Novel left behind inside the Children's Pavilion at a New York Tuberculosis Sanatorium.
Photo: "Emotional Flood"
This is a teaser image from my next historical blog post...
Flooded triple patient room inside the Mont Alto Sanatorium.
The Mont Alto Sanatorium opened in 1940 in Franklin County, Pennsylvania. This building began as a Children's Preventatorium and remained as such for 16 years. The building then became a home for mentally retarded women until 1965 when it housed geriatric patients until closing in 1985.
Photo: "Regimented"
The Kings Park Lunatic Asylum was established in 1885 as an extention to the Brooklyn County Hospital. When the need for mentally ill facilities grew, the hospital was handed over to New York State. They helped facilitate the growth of the hospital campus, turning it into a self-sufficient community.
Photo: "Diced"
Patient Room in Building 93
This 12 story building at Kings Park Psychiatric was constructed in 1939 as an geriatric infirmary and drug treatment building.
Photo: "Duplicity"
The entrance to the Heritage Inn at Rough & Ready Island, a communications outpost for submarine actvities during the Cold War.
Photo: "Mystify"
Weston State Hospital in West Virginia was built by Richard Andrew and followed the Kirkbride plan. It was constructed between 1858 an 1881 and is the largest hand-cut stone building in North America.
Photo: "Mars"
A day room inside one of the dorm buildings at Middletown Homeopathic State Hospital in NY. This building contained a seclusion wing and day rooms, such as this one, on each of the three floors.
Photo: "Crisp"
Sun porch of the Children's Ward at Sea View Tuberculosis Hospital.
This ward was built a few decades after the original campus opened in 1913. It was constructed in such a way that all patient areas were bright and had good circulation of fresh air.
Photo: "Transpose"
Rough & Ready Island in Stockton, California served as a major communications outpost for submarine activities in the Pacific during the Cold War. It opened in 1944 and closed in 1996 during the Base Realignment and Closure Commission.
Photo: "Breeze"
The children's preventorium at New York Sanatorium in New York was built sometime after the original campus in 1913. The wards were constructed in such a way to allow for maximum light and air to reach the patients.
Photo: "Lead Me On"
This New York Sanatorium complex opened in 1913. It was built on elevated land and the wards were dispersed into a fan-shaped arrangement with balconies and sun rooms providing light and air for the patients, two of the main treatments for tuberculosis.
Photo: "Bright Idea"
Administration Building
This Virginia Lunatic Asylum was founded in 1825 by an Act of the General Assembly, which made it the second mental health facility for the Commonwealth of Virginia. The first patient was admitted in 1828.
Photo: "Exhibitionist"
Inside a moldy, damp hotel room at the Heritage Inn at Rough & Ready Island, an Inn designed to house the officers, families and visitors to the island. In this particular room, the moldy mattress was hit with a beam of light from the window, causing the mattress to steam and the room to smell like a boiling pot of moldy water.
Photo: "Afterlife"
Light painted coffin in the basement of the crumbling Middletown Psychiatric Hospital, formerly known as the Middletown State Homeopathic Hospital.
Photo: "Cornerstone"
The Middletown State Homeopathic Hospital was founded in New York, in 1870 as a state asylum for "the care and treatment of the insane and the inebriate upon the principles of medicine known as homeopathic." It was the first hospital of its kind in the United States when it opened in 1874 and during the first year, sixty nine patients were treated at this facility.