Walled In: A True Story of Randall's Island

audiobook

Walled In: A True Story of Randall's Island

by William O. Stoddard

EN·~1 hours·14 chapters

Chapters

14 total
1

Walled In

0:20
2

ILLUSTRATIONS.

0:09
3

I THE HIGH STONE WALLS

9:58
4

II SUPPER TIME

9:35
5

III EVENING VISITORS

9:23
6

IV BEHIND BOLTS AND BARS

8:20
7

V JIM’S PLOT FOR LIBERTY

8:54
8

VI PLANS FOR ACTION

8:18
9

VII ONE PLAN THAT FAILED

8:58
10

VIII NEW IDEAS THAT CAME

10:00

Description

On the remote, windswept expanse of Randall’s Island, a towering stone wall encloses a regiment of boys marching in perfect unison. Dressed in identical gray coats with flashes of blue for the officers, they move to the sharp cadence of drums and fifes, their youthful faces set with a mix of defiance and determination. At the front stands a charismatic young naval officer, appointed to impose military‑style order on this unconventional battalion. The scene feels both disciplined and restless, as each boy silently measures his own limits against the unyielding barrier.

These boys come from varied corners of the city—some orphaned, some fleeing harsh streets, others placed there for minor offenses. The island functions less as a prison and more as a refuge, offering structure, education, and a chance at redemption. Within the regiment’s rigid routine, friendships form, rivalries spark, and each young soldier grapples with the promise of a future beyond the wall. Listeners are drawn into a vivid portrait of hope, hardship, and the restless energy of adolescence in a forgotten corner of New York’s history.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (106K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by ellinora, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2019-07-17

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

William O. Stoddard

William O. Stoddard

1835–1925

Best remembered as one of Abraham Lincoln’s White House secretaries, he also built a remarkably varied career as a journalist, inventor, and prolific writer for young readers. His life moved from newspaper offices and wartime Washington to more than a hundred books of fiction, memoir, poetry, and history.

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