Cell 2455 Death Row
| Author | Caryl Chessman |
|---|---|
| Genre | Memoir |
| Publisher | Prentice-Hall |
Publication date | 1954 |
Cell 2455, Death Row: A Condemned Man's Own Story is a 1954 memoir and the first of four books written on death row by convicted robber, rapist and kidnapper Caryl Chessman (27 May 1921 – 2 May 1960). Sentenced to death in 1948 under California's Little Lindbergh Law, Chessman became internationally famous for waging a legal battle to stay alive and fight his conviction and death sentence through voluminous appeals. Chessman became a cause célèbre for the movement to ban capital punishment. Before he was executed in 1960, he was the at the longest-lived death row inmate in modern history.