Photos: Prison Valley
Main Street in Cañon City, which, along with neighboring Florence, makes up the heart of Colorado’s Prison Valley.
(Thomas B. Szalay / For the Los Angeles Times)Colorado’s Prison Valley is home to 11 state and federal lockups.
The Colorado Territorial Correctional Facility in Cañon City, one of 11 prisons in the area.
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There are no guard rails on the narrow three-mile Skyline Drive, built by prison inmates a century ago. It rises 800 feet above Cañon City.
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Fremont County Sheriff James Beicker visits the cemetery at Woodpecker Hill, where unclaimed bodies from local prisons are buried.
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Razor wire tops a prison fence.
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At the Colorado Territorial Prison Museum gift shop, visitors can buy socks, shirts, hats and aprons made by inmates.
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Prayer for Prisoners uses handwritten letters and prayer request forms to contact inmates. The group works to bring religion to inmates.
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For sale in the prison store is an inmate’s custom-built chopper, nicknamed “Old Max.” Its suggested retail price: $43,000.
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Jan McLaughlin is the director of Cañon City-based Prayer for Prisoners. Her ministry involves Christians from all over the country to become pen pals to prisoners.
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Helina Dabrowska, owner of the Riviera Motel in Florence, Colo., is reflected in a window. Her motel provides rooms and counsel for relatives of local prison inmates.
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Ginny Hadley, 75, has lived in Cañon City her entire life. She says she feels safe in the community despite its proximity to 11 state and federal prisons.
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A toy horse sits atop a marker on an unnamed Colorado state prisoner’s gravesite.
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Christian Snelson at his restaurant, Good Thyme Cafe, in downtown Cañon City. A former correctional officer, he says the restaurant is now a favorite of local prison guards. “They feel safe. They don’t have to worry about anyone messing with their food,” he said.
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Arlynn Miller, with wife Nina and their three adopted children, runs New Horizons, a program that connects families with infants born to women in prison.
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