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Perched atop a hill overlooking a small college town in Ohio
(United States), Athens State Hospital-now known as The Ridges-has
an imposing presence that the banners for the art gallery
in the central building do little to diminish. While a fraction
of the building is currently in use by Ohio State University,
the majority of the aging Kirkbride hospital has been left
to the peaceful solitude of its own decay. The hallways and
rooms, still peppered with fragments of the past, are rife
with uncharted mold and bacteria; the walls have become intricate
murals of the eroding lead paint that dusts the floor and
poisons the air.
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| The
unique architecture of this campus has been spared due
to the use of several of its buildings by local businesses,
which maintain the properties of the abandoned ones. |
In many senses, Athens State Hospital is an anomaly. It has
been incredibly well preserved and protected from thieves
and vandals, and reminders of its history are still intact.
Most state hospitals, such as Byberry State Hospital in Philadelphia,
have been completely left to the elements and are easily accessible
to anyone who cares to research them and risk getting caught
by the meagre security forces that guard them. Such sites
are frequently seen as a problem to the communities they are
part of, due in part to the fact that an entire subculture
of self-titled urban explorers has developed, populated by
people ranging from those with a deep and abiding respect
for the sites to those who look at them as opportune sites
for graffiti and vandalism. While these sites are extremely
toxic, the dangers are often invisible to those who enter.
Asbestos and lead particles in the air do not affect one's
health immediately and rotting floors often give no signal
of their structural weakness until it is too late. Furthermore,
these sites are on prime locations for development, yet their
historical significance is undeniable, and often the cleanup
of hazardous materials makes costs prohibitive.
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| Asylums
were intended to be self-sufficient and the majority of
the food would be grown by patients in fields and greenhouses
like this one. |
While now famous for the abuses and horrors that took place
inside, most state hospitals were initially beautiful, idyllic
campuses founded in the late 1800s, largely in response to
the tremendous need for mental health care for veterans of
the United States Civil War suffering from what would later
be labelled post-traumatic stress disorder. Public awareness
of the need for adequate and full-time care for the mentally
ill was higher than ever, and reformers like Dorothea Dix
(1802-1887) and Thomas Kirkbride (1809-1883) helped promote
what would become an unparalleled movement to create asylums
funded by state and local governments to tend to the needs
of the mentally ill. Such facilities were founded on the curative
principles of healing through humane treatment, labour and
the natural beauty of the sprawling campuses on which the
hospitals were built, and were intended to be self-sustaining.
As such, the food was grown and the grounds maintained by
patients, and by all accounts the treatment provided was a
vast improvement on the universally poor care afforded to
the mentally ill prior to this era.
But such times were not destined to last. After the turn
of the century, state hospitals became warehouses for an increasing
number of people who society deemed undesirable, including
criminals, the poor, homosexuals, those with unorthodox religious
views, unwanted children, the elderly, syphilitics, alcoholics
and anyone else who was inconvenient to those around them.
During this period, it was frighteningly easy to commit a
wife who was no longer wanted, children who misbehaved or
aging parents whose care was too cumbersome.
As populations swelled past the capacity for which the asylums
had been designed, the level of care plummeted, and with such
diverse populations being cared for in the same wards, consistent
treatment was impossible. Cuts in funding during wartime and
the depression forced many patients to sleep on floors or
in hallways. Treatment reached critical proportions during
the Second World War, when funding and supplies were unavailable
and the majority of able-bodied staff were involved in the
war effort. The care for patients also became unimaginably
nightmarish: there were wards full of malnourished, unclothed
and filthy patients, who were forced to eat rotten food and
sleep in quarters that were falling apart, often fatally exposing
them to the elements. With staffing ratios at unthinkable
levels (at times 1 staff member to 200 patients) and facilities
crammed to nearly double their intended capacities, abuse
by staff also became incredibly problematic. Patients were
severely beaten, raped, prostituted, denied medical care and
otherwise mistreated to levels that are beyond comprehension.
One cannot help but think when looking at pictures from this
period that the patients are nearly indistinguishable from
Holocaust survivors.
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| As
the peeling paint etches intricate patterns in the walls
and doors of this asylum, its toxic dust coats the floor
and floats in the air. |
In his book, Mad in America: Bad Science, Bad Medicine, and
The Enduring Mistreatment of the Mentally Ill, Robert Whitaker
makes a compelling argument for how the Holocaust and the
treatment of the mentally ill in this period both were founded
on the same principles of eugenics and the cleansing of "undesirables"
from society: the stated goal of the concentration camps was
the extermination of Germany's upper-echelon groups deemed
detrimental to society, while the same, if unstated, goal
in the United States mental health system was attained through
forced sterilization and lethal neglect.
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| The
halls of the Athens State Hospital are remarkably well
preserved and unmarred by vandalism and theft. |
As the war ended, several major exposés brought the
abysmal treatment of the mentally ill to light. A photo essay,
entitled "Bedlam 1946", in Life Magazine and Albert
Deutsch's 1948 publication, The Shame of the States (Mental
Illness and Social Policy: the American Experience), helped
raise public awareness of the plight of the inmates in many
psychiatric hospitals. While this served to ameliorate the
situation somewhat, most of the measures taken to remedy the
problems were short-lived. Overcrowding and insufficient care
continued to be problematic, although less so than during
the years of the Second World War, and abuse of patients continued
unabated. There is simply no way to encompass all the cruelties
heaped on the patients; most are familiar with lobotomies,
which gained popularity as they produced manageable patients,
albeit those whose cognitive functioning had been permanently
impaired. A particularly barbaric variation of this treatment
was performed at Athens State Hospital by Dr. Walter Freeman
(1895-1972), who made use of neither anesthetics nor an operating
room, and whose careless technique shocked even other doctors
and nurses familiar with the procedure. Another common form
of treatment was hydrotherapy in which a patient was placed
in a tub, which would be filled with either scalding or freezing
water, and a sheet was zipped around the neck so only the
head was sticking out. Depending on the temperament of the
staff, the patient might be left in such a state for days
without even a pause to use the bathroom. As the hospitals'
intent was less to cure than to warehouse patients, the purpose
of the treatments was less to produce any measurable improvement
in their condition than to subdue them, making them convenient
for the staff.
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| Left
to its own, nature often playfully mimics architectural
details, using dazzling complimentary patterns. |
During the late 1960s and 1970s, the advent of the "chemical
straight jacket" Thorazine changed the face of mental
health care. Neuroleptics like Thorazine produce a myriad
of intensely uncomfortable, frightening side effects and were
in fact later identified by Soviet political dissidents as
one of the worst tortures they were subjected to in the "psychiatric
centres" where they were confined. They produced docile
and compliant patients however, and their use was far-reaching
and indiscriminate in the American mental health system. As
their use became more widespread and the push for deinstitutionalization
was spearheaded by President John F. Kennedy and newly formed
patients' rights associations, the focus of hospitalization
shifted from containing patients for the remainder of their
natural lives to bringing their behaviours to manageable levels
that would allow community integration. While this policy
was in many ways beneficial, the treatment at hospitals continued
to be an inhumane and dehumanizing process. In his book, entitled
The Shoe Leather Treatment, referring to the common "treatment"
of kicking patients until they were compliant or too injured
to resist, former patient Bill Thomas relates that after years
in state hospitals, a brief stay in prison after an escape
attempt seemed an immeasurable improvement in his quality
of life.
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| Vandalism
has severely damaged the buildings of the hospital in
Maryland. Doors are broken, windows smashed and graffiti
covers nearly every wall. |
Coupled with the push to reintegrate patients into society,
this flagrant abuse and neglect finally led to the closure
of many asylums. Even this process was messy, however. Under
President Ronald Reagan's policies, which often led to dumping
clients out of hospitals with inadequate aftercare, the homeless
populations soared. When the closure of Byberry State Hospital
was initiated in 1986, three patients drowned in the Schuylkill
River before the Pennsylvania Governor decided to slow down
the process to a manageable level. This process continues
to this day and the problematic nature of providing care for
the mentally ill continues to haunt us. Harrisburg State Hospital
in Pennsylvania recently shut down, forcing communities and
mental health providers to scramble to find alternatives for
patients with higher treatment needs. Many patients now in
communities may require assistance for the rest of their lives
in dealing with mundane chores most take for granted, such
as buying groceries and paying bills, because they were never
exposed to these problems during their hospitalization.
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| A
pile of discarded shoe coverings lies at the foot of the
basement staircase in Athens State Hospital. |
The ever-present issue of what to do with state hospital
facilities is also difficult. In many cases, the land and
buildings will be almost immediately reclaimed, sold to developers
or used as state agency offices. Several facilities, such
as Danvers State Hospital in New York, are being converted
into high-priced apartment buildings, although some
ex-patients and mental health workers view this as a move
only slightly more tasteful than making apartments out of
Auschwitz. Other facilities like Dixmont have been completely
demolished by large companies, which see the sites as development
gold mines and have no problems bulldozing unmarked gravestones
in patient cemeteries to make way for their projects. Some,
such as Pilgrim State Hospital in New York, were partially
used, abandoned and demolished. Countless more sites have
been completely abandoned, standing until the roofs collapse
under the weight of years of water damage or until they are
burned by arsonists. Almost none are protected historic sites
that visitors can enter to learn about their checkered past.
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| The
wings of a Kirkbride hospital are designed to house progressively
psychotic patients, so that the further one gets from
the centre (and exit), the more difficult it is to escape. |
Two examples stand out, however, as thoughtful ideas for
reintegration of the properties into the communities. The
state hospital in Fairview, Connecticut, has been turned into
a public park-the buildings are well secured and the grounds
well kept-where during the day one finds community members
jogging, picnicking or walking their dogs. Ironically, by
being open to the public, theft and vandalism have taken significantly
less of a toll on the buildings compared to other state hospitals
whose grounds are off-limits.
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| The
theatre of this asylum is in poor condition, yet large,
old projectors in the booth still rest relatively unscathed. |
Athens State Hospital is a fantastic example of proper maintenance
of an historic site. The university uses portions of many
of the buildings and as such the grounds are well-maintained,
beautiful and secure. It has an excellent section on its website
dedicated to the history of the facility; the wings of the
old Kirkbride hospital are in better condition than nearly
any other state hospital in the country. Also unlike many
other asylums, Athens State Hospital sits securely on a hill
overlooking the small college town. While entering it requires
a respirator and permission from the faculty, its rich and
multilayered past remains intact for now, serving as a poignant
reminder and an epitaph to the many shattered lives that passed
through its doors.
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