• H.M. Gaol Hobart or Campbell Street Gaol, a former Australian maximum security prison for males and females, was located in Hobart, Tasmania.
  • A Boys’ Reformatory did open in 1869. Even so, according to Joan Brown, in 1875, 53 boys aged between eight and 16 years were in Campbell Street Gaol.
  • The Hobart Convict Penitentiary, also known as the Campbell Street Gaol, is a historic site located in Hobart, Tasmania.
  • In a new exhibition assisted by Andrew Redfern called UNSHACKLED (2023) proposed for the National Trust at the old Penitentiary, Hobart Gaol, Campbell Street...
  • Huge Bunches of Keys, Massive Gates. In the 1950s a young teenager, Brian Rieusset, was an altar boy for the Chapel at the Campbell Street Hobart Gaol.
  • Popularly known as the Campbell Street Gaol, the former maximum security prison H.M. Gaol Hobart is part of the infamous Penitentiary Chapel Historic Site.
  • Thumbnail for Photograph - Campbell Street, Hobart showing walls of the Hobart Gaol.
  • 1860s photograph of Hobart's Campbell Street Gaol and early Hobart. ... The Gaol was demolished in the 1960s, although the Penitentiary building still stands.
  • On the corner of Brisbane and Campbell Streets in Hobart stands a building that once formed part of the gaol that preceded Risdon Prison.
  • The Campbell Street Gaol (Hobart Gaol), which began life as convict barracks, was converted in 1846 to serve as a civilian prison.
  • Campbell Street Gaol lies right at the heart of Hobart CBD (central business district) and is an important piece of Tasmania’s early history.
  • Hobart Convict Penitentiary (Campbell Street Gaol). Right in the middle of Hobart’s CBD is a prison complex where you can dip into the darker side of Tasmania’s...
  • Campbell Street Gaol as CSG, Hobart Supreme Court as HSC and Launceston Supreme Court as LSC. All other court appearances were at the Police Office Hobart.
  • Situated on the corner of Brisbane and Campbell Streets in Hobart, Tasmania, the Penitentiary Chapel was built in the early 1830’s according to the design of...