The Des Moines Register

Nix, penitentia­ry’s 1st Black warden, dies at 93

- Kyle Werner

One man made history on Dec. 1, 1981, when he assumed the role of warden at the Iowa State Penitentia­ry (ISP) in Fort Madison. Crispus Nix was the first Black warden at the penitentia­ry in the state of Iowa, leaving a legacy behind that changed the state’s prison systems after serving as warden for 11 years.

Nix died Sunday, March 10, at the age of 93 in Montgomery, Alabama.

Nix grew up in Greenville, Alabama as the seventh of nine children. According to a Facebook post from the 15th Military Police Brigade, he graduated from Tuskegee University in 1957 with a Bachelor of Science degree in physical education. He also received a Masters of Science degree in vocational rehabilita­tion from South Carolina University in 1974.

Taking reign as warden in Dec. 1981, Nix had just left the U.S. Army as an active duty colonel after serving combat tours in Korea and Vietnam. According to Bill Petroski, a former Register reporter, Nix was seen as “somebody who could kick butt and shape up an Iowa prison staff to handle difficult inmates at the state’s toughest prison.”

Before Nix’s takeover as warden, the ISP in Fort Madison made national headlines after a major prison riot left one inmate dead and caused more than $1 million in damages.

Nix came to Iowa after being the commander of a maximum security military prison in Fort Leavenwort­h, Kansas. Replacing then-warden David Scurr, who was transferre­d to the Mount Pleasant correction­al facility, Nix had plenty on his plate between budget limitation­s and troublemak­ers in the prison.

“We are entering a period dominated by (the) scarcity of funds that will require cutbacks, trade-offs, reallocati­on of programs, terminatio­ns and freezing privileges which some inmates and staff have come to regard as unnegotiab­le rights,” Nix said to the Register in 1983. “It is hoped, by improving management skills, practical and creative thinking about the future, that we will cope with our current crisis with efficiency and effectiven­ess.”

Implementi­ng rules from requiring correction­al officers to shine their shoes to enforcing inmates to obey their orders, Nix dramatical­ly changed the environmen­t of the Fort Madison prison.

“He was somebody who was just incredibly respected as a real profession­al,” Petroski said to the Register. “He’s the kind of guy that people wanted to follow.”

Nix brought about change to the ISP and the Fort Madison community alike.

According to Petroski, Nix made headlines for his successes while in leadership.

“We [The Des Moines Register] wrote many stories about how he made prison employees proud of themselves and provided an atmosphere where inmates knew what they could and couldn’t do and didn’t have to live in fear at the prison,” Petroski said in an email to the Register.

According to inmates in an episode of Iowa Press in 1982, “racial discrimina­tion is a part of life at Fort Madison.”

Some inmates even cited the Ku Klux Klan operating within prison walls. Just over a week after Nix took over as warden, he started an investigat­ion into allegation­s of guards recruiting inmates to join the Ku Klux Klan.

You can watch the full episode featuring Nix and his initiative­s while warden at ISP on the American Archive of Public Broadcasti­ng’s website.

Nix retired in 1993 after serving as the warden at ISP for 11 years, garnering the praise of then-governor Terry Branstad.

“Crispus Nix has done an outstandin­g job as warden of the maximum-security prison at Fort Madison,” Branstad said in 1993, according to Register archives. “He came in at a very difficult time and restored order and discipline and gained the respect of the staff and inmates. We’re all going to miss him. But we’re very pleased and proud of the record he has establishe­d during his time at Fort Madison.”

Nix was laid to rest in the Alabama National Cemetery in Montevallo, Alabama on Monday, March 18. His full obituary can be viewed at the RossClayto­n Funeral Home website.

 ?? 15TH MILITARY POLICE BRIGADE ?? Before serving as the first Black warden of the Iowa State Penitentia­ry, Crispus Nix served in the U.S. Army.
15TH MILITARY POLICE BRIGADE Before serving as the first Black warden of the Iowa State Penitentia­ry, Crispus Nix served in the U.S. Army.
 ?? PROVIDED BY ROSS-CLAYTON FUNERAL HOME ?? Crispus Nix served at the first Black warden at the Iowa State Penitentia­ry.
PROVIDED BY ROSS-CLAYTON FUNERAL HOME Crispus Nix served at the first Black warden at the Iowa State Penitentia­ry.

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