Want to cut up your vanilla slice without squashing all the custard from in the middle?
Then place the slice on its side and cut down - perfect portions every time!

The Old Melbourne Gaol was the first extensive gaol complex in Victoria. The first Melbourne Gaol was built in Collins Street West in 1839-40, but was far too small. A second gaol was built in 1841-4, adjoining the then Supreme Court at the corner of Russell and La Trobe Streets, but this was entirely demolished early in the twentieth century when the Magistrate's Court complex was built.
What was officially a new wing, but really stage one of the third gaol, was built in 1852-4. It was of bluestone rather than sandstone, and had its own perimeter wall. This new design was based upon the Pentonville Model Prison and on the then current prison reform theories of the day. In spite of the amount of building and extension work performed on the Gaol, the complex was consistently overcrowded. It was extended in two stages in 1857-9, and the boundary wall was also extended in 1858-9.

Between 1842 and its closure in 1929 the gaol was the scene of 135 hangings including Australia's most infamous citizen, the bushranger Ned Kelly. Now a National Trust museum, its displays include death masks and histories of famous bushrangers and convicts.
H.M. Pentridge was built in 1850 and officially closed in 1997and sold in 1999. Originally a stockade consisting of log huts, prisoners worked, slept and were fed in chains. Female prisoners were also at Pentridge until 1956 when Fairlea Female Prison was opened.
