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Pre Pigeon arrest house à Angers en Maine-et-Loire

Pre Pigeon arrest house

    5 Place Olivier Giran
    49100 Angers
State ownership
Maison darrêt du Pré Pigeon
Maison darrêt du Pré Pigeon
Maison darrêt du Pré Pigeon

Timeline

Révolution/Empire
XIXe siècle
Époque contemporaine
1900
2000
1852-1856
Construction of prison
1896 et 1934
Executions by guillotine
1944 (août)
German evacuation
1947 et 1949
Latest capital executions
1997
Historical Monument
2010
Prison expansion
Aujourd'hui
Aujourd'hui

Heritage classified

Cross buildings around the rotunda (the three large wings and the small wing of the administrative building) and the rotunda (Box BP 169): inscription by order of 14 January 1997

Key figures

Ferdinand Lachèse - Departmental architect Designer of the prison (1852-1856).
Chanoine Uzureau - Prison chaplain From 1902 to 1948.
Germaine Leloy - Last female guillotine in France Executed in 1949 in prison.

Origin and history

The Pre Pigeon arrest house, located in Angers in the Pays de la Loire, is a prison built between 1852 and 1856 under the direction of the departmental architect Ferdinand Lachese. It replaces the old prison facilities of the castle of Angers, considered inadequate. Inspired by the panoptic model, the building adopts a cross plan with four wings (three cells and one administrative) anchored to a central rotunda. This project is part of a 19th-century philanthropic trend aimed at improving prison conditions, although overpopulation is rapidly becoming a recurring problem (217 theoretical places for 370 prisoners in 2013).

The prison was the scene of capital executions, with the guillotine erected twice in front of its entrance (1896 and 1934), then in the inner court in 1947 for two death row prisoners. The last execution, that of Germaine Leloy in 1949, marks a rare fact: a woman guillotined in a male-only establishment. During the Second World War, the Germans interned and tortured resistance fighters before evacuating in August 1944, taking 134 deportees.

Classified as a Historical Monument in 1997 for its interior parts (cross and rotunda buildings), the prison was enlarged in 2010 with a semi-freedom centre. Today enclaved in the heart of Angers, it is considered obsolete because of its overpopulation and age. A proposed new 850-seat prison in Trelaze, planned for 2028, is to replace it, employing 525 people. Between 1902 and 1948, Canon Uzureau served as chaplain of the institution.

The prison's architecture, with its central surveillance post surmounted by a chapel and its entrance door in the shape of a chestnut, illustrates the prison principles of the 19th century. Its inscription in the Historic Monuments underscores its heritage value, despite the contemporary challenges associated with its use in prisons. The prison thus embodies both an architectural heritage and the tensions between historical memory and modern requirements of the prison system.

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