The
Wisconsin Legislature first authorized a commission to locate and build a state prison in 1851. That
first prison was opened in 1852 in
Waupun, Wisconsin. In 1853, Wisconsin abolished the
death penalty, making it the first state to do so. That same year, Wisconsin created the office of state prison commissioner as a state-wide partisan elected office. That office was abolished in 1874 and replaced by a board of commissioners appointed by the governor, which was folded into the state Board of Supervision of Charitable, Reformatory and Penal Institutions in 1881. That board was transformed into the Board of Control of Reformatory, Charitable, and Penal Institutions in 1891. In 1909, a law was enacted creating
parole and the state's first
Parole officer was appointed. In 1933,
Taycheedah Correctional Institution opened as an all female prison. In 1939, control of state prisons was transferred to a new "Division of Corrections" established within the new Wisconsin Department of Public Welfare. There was a major reorganization of Wisconsin's state government agencies in 1967, and the Department of Public Welfare was replaced by the Wisconsin Department of Health and Social Services, where the Division of Corrections was relocated. The modern Wisconsin Department of Corrections was created by a chapter of the executive budget of 1989 (1989 Wisc. Act 31) and began operating January 1, 1990. == Division of Adult Institutions ==