A History of the County of Westchester, Vol. I — Passage 161
[Robert Bolton, Jr. (1848)] *■ From the original map in the possession of the Hon. William Jay, Bedford. COUNTY OF WESTCHESTER. 505 ble found in this vicinity, is the dolomitic or white coarsegrained, of excellent quality, and almost inexhaustible; large quantities are annually quarried and sent to the city of New Yojk and other plac s. "The Mount Pleasant Stale Prison, situated about half a mile south of the village of Sing Sing, and thirty-three miles no th of New York; contained in 1840, 847 male and female convicts, of whom 60 were fema'es. The prison grounds consist of 130 acres of land, lying between the villages of Sing Sing and Sparta; being bounded on the east by the Highland turnpike, and on the west by the Hudson river, which here affords a depth of twelve feet of water at the landing. The main prison building is four hundred and eighty-four feet in length, running north and south, and forty-four feet in width, fronting westerly on the Hudson, being five stories in height, and containing one thousand cells; in front and rear are located work shops of different kinds, which together with the keeper's house are all built of rough dressed marble. Attached to the prison building on the south, is a chapel, hospital, kitchen, store houses) &.C. A new prison for female convicts stands on elevated ground, and is built of marble in the Ionic order. It contains well fur-nished apartments in front for the matrons, and the interior fin-