", and tried to train women with skills suitable for subsequent employment, cooking, cleaning and laundry, with emphasis on "softening and civilising".

[5] Part of the reasoning behind calling it a "refuge" rather than "prison" was that potential employers might be less reluctant to employ such women and help them to transition back to respectability, especially as women were often judged more harshly than men; and that there was always rough work available for male former prisoners, but women were expected to be of "good character" for domestic service.

"The Refuge for female convicts at Fulham", The Illustrated London News , 1858. [ 1 ]