Difference between revisions of "Vermont State Hospital"

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More able patients assumed various roles in the work of the institution, including custodial work, maintenance, and tending animals and crops on the institution-run farm in Duxbury. Dr. Stanley also initiated a system of industrial work for patients: assembling clothespins, shoe repair, and crafts such as making chairs, rugs, and baskets. The profits from these enterprises were used for patient entertainment and recreation.
 
More able patients assumed various roles in the work of the institution, including custodial work, maintenance, and tending animals and crops on the institution-run farm in Duxbury. Dr. Stanley also initiated a system of industrial work for patients: assembling clothespins, shoe repair, and crafts such as making chairs, rugs, and baskets. The profits from these enterprises were used for patient entertainment and recreation.
  
=Hurricane Irene  and other issues pertaining to    wabanki nation and  institutions
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==Hurricane Irene==
closure of  VSH and the   closure of  wabanaki  Indian residential schools in Vermont 
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In August 2011, hurricane Irene's flood waters flooded the valley which the closed complex stood. At one point the entire complex was underwater and partially destroyed by the hurricane. After the flood waters receded the campus was deemed unusable. The main complex was saved and has been renovated into the State Offices. The complex reopened in December 2015.
  
In August 2011, hurricane Irene's flood waters flooded the valley which the closed complex stood.  At one point the entire complex was underwater and partially destroyed by the hurricane.  After the flood waters receded the campus was deemed unusable.  The main complex was saved and has been renovated into the State Offices. The complex reopened in December 2015.
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== Books ==
 
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*''Empty beds: A history of Vermont State Hospital'', by Marsha R Kincheloe
* Criminalization  of wabanaki as wards of institutions  Abuses are being investigated
 
 
 
  *2018  Vermont Commission on Native affairs abuses  and targeting of Wabanaki with reparitive  justice programs after closure of  BTS and  VSH .  Targeting of people and racial slurs of the term  wabanki gypsys  were used  by the state bureau of indian affairs and ago office  when  missiquoi    failed to meet requirements for  federal Indian status
 
 
 
https://www.iromaniunion.org/  More info about romani union and mikmaq  rights  in Vermont and  elsewhere
 
 
 
https://www.mass.gov
 
 
 
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Treaty_of_Watertown 
 
 
 
Title vii Indian education is currently being discussed to  release  people of the VCNA  and Governmental schools  for Indians  to  the commonwealth to access federal  tribal  rights in  usa and canada  and Truth and reconciliation for parochial abuses.  i.e St andrews  and VSH and BTS  , Boy scouts of america inmate programs , institutional  catholic  physical  , mental or sexual  abuse (exploitation of  vulnerable populations)
 
  
== Books ==
 
*''Empty beds: A history of Vermont State Hospital'', by Marsha R Kincheloe
 
*http://www.danielnpaul.com/WeWereNotTheSavages-Mi'kmaqHistory.html
 
  
 
== Images of Vermont State Hospital ==
 
== Images of Vermont State Hospital ==
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[[Category:Asylum Books]]
 
[[Category:Asylum Books]]
 
[[Category:Past Featured Article Of The Week]]
 
[[Category:Past Featured Article Of The Week]]
*Boy scout of america  now  in chapter 11  bankruptcy had troops and explorer post were at  VSH ,  BTS and Weeks Schools  Federal programs for reparative justice  were  in the community and at in the  institutional setting.  Brandon training school had  a handicapt boy scout troop 111 as did  the  bsa exploers at Vermont state hosptial  this goes back to the 1950s .  Law enforcement exploers post 111  was run by the BTS  and  Deb Preseau  and Chief Joseph N arduca and Vermont police academy
 

Latest revision as of 04:51, 23 December 2018

Vermont State Hospital
Vermont State Hospital
Established 1889
Construction Began 1891
Opened 1891
Closed October 20, 2011
Current Status Preserved
Building Style Pavilion Plan
Architect(s) Rand & Taylor
Location Waterbury, VT
Peak Patient Population 1,728
Alternate Names
  • Waterbury Asylum
  • Vermont State Asylum for the Insane
  • Vermont State Asylum



History[edit]

The Vermont State Hospital for the Insane was built in 1890 in Waterbury, Vermont, in response to overcrowded conditions at the Vermont Asylum for the Insane in Brattleboro (Brattleboro Retreat after 1898), Vermont's first and only facility for the care of the mentally ill. Originally built for "the care, custody, and treatment of insane criminals of the state," the Waterbury State Hospital eventually became the temporary or permanent shelter for Vermonters with mild to severe mental disabilities and others who had been committed for epilepsy, depression, alcoholism, or senility. Throughout its history, methods of patient diagnosis and treatment varied according to the philosophy of the superintendent.

Image of Eugene A. Stanley Early twentieth century efforts among reformers to reduce the stigma of mental illness and confinement in state hospitals yielded to the pessimism of the eugenics era, which brought back the stigma with a vengeance. It was during these years that Dr. Eugene A. Stanley directed affairs at Waterbury. An advocate of eugenics, Dr. Stanley testified in favor of the sterilization bills in 1927 and 1931, provided the Eugenics Survey access to patient records, and played an influential role as an advisor to the Eugenics Survey. He was a member of the sub-committee on "Care of the the Handicapped" for the Vermont Commission on Country Life.

Dr. Eugene A. Stanley (1875-1936) was born and raised in New Hampshire and educated at Cleveland University of Medicine and Surgery and Jefferson Medical College. He moved to Waterbury, Vermont in 1899, where he served as a health officer and assistant physician at the Vermont State Hospital from 1908 to 1918. He became Vermont State Hospital superintendent in 1918, succeeding Dr. Walter L. Wasson, who had perished in the influenza epidemic . Stanley held that position until his death in 1936.

During Dr. Stanley's tenure at the Waterbury State Hospital, the patient population grew, peaking at 1,728 during the mid-1930s. In 1931, Stanley convinced the state legislature to construct a new three-story building for the growing number of "acutely disturbed female patients." By today's standards, treatment of patients was primitive, at times barbaric. Typically women in this ward and severe epileptic patients were tied to wooden benches with "camisoles," which secured their arms in back of them. Hydrotherapy, where patients were immersed in continuous baths or placed in wet sheet packs, and "colonic irrigation" were standard treatments for disruptive patients; eventually electro-shock therapy and drug therapy replaced these treatments.

More able patients assumed various roles in the work of the institution, including custodial work, maintenance, and tending animals and crops on the institution-run farm in Duxbury. Dr. Stanley also initiated a system of industrial work for patients: assembling clothespins, shoe repair, and crafts such as making chairs, rugs, and baskets. The profits from these enterprises were used for patient entertainment and recreation.

Hurricane Irene[edit]

In August 2011, hurricane Irene's flood waters flooded the valley which the closed complex stood. At one point the entire complex was underwater and partially destroyed by the hurricane. After the flood waters receded the campus was deemed unusable. The main complex was saved and has been renovated into the State Offices. The complex reopened in December 2015.

Books[edit]

  • Empty beds: A history of Vermont State Hospital, by Marsha R Kincheloe


Images of Vermont State Hospital[edit]

Main Image Gallery: Vermont State Hospital