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Devil's Island

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Aerial View of Devil's IslandAerial View of Devil's Island

Devil's Island, small rocky islet in the Atlantic Ocean, northern French Guiana, part of a French penal settlement in use from 1852 to 1946. The island and two others, Royale and Saint-Joseph islands, form the Îles du Salut (Safety Islands), a group formerly known as the Îles du Diable (Devil's Islands). The island group and portions of French Guiana comprised the entire penal settlement, which was collectively known as Devil's Island. The settlement was maintained separately from the former colony of French Guiana. The prisoners were classed as follows: habitual criminals who were permitted to work; political prisoners and criminals who were permitted limited liberty; and serious criminals who were imprisoned at hard labour. If a prisoner was sentenced to a term of less than eight years, he had to spend an equal period of time in French Guiana; if his sentence was more than eight years, he had to remain in the colony permanently. After 1885, only criminals with sentences of more than eight years were sent to Devil's Island. Those prisoners who were liberated earned their passage home by working in the colony.

The climate in the settlement proved so unhealthy that many prisoners died. Only a few of the convicts managed to escape. These two factors combined to make Devil's Island known as a place from which there was no return. The horrors of the penal settlement became notorious after the French army captain Alfred Dreyfus was sent there in 1895—the so-called Dreyfus Affair.

Improvement of the conditions on Devil's Island was undertaken during the early 1930s by the French Salvation Army with the approval of the French government. In 1938 the government ceased sending prisoners to Devil's Island, and in 1946 the penal settlement was closed. The Salvation Army was authorized to look after those liberated prisoners who, for various reasons, did not wish to return to France.

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