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The Old Hospital: Perceptions and Fates of Historic Asylums Post-Deinstitutionalization

The Old Hospital: Perceptions and Fates of Historic Asylums Post-Deinstitutionalization

  • Bibliography

The deinstitutionalization movement in the later half of the twentieth century resulted in many of those previously committed to psychiatric hospitals moving into the community, leaving the asylums that previously dominated mental health care with increasingly shrinking patient bodies. The changes in trends of mental health care during this period resulted in remaining psychiatric hospitals inhabiting historic campuses much larger than they needed and much more than they had the resources to maintain. For many of these hospitals, they were eventually shut down, being found unnecessary, harmful, or, as has been the case more recently for those that continued to be used well into the twenty-first century, because the buildings themselves became unusable. 

The former historic asylums have since found a variety of purposes, some being renovated for new use, some being abandoned as they await potential development, and some eventually being demolished. They have also become a source of intrigue for many, with a variety of factors including their history, architecture, and rumors of paranormal activity becoming a motive for their preservation and for people to continue trying to interact with them. 

Five specific case studies will be used to asses the varied fates of historic asylums and the ways that people react to them in order to understand why they have ended up the way that they have and how the history of these structures impacts the way that they themselves are viewed by the public. These case studies will include Western State Hospital and the DeJarnette Center in Staunton, Virginia; St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington, DC; Fulton State Hospital in Fulton, Missouri; Allentown State Hospital in Allentown, Pennsylvania; and Pennhurst State School and Hospital in Spring City, Pennsylvania. Diverse in their past and present, these buildings can begin to give insight into wider trends in popular thoughts on the role of asylums in the history of American mental health care.

Recent Posts

  • The DeJarnette Center, Staunton, Virginia
  • St. Elizabeths Hospital, Washington, DC
  • Fulton State Hospital, Fulton, Missouri
  • Allentown State Hospital, Pennsylvania
  • Pennhurst State School and Hospital, Pennsylvania

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  • October 2023

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  • Case Studies

The Old Hospital: Perceptions and Fates of Historic Asylums Post-Deinstitutionalization

  • Bibliography

The deinstitutionalization movement in the later half of the twentieth century resulted in many of those previously committed to psychiatric hospitals moving into the community, leaving the asylums that previously dominated mental health care with increasingly shrinking patient bodies. The changes in trends of mental health care during this period resulted in remaining psychiatric hospitals inhabiting historic campuses much larger than they needed and much more than they had the resources to maintain. For many of these hospitals, they were eventually shut down, being found unnecessary, harmful, or, as has been the case more recently for those that continued to be used well into the twenty-first century, because the buildings themselves became unusable. 

The former historic asylums have since found a variety of purposes, some being renovated for new use, some being abandoned as they await potential development, and some eventually being demolished. They have also become a source of intrigue for many, with a variety of factors including their history, architecture, and rumors of paranormal activity becoming a motive for their preservation and for people to continue trying to interact with them. 

Five specific case studies will be used to asses the varied fates of historic asylums and the ways that people react to them in order to understand why they have ended up the way that they have and how the history of these structures impacts the way that they themselves are viewed by the public. These case studies will include Western State Hospital and the DeJarnette Center in Staunton, Virginia; St. Elizabeths Hospital in Washington, DC; Fulton State Hospital in Fulton, Missouri; Allentown State Hospital in Allentown, Pennsylvania; and Pennhurst State School and Hospital in Spring City, Pennsylvania. Diverse in their past and present, these buildings can begin to give insight into wider trends in popular thoughts on the role of asylums in the history of American mental health care.

Recent Posts

  • The DeJarnette Center, Staunton, Virginia
  • St. Elizabeths Hospital, Washington, DC
  • Fulton State Hospital, Fulton, Missouri
  • Allentown State Hospital, Pennsylvania
  • Pennhurst State School and Hospital, Pennsylvania

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Archives

  • October 2023

Categories

  • Case Studies

The DeJarnette Center, Staunton, Virginia

  • Post date
    October 29, 2023
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St. Elizabeths Hospital, Washington, DC

  • Post date
    October 29, 2023
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Fulton State Hospital, Fulton, Missouri

  • Post date
    October 29, 2023
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Allentown State Hospital, Pennsylvania

  • Post date
    October 29, 2023
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Pennhurst State School and Hospital, Pennsylvania

  • Post date
    October 29, 2023
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    0

Conclusion:

Along with being one of the more well known examples, Pennhurst perhaps is more so than any of these case studies representative of the popular view of abandoned asylums. Associated with ghosts, trauma, and abuse, it fits the stereotype that the current haunted house set up in its walls represents well. However, it also points to the two key issues for historic asylums today that influences what becomes of them: finding a way to use them and determining what uses are appropriate based on their history. When trying to determine a use for them, the two biggest influences are the physical state of the building and the economic burden one who wished to restore it would need to take on. Allentown and the DeJarnette Center are two examples where, to the distress of some and to the pleasure of others, it was ultimately decided that in order to find a developer for the land, the buildings would have to come down due to how expensive of an undertaking transforming them for a new purpose would be. St. Elizabeths and Pennhurst, on the other hand, faced similar situations but were able to find developers who would make use of the existing buildings; however,

many found the ways in which they were repurposed to be an inappropriate way of engaging with their history. Examining a variety of asylums who are now held in different regards, it becomes clear that their history has a strong influence on how they are perceived. While Pennhurst may be the more well known archetype, the displays of grief at the destruction of Allentown and the positive attitude towards it does not make it surprising that the history it is remembered for is largely positive as well. It therefore does not create the fear or the connection with ghosts characteristic of places such as Pennhurst, the DeJarnette’s Center, and even to a lesser extent St. Elizabeths. With examples like St. Elizabeths and Fulton, it is clear that historic asylums are now becoming unfit at to continue to provide mental health care, both due to the fact that deinstitutionalization has made them no necessary and that the lack of necessity has resulted in an inability to keep them from suffering from the effects of time and decay. However, for most, the end of the care they provide is only the beginning of a period of turmoil as those associated with and interested in the hospitals attempt to deal with the question of what the legacy of the historic asylum should be in an age that no longer has a need for them.

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