Editing Lincoln State School
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| location = Lincoln, IL | | location = Lincoln, IL | ||
| architecture_style = | | architecture_style = | ||
− | | peak_patient_population = | + | | peak_patient_population = |
| alternate_names =<br> | | alternate_names =<br> | ||
*Illinois Asylum for Feeble-Minded Children | *Illinois Asylum for Feeble-Minded Children | ||
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In 1909 the Board of State Commissioners of Public Charities and the boards of trustees of all state charitable institutions were abolished and executive and administrative control was transferred to the newly created Board of Administration. Under the new board the institution became Lincoln State School and Colony. | In 1909 the Board of State Commissioners of Public Charities and the boards of trustees of all state charitable institutions were abolished and executive and administrative control was transferred to the newly created Board of Administration. Under the new board the institution became Lincoln State School and Colony. | ||
− | + | With the passage of the Civil Administrative Code in 1917 the Department of Public Welfare assumed all responsibility for the school and retained control until the creation of the Department of Mental Health in 1961. The school's name which had been shortened to Lincoln State School in 1953 was again altered to Lincoln Developmental Center in 1975. After years of investigations into neglect and abuse of patients, the facility closed on August 31, 2002. | |
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− | With the passage of the Civil Administrative Code in 1917 the Department of Public Welfare assumed all responsibility for the school and retained control until the creation of the Department of Mental Health in 1961. The school's name which had been shortened to Lincoln State School in 1953 was again altered to Lincoln Developmental Center in 1975. | ||
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== Images of Lincoln State School == | == Images of Lincoln State School == | ||
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File:Lincoln.jpg | File:Lincoln.jpg | ||
file:Lincoln.png | file:Lincoln.png | ||
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</gallery> | </gallery> | ||
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There is a cemetery for the former patients, however it is now part of a prison and difficult to obtain permission to visit. There are several hundred graves marked with flat stones and a number or a name. | There is a cemetery for the former patients, however it is now part of a prison and difficult to obtain permission to visit. There are several hundred graves marked with flat stones and a number or a name. | ||
− | + | VL-We were granted tower & Ground permission to photograph the Developmental Center Cemetery. There are over 1800 graves in 3 large blocks that we have digital photos of. My photos of this Cemetery can be seen by going to Find A Grave and searching for Developmental Center Cemetery. Since no one is allowed to be on the cemetery grounds, there is not one single flower on any of the graves and all the stones are pretty much the same. Some stones from 1878 to the early 1900's only have names engraved clearly on a square piece of concrete, never possing birth or death dates. The graves are also in order by death date. | |
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==Books== | ==Books== |