[2] Inmates at the Wisconsin Prison for Women typically did laundry, sewing, gardening, kitchen and farm work.
Beginning in 1943, they put their sewing skills to work by making dresses for the Russian War Relief.
[2] Taycheedah provides its inmates with several social services, including anger management training, Alcoholics/Narcotics Anonymous, and a pre-release program.
The pre-release program helps inmates produce résumés, develop interviewing skills, and learn to use community resources before they are released from the institution.
As of June 30, 2007, 80% of the inmate population was Protestant, 15% Catholic, 5% Native American, 4% Wiccan, 4% Islamic, 1% Buddhist, and less than 1% were other or had no preference.
The racial breakdown of the population as of June 2007 was White 57%, Black 38%, American Indian 4.5%, and Asian 0.5%.
Inmates are provided jobs within the prison, such as kitchen duties, maintenance around the facility, recycling, and laundry.
[3] In 2005 Angela Enoch, an 18-year-old inmate at Taycheedah, killed herself by using pieces of her pillow to strangle herself, after several days of pleading for psychiatric attention.