Architecture of Kirkbride Buildings; Lunatic Asylums in the 19th Century

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Can architecture and layout of a building really “cure” mental illness? Dr. Thomas Story Kirkbride thought so. Before 1844 the mentally ill were stashed away in prisons, jails, private homes and basements of public buildings. There were a lot of reasons people did get diagnosed with mental illness but many of which were not reality as we know it today. People were diagnosed with mental illness because of disagreements, lack of knowing a language and the weirdest thing I found was that women would be deemed insane from menstruation and teenage boys because of masturbation. The “insane” were treated without rights, starved, lost and forgotten while being hidden away from society. Dorothea Dix, who at first started out as a teacher saw these conditions in East Cambridge Jail. These were the most horrific images that she has ever seen in her life, and this made her try to establish human rights under the philosophy of Moral Treatment. She wanted to have rights for the “insane”. Her efforts led to the construction of the New Jersey State Lunatic Asylum. This was the first asylum built on the Kirkbride Plan.

Moral treatment was based on humane psychosocial care or moral discipline. It emerged as an approach in the 18th century and was primarily used during the 19th century. Moral treatment was focused on social welfare and individual rights. This changed the idea that the insane were “wild animals” that could not control themselves. The insane prior to this were scorned by the public, often chained and neglected for years in completely appalling conditions. They had been the subject of tortuous treatments which included whipping, beating, bloodletting, shocking, starvation and isolation. Moral treatment fell out of us...

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...struction. I really love the architecture of these buildings and wish that we had more resources to be able to preserve this piece of American history.

References:

Carla Yanni, The Architecture of Madness: Insane Asylums in the United States, Minneapolis: Minnesota University Press, 2007

George S. Layne, Kirkbride-Langenheim Collaboration: Early use of Photography in Psychiatric Treatment in Philadelphia, The Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography, Vol. 105, No. 2 (Arr., 1981), The Historical Society of Pennsylvania. http://www.jstor.org/stable/2091563

http://www.asylumprojects.org/index.php?title=Danvers_State_Hospital

http://www.danversstateinsaneasylum.com/home.html

http://www.kirkbridebuildings.com/

http://www.trans-alleghenylunaticasylum.com/

http://www.forgottenphotography.com/

http://pabook.libraries.psu.edu/palitmap/Kirkbride.html

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