Before 1844, the mentally ill were stashed away in prisons and the basements of public buildings. But in the middle of the 19th century, reformers like Dorothea Dix pushed to improve the standing of those with serious mental illness, an effort that led to the construction of sprawling psychiatric hospitals with names like the State Lunatic Hospital at Danvers and the Athens Lunatic Asylum.Many of these new facilities were built under the Kirkbride Plan, an architectural guideline which ensured the maximum amount of privacy and comfort for the patients. However the concept of "building as treatment" soon fell out of favor, and most American mental asylums became overcrowded Gothic palaces of abuse and neglect.
In the latter half of the 20th century, the invention of anti-psychotic drugs like Thorazine triggered a movement toward "deinstitutionalization" -- so much so that by the year 2000 almost all of the Kirkbride buildings had been abandoned or downsized. The shells of the grand structures, and tales of the horrors they housed, still remain. Read on to check them out.
Danvers State Hospital
Built in 1878 to house 500, Danvers State Hospital (formally known the State Lunatic Hospital at Danvers) had over 2,300 patients at its peak in the 1940s. Needless to say, conditions were hellish. Danvers is the rumored birthplace of the lobotomy, and doctors used that barbaric procedure, as well as electroshock therapy, to the keep the inmates in line.
The facility closed in 1992, but a plan to turn the building into condos stalled when it promptly burned down. The structure's cursed history shouldn't be that much of a surprise: It was built on plot of land once owned by John Hathorne, the most unforgiving of the Salem Witch Trial judges.
The Athens Lunatic AsylumThe Athens Lunatic Asylum, or The Ridges, has been considered one of the more haunted places on Earth ever since an incident in 1978, in which the lifeless, naked body of a missing female patient was found in an unheated room that was locked from the inside. Her corpse left a stain, and legend has it this darkened silhouette has remained ever since, despite numerous attempts to scrub it away.
It's also interesting to note that in 1876, two years after The Ridges opened, the number-one-listed cause of insanity among its male patients was masturbation, while menstrual issues were high up on the list of ills for committed females.
McLean Hospital With prominent former patients like John Nash, Ray Charles, Zelda Fitzgerald, Sylvia Plath and David Foster Wallace, McLean Hospital in Belmont, Mass., has long had a reputation as the insane asylum for the rich and famous. The private facility was the setting for "The Bell Jar" and "Girl, Interrupted," and a teenage James Taylor wrote one of his first songs, "Knockin' 'Round the Zoo," about his stay at McLean.
In fact, the mellow-voiced singing legend credits the Thorazine-filled nine months he spent committed at McLean as a "life saver." Today, McLean Hospital is one of the most well-regarded psychiatric facilities in the world.
Pilgram Psychiatric Center This Long Island asylum is most famous for its sheer size -- housing about 14,000 patients during its peak in the 1950s. The massive facility also featured a firehouse, a power plant, a bakery and a working farm.
Originally conceived with a "rest and relaxation" philosophy, Pilgram's treatment techniques become more aggressive with an increasing population. In addition to lobotomies and electroshock therapy, doctors at Pilgrim violently induced patients into comas using large doses of insulin and metrozol. A small part of the campus is still in use today, with its abandoned acreage now fodder for photographs and urban explorers.
Topeka State HospitalIn 1913, the Kansas legislature deemed that habitual criminals, idiots, epileptics, imbeciles and the insane could be subject to castration. From then until 1961, when the inhumane procedure was banned, about 3,000 Kansans were medically rendered infertile, with majority of those castrations taking place at the Topeka State Hospital.
Even before the facility became a hotbed of eugenics, it had a notorious reputation. In the early 1900s there were reports of patients being strapped down for so long their skin had grown over their bounds. Thankfully, the Topeka State Hospital was shut down in 1997.
Bethlem Royal HospitalEven on a list of American insane asylums, we would be remiss if we didn't mention Bethlem Royal Hospital in London. Bethlem, the world's oldest institution specializing in the mentally ill, started admitting unbalanced patients in 1357. Throughout most of its history the conditions in the asylum were atrocious. For example, in the 18th century the public could pay a penny for the privilege of watching the "freaks"; they were even permitted to poke the caged patients with a long stick.
As an indication of what a house of horrors Bethlem Royal Hospital was, the word bedlam is derived from its name.
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Tuesday 02 February
By DJ Maniak
I was hoping Pilgrim State would make this list, but I'm a bit surprised Kings Park didn't. I happen to live on LI, and these are both fertile ground for urban exploring and photo shoots for most.
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Wednesday 03 February
By MeSoMovie
Man, you missed Poveglia Asylum, surely the most balls out scariest asylum ever. The island it's on is empty despite being located near some of the priciest real estate in Italy.
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Friday 05 February
By frank
The scariest thing about that new movie is Leonardo DiCaprio's attempt at a New England accent! Did we learn NOTHING from Matt Damon and his boyfriend Ben Affleck about affected New England accents? I'm an 11th generation New Englander and I don't and never will speak like the Kennedys or the South Boston ChowderHeads they always seem to go for. I think it should be a law that unless you're from New England, DO NOT ATTEMPT A NEW ENGLAND ACCENT! We're all not South Boston Chowdreheads!~
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Saturday 06 February
By Marion
Dear Mr. Taylor,
In your quest for literary embellishment and sensationalism, you have chosen to include an undeserving group of individuals among the worst case scenario inmates of mental institutions as evidenced in the following extraction from your article below.
Topeka State Hospital
In 1913, the Kansas legislature deemed that habitual criminals, idiots, (epileptics), imbeciles and the insane could be subject to castration.
The group to which I refer is of course "epileptics". In your statement the group comes directly between idiots and imbeciles. It also lumps them together with habitual criminals and the insane. I take personal offense to this type of reporting since epileptics are very much a functioning part of society and have worked diligently for many years to dispel the myths which surround their malady. Furthermore, I believe that every time an article is written in this manner it erases their many years of hard work. My daughter is an epileptic and has three degrees from the University of Georgia and continues to be a highly functioning member of society. She is neither an imbecile, idiot, habitual criminal or insane.
Mr. Taylor, may I suggest that in future reporting you carefully reflect upon how your article portrays a large demographic to readers since a majority of readers may be uneducated about a particular subject upon which you write. Written words and opinions are powerful tools which should be used wisely and upon reflection.
You may consider me.........
Highly offended,
Marion
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Saturday 06 February
By Jeremy Taylor
Marion --
The passage that offends you is directly from a once-on-the-books law. I reprinted it because it conveys the absurdity of the state's mental health policies in 1913. It wasn't my "choice" to include epileptics in the list of those eligible for castration under 1913 law in Kansas. In fact, if I didn't mention epileptics, it would render my article historically inaccurate, and I wouldn't be doing my job. This being the case, the passage that "offends" you is the exact opposite of "literary embellishment" and would hardly qualify as "sensationalism."
I'm glad your daughter has done so well with a condition that, in 2010, nobody would ever compare to being an "idiot" or an "imbecile." But your "offense" is completely misguided.
If you'd like to learn more about early 20th century legal eugenics in Kansas, here is a footnoted paper (which I linked in the original article) on the subject: http://www.uvm.edu/~lkaelber/eugenics/KS/KS.html
Jeremy
Friday 12 February
By Mel
Good job, you are offended by history. Very original.
Saturday 13 February
By Clark
Just because you're offended doesn't mean it didn't happen. We can't continue to rewrite history books just because someone might be offended by something that happened a long, long time ago. We must embrace the most sordid parts of our history and learn from then as best as we can, lest we end up repeating them in the future.
I hope you aren't among the ranks of contemporary Americans who buy into the current "revisionist history" trend that is so popular these days.
Saturday 13 February
By Alyssa
Like it or not, historically people with epilepsy were lumped into that category. It's not politically correct. It's just s fact. And the same was true for many, many hospitals.
Wednesday 17 February
By Brigitte
You missed Southern California's Camarillo State Institution...
The song "Hotel California" was about this place. Now go back and listen to the popular song with new ears...haha. The building sat empty for years, claimed to be haunted. A metal sign taken from the building was sold on Ebay many years ago, with the owner recounting his fright of being there over night. Stands on his word that the horrors within the walls didn't stop when the people left it empty.
Thursday 18 February
By Lee
Marion,
It seems like folks such as yourself are too quick to pick out one small piece of information and make it into a mountain of problems. Maybe you'd like to sue the writer of this article???? This is the trouble with our country. It's not all about you.
Saturday 06 February
By Rachel
thank you Jeremy! I understood what you were doing & I was not offended. Oh & by the way my daughter is epileptic also.
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Saturday 06 February
By Rachel
I'm from New Orleans & people always butcher our accents too. Just because we're in the south doesn't mean we all sound like Scarlett Ohara or red necks. New Orleans accents are sometimes confused with Brooklyn accents.
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Sunday 07 February
By nomad
No one cares about your silly accents. Good article.
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Monday 08 February
By Ginger
I agree with you Nomad who really cares about the accents!!!! WTF
Sunday 07 February
By byron
there is another hospital that needs to be on this list: central state hospital (formerly ga lunatic asylum, then ga state sanatarium) in milledgeville ga. people were admitted (rather comitted) here for a variety of mental illness' and developmental disorders. they even have a large cemetary on the grounds, as it was illegal to bury the" insane or demented" in public cemetaries. patients here were subject to cruel treatment and warehousing conditions, as well as "icepick" lobotomies, electro-convulsive therapies, and icebaths to name a few cruel procedures. the complex is a vast maze of approximately 20 buildings (4 of which are still in use). this form of treatment was used up until the mid 1960's and in some ways is still being used. i had the priviledge of being admitted there at the age of 19, after the loss of a close friend by suicide, and while there i was subject to strip searches everytime i had a visiter, being "hosed down" daily rather than being allowed to shower, and on one occasion, an orderly allowed a patient into my room who then proceded to rape me (i am a male, as was the other patient. he happened to be there on suicide precautions from the state prison.). this place haunts my nightmares. it is one of the oldest (only bellevue in new york is older), cruelest, and largest (again,during its hayday, only bellevue was larger) and evil asylums in our country. mental illness may have come a longway, but the fact that places like this are still open is testament to the fact that it still has a long way to go.
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Monday 08 February
By Jimmy James
Haha Marion, you need to STFU. There is no place for hyper-sensitivity on the internet.
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Tuesday 09 February
By John Losh
Great article ... You could prob host haunted tours of any one of these creepy facilities. Was Shutter Island based on a real Asylum as well?
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Tuesday 09 February
By Donalyn
Does anyone know where "One flew over the Cuckoo's Nest" was filmed? Do tell -
Thank's!
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Saturday 13 February
By browerbears8
so far all i have found is it was in Oregon asylum, but im continuing to resurch
Wednesday 17 February
By Steve
"One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest" was filmed at the Oregon State Hospital in Salem. This was one of the original Kirkbride hospitals, built in 1878. It's now undergoing a major renovation/replacement.