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Carroll Pickett

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Nationality
  
American

Ex-spouse
  
Sonja Campbell Pickett

Role
  
Pastor

Name
  
Carroll Pickett

Occupation
  

Carroll Pickett httpsiytimgcomvixidS2bnHIFQhqdefaultjpg

Born
  
Other names
  
Carroll L. "Bud" Pickett

Alma mater
  
Victoria CollegeAustin College

Employer
  
Texas Department of Corrections (ret.)

Known for
  
Prison ministry, opposition to capital punishment

Residence
  
Huntsville, Texas, United States

Children
  
Anne Ellis, Karel Henry, Charlotte Hirschfelder

People also search for
  
Peter Gilbert, Steve James, Anne Ellis, Karel Henry, Charlotte Hirschfelder, Sam Martin

Carroll pickett short video 1


Reverend Carroll L. "Bud" Pickett (born 1933) is a Presbyterian minister in Huntsville, Texas. In the 1960s and 1970s, Rev. Pickett served as pastor for three churches in Texas. In 1980 he began serving as a chaplain in the Huntsville, Texas, prison, where he spent most of the next 15 years working with prisoners facing imminent execution. Since retiring from the Texas Department of Corrections, Rev. Pickett writes and speaks against the death penalty. His 2002 book, Within These Walls: Memoirs of a Death House Chaplain, won several awards. The 2008 documentary At the Death House Door: No Man Should Die Alone chronicles his prison ministry.

Contents

Carroll pickett short video 2


Early life and ministry

Born in Nursery, Texas, Pickett attended Pattie Welder High School in Victoria and graduated from Victoria College, then Austin College in 1954 and seminary in 1957. He married Sonja Campbell of Victoria and raised 4 children. After divorcing, he married his second wife Jane in 1990.

Early in his career, he served a Presbyterian church in Sinton. From 1961 to 1967, he served as Associate Pastor for First Presbyterian Church in Victoria. From 1967 to 1980, he served as pastor of First Presbyterian Church in Huntsville, Texas.

Attitudes towards the death penalty

In 1974, the Carrasco Prison Siege took the lives of two of Rev. Pickett's parishioners. After this, he was in favor of the death penalty. This was in direct conflict with the Presbyterian Church's established opposition to the death penalty.

During his tenure as a prison chaplain in the 1980s and 1990s, his views changed. In 1989 he sought psychiatric help to deal with work-related issues. He came to believe that one prisoner, Carlos DeLuna, was wrongly executed. He could not reveal his changed attitudes without jeopardizing his job and he felt a calling to continue to minister to prisoners on the last day of their lives. On the day of his retirement in 1995, he announced that he was against the death penalty. In 2008, he called execution "Biblically wrong."

In a September 2008 interview, he mentions that his attitude change was a long process, and was in part due to the execution of several men who he now believes were innocent.

In all, Rev. Pickett "walked with 95 inmates the last 10 steps to the Death House Door" in his 15 years with the prison system.

Campaign against the death penalty

In addition to writing a book and being the subject of a documentary about his time as the Death House chaplain, Rev. Pickett speaks and writes against the death penalty.

Recognition

  • 2002, Within These Walls: Memoirs of a Death House Chaplain, Violet Crown Award
  • 2005, Within These Walls: Memoirs of a Death House Chaplain, PEN Southwest Book Awards, finalist, non-fiction
  • Publications

  • Stowers, Carlton, and Carroll Pickett, Within These Walls: Memoirs of a Death House Chaplain, ISBN 978-0-312-28717-7, St. Martin's Press, 2002, Google Books
  • References

    Carroll Pickett Wikipedia