i guess, the two most famous female inmates was kate richards o'hare and emma goldman, and the federal prison system never had prisons for women until around 1925, 1927, and so at the time of world war i, emma goldman, who was a native of russia, was called red emma. she was a very outspoken activist and she and kate richards o'hara, kate richards o'hara was from kansas, and she spent a lot of time in st. louis, missouri. she was married, had several children. well, those two ladies were sent here right around 1919, 1920, because they had made a series of speeches around the country in which they very strongly protested u.s. involvement in world war i, so the government convicted them for sadicious acts against the government, and they were sent here. they were very well known. there were approximately 70 to 80 other female prisoners in here at the time and you can see this cell block is like a box within a box, pretty typical for the time. we don't know exactly which cells emma and kate were in, but we know it was in this general area, because behind me is located what was called the