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it had. At this point he made a decision that he probably regretted in the days to come. Rather than lead the growing rescue efforts within the prison yard, he decided to station himself outside the prison walls to supervise efforts to prevent any convicts from breaking out. Profoundly disliked by many of his charges, the warden was usually hesitant to spend too much time in the yard without sufficient protection. He would not make an appearance within the prison walls until two days after the fire. The “hero priest,” Father Albert O’Brien, would later report that the convicts were indeed ready to kill the warden if he stepped inside the prison during the pandemonium.

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      Night guards Thomas Little and William Baldwin, as well as seventy-two-year-old Captain John Hall, had all arrived at the guardroom separately on Easter Monday, a half hour early for their shifts. It was customary for Baldwin to get to the guardroom before 6. His explanation was that he had an old car and “sometimes it don’t just jump as it should,” so he always liked to get a head start so he wouldn’t miss his shift.18 That day he stopped to speak briefly with Captain Hall, who was perusing a newspaper outside, before entering the guardroom. Following protocol, he signed in on two sign-in sheets and sat down. He recalled that he was sitting against the wall making small talk with night guard Thomas F. Little until about 5:45, when a prisoner ran into the guardroom yelling, “Fire.”19 As will be seen, the early arrivals of Baldwin and Little would prove serendipitous.

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      Leaving the prison yard, Warden Thomas made a beeline for the guardroom door and told Little and Baldwin rather cryptically to “get down there” on his way out of the building. The guards would later admit that no one was really sure which of them he was speaking to since there were others in the room as well, but they made off for the endangered cellblocks just the same.20 Baldwin and Little hurried from the guardhouse through the E&F dormitory toward G&H, with the geriatric Captain Hall trying to keep up. Not surprisingly, the decrepit captain lagged behind the two younger guards. Reaching the cellblock, they found that Watkinson had stationed himself at the cage gate leading into the upper ranges. The cell house was rapidly filling with dangerous smoke, and flames could be seen in the upper reaches of the northern cellblocks (I&K). The guards intended, once Watkinson had opened the gate, to reach the men in the upper ranges. But this would have to wait, as some type of verbal altercation took place between the two night guards and the day guard Watkinson.

      Watkinson, Baldwin, and Little all held the same rank, but since it was still before 6 p.m., the Englishman was in control of the cellblock, which he zealously protected. At this point Little and Baldwin had to overcome their first major challenge, which was to convince Watkinson to open the cage gate leading up to tiers two to six. The day guards had the cell keys to the upper tiers, but those would be worthless without access to the upper ranges. But Watkinson refused to cooperate, telling them, “I got no orders to unlock those men.”21 Even after they told the Englishman that he had verbal orders from the warden to release the convicts, Watkinson held firm, replying, “I have no order to open the door.”22 Little said, “We have to get it open and get up in there and get fellows out.” Watkinson adamantly responded, “Well I can’t open it without orders.” Outranked before 6 p.m., Little recognized he needed to act quickly. He ran around to the west side of the block, looking for any opportunity to get the men out, but the smoke was so dense he had to run back around to haggle once more with Watkinson, wasting at least five to six valuable minutes.

      After being refused entry into the cage door leading up to the top five tiers, Baldwin and Little returned to the adjacent ground-level cells on the first tier, the only ones they had access to without passing through the cage first, and began releasing the convicts. They were the first guards to actually release any convicts from the cellblocks. Little told Baldwin that they had to “get this goddamn door [cage gate] open or those fellows are all going to die.” He could not know that they were already dying by the dozens. It was at this point that Watkinson finally came to his senses and decided to cooperate. He approached Little with the key, “but not fast enough.” Little grabbed it out of his hand, opened the cage door, and started upstairs. He is credited with leading the first rescuers up to higher tiers, but not without making sure that others followed him in case he was overcome with smoke and needed rescuing himself. Initially, when he turned around he only saw Baldwin.23 Five to eight crucial minutes had been wasted by the time the rescue could begin.

      Watkinson’s account conflicts sharply with that of the guards Little and Baldwin, as it did with Captain Hall’s. The Englishman later claimed that he was just sticking his key into the cage lock to let the guards in when Captain Hall intervened and told him, “Don’t open that yet, don’t do that.” Since Hall was the captain, the Englishman would argue, “he had to follow superiors or he would be suspended for disobeying rules and order.” As to why Hall wouldn’t permit it, perhaps Hall thought it “didn’t look so dangerous in G&H.” At one point during the exchange over the keys, Baldwin commented, “Isn’t this hell?”24

      Contrary to Watkinson’s assertion that Hall had personally ordered him to keep the cells locked, both Little and Baldwin later testified under oath that Hall never even made it to the gate to prevent them from entering the tiers. In fact, they never saw Hall at the cage door. But they could definitely hear him hollering behind them for inmates to knock windows out to let in some air and the sounds of shattering glass. In fact, Hall could not possibly have reached the cage before them. Furthermore, if he had verbally directed Watkinson not to open the gate, he would have to have done this after the two guards got there, which simply never happened. Buttressing the guards’ claims was Captain Hall’s testimony that he “did not tell Watkinson anything.25

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      By the time Baldwin and Little had retrieved the keys from Watkinson, it was clear that the source of the fire was in the wooden form work in the adjacent I&K blocks, which were undergoing construction. When they got through the gate, the guards parceled out the keys to convicts taking part in the rescue efforts, many of whom had come from the E&F dorms. Baldwin and Little reached the third tier and were soon joined by a prisoner, but they couldn’t make it farther than the fourth tier and had to retreat to the second range. Against his better judgment, instead of running outside for air, Little decided to keep up his rescue efforts and began unlocking the second range. As he ran up the second range, he could see the flames above but “couldn’t tell whether they were in the ceiling or in the lumber on top.” It was impossible at that point to ascertain whether the fire was actually in the roof or on top of it because there was only one story separating the roof from the fifth tier under construction in I&K.

      Little was able to get everyone out on one side of the second tier. When a “colored” inmate came around, he told him to “get these fellows” out on the other side of the second tier. He went back up to the fourth tier, where he passed out from smoke inhalation and was carried out by Baldwin and three or four inmates. He later lamented, “I was so damned near all in I couldn’t remember…. There was no man in the world who could have got up there at the time we got in the cage, no man, I don’t care who it was.”26 Within five minutes the fire made a decided change. “Oh, it was fast, yes, it come down there, the smoke seemed to come all at once, just come down there in a big billow.” In retrospect, Little and other rescuers regretted not starting at the top and working their way down. This was a moot point, though, since by the time the keys were turned over to Little most of the convicts in the top two tiers were at death’s door.27

      It was well documented that none of the G&H cells were opened before 5:45, six minutes after the fire department was officially contacted. Little would later note that by the time he and fellow officer Baldwin began opening cells the smoke was already too intense on the top range to save anyone on tier six. Little and Baldwin were quickly overcome by the dense smoke as they opened the first two tiers of G&H. One convict reported noticing blood trickling out of Little’s nose. Abandoning their efforts for the moment, they passed on cell keys to

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