Some people scare easily, some don’t. Jody Christopherson is somewhere in the middle; a New York based Photographer/Actor/Writer who has been doing research for a new play she is creating, AMP, about electricity and electroshock therapy. She decided to visit these asylums in New York and Massachusetts with my director, Emma Rosa Went. What we discovered was beautiful and truly frightening. Luckily, She took my camera and have decided to use some of the photographs in the show.
Here’s a bit of history on each location-
Letchworth Village- named for William Pryor Letchworth, who espoused reform in the treatment and care of the insane, epileptics, and poor children. The “village” in Rockland County NY consisted of 130 sprawling neoclassic buildings including small dormitories, a hospital, dining halls, basketball courts and a graveyard with roughly 900 unmarked graves on the 200-acre site. Reports of inadequate funding and improper care of the residents date back to the 1920s. Accounts have surfaced of residents being found unclothed, unbathed, severely neglected. In addition to rampant abuse among the institution’s residents, staff also suffered at the hands of co-workers, including incidents of rape. In 1950, the institution gained notoriety for conducting one of the first human trials of a still-experimental polio vaccine. Unable to give or refuse consent, children unknowingly became test subjects for medical testing. Brain specimens were harvested from deceased subjects and put on display in jars of formaldehyde. In 1996, the institution was permanently closed down. The negative energy here is palpable; a village of deafeningly silent tombs that nature has reclaimed.
Craig House- built in 1859 in Peekskill NY, for the Civil War Officer General Joseph Howland in 1859, the gothic mansion was turned into America’s first privately licensed posh psychiatric hospital in 1915. Zelda Fitzgerald was treated here for $750 a month in 1934. She was later moved to a cheaper hospital, the Highland in Asheville, North Carolina, where she died in a fire awaiting electroshock therapy. Frances Seymour, Jane Fonda’s mother slit her own throat in one of Craig House’s high turrets and Rosemary Kennedy ended up here after her lobotomy. As is the case with many of these places, there is a quiet sense of desperation and finality.
Tewksbury Hospital- what used to be Tewskbury Alms House is now the Public Health Museum and Tewksbury Hospital. An 800+ acre site, listed in the National Register of Historic Places located on a campus in Tewksbury, Massachusetts. Historian and sociologist David Wagner estimates that one-third of the original population were children, and of the remaining adult population, 64% were male. The overwhelming majority of inmates were immigrants, mostly from Ireland. Anne Sullivan, famed teacher to Helen Keller, was housed here from the age of 10 year to 14.
In 1883 Massachusetts Governor Benjamin F. Butler accused Tewksbury management and staff of “trading in bodies of dead paupers and transporting them for a profit to medical schools” and profiting from “tanned human flesh converted to shoes or other objects from Tewksbury paupers.” 10,000 patients are buried here that they know of; they suspect 20,000 passed away. Vintage electroshock therapy machines are still stored in the basement here; a treatment often used to subdue patients prior to lobotomies, which used a voltage strong enough to power heavy machinery.
Source : Jodychristopherson
Really cool that you could visit them! I wish I could see abandoned asylums, photos are great too and capture the eerie feeling that goes with asylums. I definitely would love to have photos of all different rooms and make a cool little adventure game of some sort.
This post recieved an upvote from minnowpond. If you would like to recieve upvotes from minnowpond on all your posts, simply FOLLOW @minnowpond
A very nice contribution, which I take with for "My Steemit Favorites Part 33.
https://steemit.com/photography/@homeartpictures/my-steemit-favorites-part-33-meine-steemit-favoriten-teil-33-homeartpictures-originalcontent
I love this kind of old abandoned places 😁
great pics!
This post has received a 0.08 % upvote from @drotto thanks to: @banjo.