SH Archive Insane Asylums of the United States, Canada, UK and the rest of the World

SH.org OP Username
KorbenDallas
SH.org OP Date
2019-06-16 04:58:22
SH.org Reaction Score
78
SH.org Reply Count
39
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Username: Red Bird
Date: 2019-06-25 14:07:55
Reaction Score: 1
Yes I’ve read about this of course and while it could be true in instances I’ve recently been reading about how some were actually witches from Luciferian/satanic families. Knowing what is going on in the present I’m beginning to put more weight on the second theory.
Also psychological help has always been dark and light. The characture of evil drs in white coats doesn’t come from nowhere. In fact the mad professor character is even more believable now. I always wonder how Christian psychiatrists come to grips with HOW a lot of their knowledge was come by. Its getting much worse today. They don’t recognize the ability, and possibility, of outside manipulation either. Use in gun control and other controls (taking children away). Forgot to mention demon posession- which even Christians who believe this don't consider modern (?) silent weapons.
 
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Username: whitewave
Date: 2019-06-25 21:23:33
Reaction Score: 3
Possibly, but I'd think that witches with Luciferian powers/protection would be able to escape the fate of being burned at the stake. Cast a "whammy" on their captors or put a curse on them that would frighten away any further persecutors. Odd how most of the "witches" had property (which was conveniently forfeited to the RCC). Not too many indigent people were accused of witchcraft unless they were also outspoken against the RCC.

Insane asylums are the modern equivalent of witch hunts. Living in a town that had the state mental hospital all but closed, I can assure you that poor people who are truly insane are running around on the streets whereas the rich afflicted are sent to "retreats", "spas", "resorts" "rehab" (at least until their insurance runs out). I once took my car to a mechanic as soon as his shop opened in the morning and, as we were outside discussing the issue of my vehicle, we were surprised by quite a sight. Some guy (obviously released too early from the mental hospital) was performing a high-stepping march-knees practically raised to his chest before smartly stepping in rhythm with his arms swinging far forward with each step. He was holding a scepter (or stick of some sort), had on cowboy boots and a cowboy hat and not one stitch of anything else as he marched down the road. The mechanic and I watched as he marched away then went back to discussing the car problem. Naked guy was crazy as a bed bug but harmless and, in Oklahoma, we're pretty much "live and let live". :) If he had money he would have been tucked away out of sight and doped to the gills.
Women weren't the only victims of the Salem witch trials. But they were the overwhelming majority. "For the most part, the men of Salem Village were involved in blaming, trying, and convicting the young women whose unusual behavior and outlandish accusations were at the heart of the trials. But soon, men like Proctor were among those being accused, sometimes by neighbors who had longstanding resentments against them." According to this list of victims names, 1/3 of the victims were men. Almost all of the victims were elderly (50+ years old which in 1692 was elderly).

During medieval witch hunts over 70% of the victims/accused were women. "Well over 70 percent of the accused were women, especially widows, who often had no one to defend them. Victims included the poor, the elderly, and women who dispensed herbal remedies, especially if these failed. No one was truly safe—rich or poor, male or female, lowly or prominent. Friedrich Spee, a Jesuit priest who had accompanied many people judged to be witches to the stake to be burned alive, wrote that in his view none were guilty. And if witch hunting continued unabated, he warned, the land would become empty!"

Many of the men accused of witchcraft were due to political rather than religious reasons. Partial list of the accused and known numbers of those executed including the Knights Templar, Father Urbain Grandier, the Cathars, a bishop who tried to assassinate Pope John the XII; and the Malleus Maleficarum was published during a time when Protestant-ism was rising. Although men were also accused of witchcraft, about 75–80 percent of those executed during the witch hunts were women.
Some writers have also argued, with significant evidence, that many of those accused were single women or widows whose very existence delayed the full inheritance of property by male heirs. Dower rights, intended to protect widows, gave women in such circumstances power over property that they usually could not exercise. Witchcraft accusations were easy ways to remove the obstacle.

It was also true that most of those accused and executed were among the poorest, most marginal in society."
 
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Username: anadentone
Date: 2019-06-25 22:46:59
Reaction Score: 1
world mud flood- these came out at the time of the mud flooding. I wonder if those who were deemed "crazy" were men,women and children who refuse to keep quiet about it. And one main reason they were torn down was after the generation who lived during the time of the flooding had died out and they got rid of the buildings and destroy the records of "reasons" the crazies were in there.
 
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Username: Recognition
Date: 2019-06-26 11:25:08
Reaction Score: 1
Anyone read this book? Puts a whole new spin on the topics we are discussing!

The Memory Code

Here's what someone said in their review:

The author makes a plausible if highly speculative proposition. Namely *that many of the artifacts and monuments of prehistory were used to enhance memory of important knowledge in an oral tradition*. Drawing from Cicero's Ad Herennium and the memory palace described in it in addition to indigenous peoples *use of ritual and song to hold on to traditions and histories of their people and knowledge of plants and animals, the author argues that ancient monuments and artifacts had the same purpose*.... Update 3/10/17 after watching Lynne Kelly give a talk I am much more impressed with her argument. Here is a youtube video of her argument it is about an hour and twelve minutes.


*asterix are mine couldn't get it to bold
 
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Username: trismegistus
Date: 2019-07-01 21:48:21
Reaction Score: 5
Found this quote in a Miles Mathis article referencing a quote from Dr. Julia Shaw on an episode of NOVA called Memory Hackers. Thought it was relevant to the idea that these insane asylums were reeducation facilities for the particularly strong willed individuals who still remembered the old world.

 
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Username: Robinl17
Date: 2019-07-19 03:57:33
Reaction Score: 6
I just finished a book on the house arrest of the Romanov family--I'll add the book later, and it strikes me that maybe these 'asylums' were the homes of the defeated Tartarians. Maybe they were kept under house arrest and tortured until they died or were killed. This happened to the Russian royalty of 1917, just 100 years later. Where they the last hold-outs of the Tartarians? These 'asylums' are far too grand for their stated-use. Ridiculous to the extreem. I would guess that they were the homes of the royals. Any ideas?
 
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Username: universer
Date: 2019-07-22 16:49:22
Reaction Score: 2
As horrible and incomprehensible as it is, one possible explanation for the opulence is that some of these places were meant to be amusement attractions where rich people paid to gawk at the mentally ill. At least we can say that was true of Bethlehem (Bedlam) Hospital in London.
 
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Username: Robinl17
Date: 2019-08-12 22:28:33
Reaction Score: 3
Korbin, you mentioned once that someone would write a fictional account of this story, and I've thought about it since and have been working on an outline. Any new info you might have, or anyone else, I'd love to see. I am a writer and have a book out now, and one upcoming, and was looking for a great new idea. I think the reset is it. Most people find it easier to handle the truth in a fictional way. "Fiction is a lie that tells the truth"
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2019-09-28 22:07:15
Reaction Score: 1
Did not want to create a separate thread, though if they have more of these, I probably should have. Anyways, apparently, they also had institudtions for inebriated people. Correct me if I'm wrong but they do mean drunkards, right?

 
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Username: Manwich
Date: 2019-10-04 05:37:08
Reaction Score: 12
Hello everyone. This is my first post. There is so much information on this website. I'm really enjoying it.

I used to work at the St. Peter State Hospital in Minnesota. The oldest building on grounds is the center part of the huge complex. After looking into the history It always seemed fishy that they would need to open up so many insane asylums across the newly acquired regions within a few years. It's almost like they needed asylums to put all the people who knew what happened or didn't want to go with the flow of the new hierarchy.

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The wings of this building were destroyed due to a fire.

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This is what's left.

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When I worked there I was campus security so I had to patrol the buildings, grounds, tunnels, etc. In this building they have tunnels in the basement that lead to other buildings on grounds and one tunnel leads out to the river but that was blocked off.
Now below those tunnels are older tunnels that have a gravel floor, red brick walls and arched ceilings. We were not allowed to go in those tunnels. I was only able to see about 20 yards and it looked like it had never been touched. Supposedly these tunnels went all the way into town (about 1 mile) to the old temporary asylum building.

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They said the tunnels were built to hide women and children from the Indians during the Minnesota Indian war of 1862.

I was also able to explore the attic of the main building and the joists were huge at least 18" x 18" wooden beams. It was pretty amazing.
I noticed in the older pictures, some of them had a center steeple on the main center building and then it was removed.

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One last picture, not from St. Peter but Fergus Falls, MN. It also looks like it fits this mold.

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Username: HiStoryBoost
Date: 2019-10-04 20:49:17
Reaction Score: 5
First Post, so I’ll try to keep it short and sweet.
Close to home I found the Lancaster County Almshouse. Construction began in 1799.


This building appears too good to be true. And it was built primarily to “control” the poor. How many poor were walking around in the 1800’s in Lancaster, PA?

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We even have information on the architect including a photo - Lancaster’s first architect! (which would seem to push back construction to at least when photography existed.)


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This structure, for the most part, was demolished long ago. But oddly enough the part of the building that was built first, building 1, from 1799, still stands tucked away in Lancaster today. A very interesting find. Seeing as there is the whole city of Lancaster built on top of this land today!


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And a quilt made in Lancaster from “way back then” depicting the Almshouse in all its glory. The building was one of the major features of Lancaster for quite a long time. For a small community there sure was a lot of poor and sick!

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Username: Casimir
Date: 2019-10-07 14:57:10
Reaction Score: 1
It's not like there was some Insane Asylum template everyone was working from but the similarities of the buildings sure make it look that way- everyone posting them from around the world is crazy. If these buildings were leftover and re-purposed, I think it would be an exquisite opportunity to launder tons and tons of money into the "building" of them.

So the 1800s were full of orphan trains shipping kids across the USA and around the same time, we had these multi-million dollar mansions for the clinically insane being built to be filled with tons of adults
 
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Username: 0harris0
Date: 2019-10-07 17:55:47
Reaction Score: 3
BAM! cogs are turning.... what if most of the adults had gone/ been "got rid of" (cataclysm/ mud/ war/ disease)?
guess that would only leave a certain number of survivors... the kids all shipped off to workhouses, and the adults who don't agree with societal norms (that could be a change of history/ alteration of events) can quite easily be labelled as crazy!!
 
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Username: KorbenDallas
Date: 2019-10-07 18:04:55
Reaction Score: 2
In the below thread there was something about people going insane during the so-called earthquake:
And if there was insanity involved, may be it was not caused by your traditional average earthquake:
I guess, what I’m getting to... what if there was a reason for so many insane people suddenly emerging?
 
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Username: 0harris0
Date: 2019-10-07 18:06:00
Reaction Score: 2
the asylum thing is gonna take me a while to get my thoguhts in gear, LOADS of them around north somerset/ bristol (some have become rehab centres). i've done construction work in one (that's now, ironically, a university building for nurses) and it was creepy in there!
also, hopefully not too off topic but there's an old 19thC. orphanage complex in bristol too, it's MASSIVE!! (mostly mentioning because all were built in the "same" time frame)

so you've got a bunch of crazy people, maybe having kids they can't look after(?) and getting locked away all conveniently in the same time as wars, disease, earthquakes... all the while the empire is expanding and huge fancy construction projects being undertaken in smashing time!
 
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Username: universer
Date: 2019-10-22 19:11:56
Reaction Score: 3
This topic is close to my heart because my great-great grandfather was incarcerated at Central State Hospital (then known as Central Indiana Hospital for the Insane)...another of these improbably huge and ornate buildings...in Indianapolis in 1895. The state archives were able to provide me with some of his paperwork, in which his oldest son basically said he completely lost his marbles after his wife died pretty young from Typhoid fever, going from kind and gentle to rabid. He was born in 1835 and I wonder what other kind of shenanigans he lived through.

This may call for a separate topic but on a few of my harder to trace ancestry lines from the Midwest, nobody seems to want to mention on documents who their parents were. It just didn't seem important for some reason. I wondered how this might have aligned with the orphan trains, but the dates don't align in this case.
 
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Username: Starmonkey
Date: 2019-10-23 01:14:23
Reaction Score: 0
They'll be rounding us up again soon.
Creepy big old buildings.
Either for the rebels or those driven crazy by the comet and cataclysms.
Weird.
 
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Username: anotherlayer
Date: 2019-10-23 01:48:17
Reaction Score: 12
I cannot believe I let this thread go so long without posting Buffalo's Insane Asylum:

The large Medina red sandstone and brick hospital buildings were designed in 1870 in the Kirkbride Plan by architect Henry Hobson Richardson with grounds by landscape architect Frederick Law Olmsted.[5] The campus consists of a central administrative tower and five pavilions or wards progressively set back on each side, for eleven buildings total, all connected by short curved two-story corridors. Patients were segregated by sex, males on the east side, females on the west. The wards housed patients until the mid-1970s. The central administration building was used for offices until 1994.[1]

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It's a glorious beast and it still has half of the renovation left. Buffalo woke up early (or ran out of money) and stopped tearing these things down:
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And I took this picture flying in the other day, down in the bottom left:
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Username: Mifletz
Date: 2019-10-23 01:53:58
Reaction Score: 5
And in Woodford, Essex , near London UK, the 1889 Claybury Lunatic Asylum. I visited an inmate there in 1978, and was lucky to get out!

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The London E11 Wanstead 1841 Infant Orphanage Asylum
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Username: HiStoryBoost
Date: 2019-10-24 02:30:26
Reaction Score: 6
universer,

I’m glad to see your post, as I’ve recently stumbled into another epic hospital that once existed in Indiana.

It was known originally as “Woodmere” - which meant tranquility in the forest. Built in 1890 in Evansville, Indiana on 900 acres. Woodmere was self sufficient and had farms and gardens, with livestock on the lands.

In 1927 the name was changed to Evansville State Hospital. The building was nearly completely burned down in 1943 (what a surprise). Woodmere had a pretty epic design!

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I wonder if all these insane people realized they were living inside the nicest buildings of their times?
 
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