Nancy Ackley
Module 5 - Bedlum Redux-
" Abandon All Hope Who Enter Here."
1. When was the asylum opened and what did it look like? Did
it follow Kirkbride's design?
The asylum was
constructed in 1906 and opened in 1907 and followed the theory of Benjamin
Rush. He believed
that mental illness was a disease that could be cured by proper treatment.
While the original intent was to follow Kirkbride's design,
a number of political and financial barriers prevented the completion of a
building that followed Kirkbride's plan. The events at the turn of the 20th
century marked the beginning of the end for the Kirkbridge hospital design. It
was originally designed as a cottage and began as a small work farm for the
mentally ill. The first patient were transferred from the over crowded Philadelphia General Hospital . The name of the institution
changed several time and was called Philadelphia
State Hospital ,
Byberry State
Hospital , Byberry City Farms, and Philadelphia Hospital for Mental Diseases. During its
time of operation from 1907 to 1977, it served a wide range of patients from
those who were mentally challenged to the criminally insane.
2. What was the
institution's original intent?
The original intent was to run a farm
operation for mental patients. The patients were mental
patients who
were transferred from Philadelphia
General Hospital .
3. Who were the patients there? Do narratives of their
experiences exist?
The original 6
patients were patients with mental illness. Over the course of the 70 years of
operation changed
to serve a wide range of patients including children, those who were
mentally
challenged to the criminally insane and people who had no place to go.
There are
narratives that exist from records and from staff and former patients. An
article in
Philadelphia
Magazine by Liz Spikol on 6-28-2015 called They Survived Byberry and features
the story of Anna
Jennings who was admitted in 1984 and died by suicide in the ward of a
different state
hospital in 1990. Anna's advocacy efforts helped to close Byberry.
4. What was the patient's experience experiences like in
that institution and did that change over
the course of the
institution's history?
The patient's experience was one of horror and abuse for
those unfortunate to work or live there. Stories of horrible conditions and
treatment have been described as" when the government collects, locks
away, and systematically tortures tens of thousands of mental patients through
excruciating neglect for a better part of a century, it's not Hitler, It's
Byberry. Justly compared to Nazi concentration camps, Byberry was perhaps the
nations best example of a free-world-leadng society's inability to embrace it's
own people with mental illness."
5. Did the institution, its services, and patients change
over time?
In 1907, Byberry
farms consisted of 15 farm cottages. They were converted to colony houses
and the city built
several small wooden buildings to house 150 inmates from Blockley.
Buildings were
constructed to house 1000 male adults, and 1000 female adults, and 100
children. These
buildings quickly came to house more than 4000 patients.
Between 1939- 1959
the state took over the operation of Byberry. By the late 1950's, there
were as many as
7000 people. The institution changed from a small farm operation to a large
overcrowded and
understaffed asylum. As many as 7000 patients lived and worked at Byberry
at its height of
use. While staff number were as many as a 1000, they were understaffed for
most of its
operation. The staff that were hired were often not trained and were known to
beat
patients.
6. How many people lived, worked, and died there?
While I found figures of those who lived there ranged from 6
to 7000. There was no references as to the total number who died at Byberry. In
the early 1970s, there was a list of 31 people that died between 3-23-29 to
6-24-47 that was released by the Philadelphia Inquirer. A couple of examples
from the list include: 4-28-38 Reynold Rosenblatt, drowned in the bathtub
during
hydrotherapy and 3-30-42 Louis Petrome, 34, died of injuries
suffered while being restrained by attendants.
7. Were bad conditions ever exposed to the public How?
Bad conditions
were exposed through the Philadelphia Inquirer in an article" The Shame
that is Byberry " as well as " Inside Philadelphia Byberry Mental
Hospital House of Horrors" by Erin Kelly published Dec 5, 2017 and updated
May 4, 2018. Life Magazine did an expose on Byberry in 1946.
8. Would you have wanted" treatment" in the
institution?
No way would I have wanted to be treated at this
institution. It has been described to be similar to Hitler's work camps.
References
http:// the duke81.tripod.com/id23.html
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/philadelphia_state_hosptal at
Byberry
https://www.complex.com/pop-culture/2013/01/crazy-mental-asylum-transallegheny-lunatic-asylum
http://www.phidelphiastatehospital.com/
https://www.pinterest.com/pin/112378953176004061/?lp+true
https://www.phillymag.com/news
2015/06/28/byberry-mental-nstitution-survivor/
http://allthatsinestering.com.byberry-mental-hospital
It certainly appears that institutions, quite quickly after construction, began to suffer from overcrowding and understaffing. Psychologically, humans, pretty much without exception, require some solitary time; this solitary time must have been totally absent in these overcrowded conditions. Moreover, chaos, which is antithetical to recovery, must have been rampant.
ReplyDeleteLisa,
DeleteThis institution was featured in a 1946 Life Magazine and is listed as one of the 10 worst mental institutions.
Nancy
Lisa,
DeleteI have an analysis of the Unlimited Solutions Clubhouse( HCE 514 assignment) and include a section on Fountain House and the the program components that are considered necessary to promote high fidelity. I would be glad to email to anyone in the class who has more interest in this approach.
Nancy
It's nice to see that there was an article published highlighting the poor treatment. I thought it odd that these articles only came about in the last decade - a bit too late. But I looked, Anna & her mom reported the poor treatment to public welfare who investigated and found abuse. Then, a year later there was a 1987 plea for changes published which pointed out the inhumane treatments that were occurring. Seems so much like Nellie Bly's expose which was done in 1887 (a hundred years before Anna). Just so sad how long and slow this battle for better conditions has been.
ReplyDeletehttps://www.phillymag.com/news/2015/06/28/byberry-mental-institution-survivors/
Jessica,
DeleteLife Magazine did a report of the abuses in 1946 and it took a very long time before anything was done. I used this example of Anna because it did remind me of the Nellie Bly expose. I wonder if current treatment is all that it could be? What role does the media play in improving the care of person's with mental illness. The media often does a disservice to persons with mental illness when it is portrayed in film and tv.. and not much better in terms of educating the public on treatment of mental healh issues or counselors and counseling as a profession.
Nancy