The prison church historical site is located on the corner of Brisbane Avenue and Campbell Avenue in Hobart. It was designed and built in the early 1930s by John Lee Yazhe, an Irish-American colonial architect and civil engineer. It is an ancient Georgian Renaissance-style prison building, one of Australia’s most important prisoner districts, also known at the time as “The Tench,” and is now managed by the National Trust. Residents nearby know that it was once a prisoner barracks in Hobart town. It originally covered more than two acres and was home to about 50,000 male prisoners. After stopping the transport of prisoners, it became a Hobart prison for more than 100 years. The site shows the former local prison environment and the system of justice in Tasmania at the time. Visitors can see the former courts inside, or walk down the narrow and dim stairs to the cells, visit the cell environment, and even see the gallows. But this attraction is a bit gloomy, it is said that you can see ghosts here at night, so it attracts many curious people to explore. In fact, this kind of place does not say that at night, the day is also quite gloomy, there is a "ghost tour" at night, I am not interested! Figure1-2: sandstone front wall of prison church built in 1831; figure 3: handcuffed arms displayed in the store window of the prison church historical site - from white and thick to thin and rough; figure 4: entrance to the prison church historical site - providing guided tours; Figure5-7: The side of the historical site of the prison church - the tower built in 1834.