Difference between revisions of "Dixmont State Hospital"

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*[http://www.opacity.us/gallery98_departure.htm Photos from 2005]
 
*[http://www.opacity.us/gallery98_departure.htm Photos from 2005]
 
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dixmont_State_Hospital DSH Wikipedia Entry]
 
*[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dixmont_State_Hospital DSH Wikipedia Entry]
*[http://www.dixmontstatehospital.com A web site dedicated to DSH]
 
  
  

Revision as of 21:57, 16 November 2015

Dixmont State Hospital
Dixmont State Hospital
Established March 18, 1848
Construction Began 1859
Opened 1862
Closed 1984
Demolished 2006
Current Status Demolished
Building Style Kirkbride Plan
Location Dixmont, PA
Peak Patient Population 973 in 1947
Alternate Names
  • Western Pennsylvania Hospital for the Insane



History

The Western Pennsylvania Hospital was founded in Pittsburgh in 1848 as a general hospital that treated all types of illnesses and became the first institution in western Pennsylvania to offer treatment for the insane. When the Insane Department of the Western Pennsylvania Hospital was moved to a new building in Kilbuck Township outside of Pittsburgh in 1862 it was renamed the Western Pennsylvania Hospital for the Insane at Dixmont to honor the memory of Dorothea Dix, an advocate for reforming the treatment of mental patients. The Dixmont Hospital was legally separated from the Western Pennsylvania Hospital in 1907 when it was individually incorporated as the Dixmont Hospital for the Insane. Supported by private contributions since 1852, it was primarily state appropriations that enabled the hospital to expand its facilities and care for an increasing number of mentally ill persons over the first nine decades of its existence. Despite receiving state appropriations, it nonetheless continued to operate as a private corporation until 1945 when it was taken over by the Department of Public Welfare. From that date, it operated under the name Dixmont State Hospital until it closed in July 1984.

Dixmont Vint 14.jpg

The Western Pennsylvania Hospital was one of the earlier asylums built on the Kirkbride plan, with three crooked wings stretching to each side of administration; one wing for male and the other for female patients. By the end of the 1800's, the resident population grew to over 1,200 and a nursing school was established in 1895. As with most asylums, Dixmont became overcrowded to the point that it was not accepting new admissions. During the Great Depression, the hospital tried to sustain itself by paying employees only with room and board, not salaries, and sold any crafts made by patients for extra income. By 1946, the state had to step in, and the institution became known as Dixmont State Hospital.

Financial troubles still plagued the hospital until it finally closed in 1984. A fire partially destroyed the administration building, and the place was an easy target for anyone to do what they pleased. For 15 years the hospital sat decaying, until a contractor named Ralph Stroyne bought the property (whose many relatives worked at the institution), but it was sold again to the Wal-mart corporation, where they planned to raze the buildings for a new department store. Someone has (unofficially) informed me that there was a company who offered to restore the property but Wal-Mart? had deeper pockets ($35 million for 35 acres).

As of 2006, the hospital has been demolished. The precarious nature of the hill that it rested on proved to be a challenge for the developers - and eventually an engineering disaster. The demolition and clearing of the parcel atop the hill caused a massive landslide in September 2006, which dumped 500,000 cubic yards of soil, rock and debris onto Route 65, closing it to traffic for some time. One year later, Wal-mart finally abandoned the plans to develop the site.


Images of Dixmont State Hospital

Main Image Gallery: Dixmont State Hospital


Related Books & Media

  • Dixmont State Hospital, by Mark Berton

Cemetery

This cemetery, still owned by the state, contains about 1300 graves with nothing but a number on a simple stone marking each sight. Most of the patients were buried in wicker coffins and pine boxes. The graves were dug in straight lines, but today, the lines aren't so straight. They have slowly been sliding a little due to the recent landslide. List of burials

Links & Additional Information