Coldwater State Home
Coldwater State Home | |
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Established | 1871 |
Opened | 1874 |
Closed | 1992 |
Current Status | Closed |
Building Style | Cottage Plan |
Location | Coldwater, MI |
Alternate Names |
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History
The Coldwater Regional Mental Health Center opened in 1874 as the State Public School for Orphaned Children. The school was opened in Coldwater on May 21, 1874. Once admitted, children participated in "family-like" life in cottages and a placing-out program. A third of each day was used for schoolwork, a third for recreation and entertainment, and a third for acquiring work skills. Children learned reading, spelling, counting, calisthenics, singing, cyphering and slate drawing. By the turn of the century, the facility had become the only home in Michigan admitting both normal and handicapped children.
In 1939 the Children's Village became the Coldwater State Home and Training School, and persons of all ages with more serious handicaps were admitted. By 1960 there were 2,900 residents. During the 1970s, special education, training and living experiences in communities reduced the number of residents to less than 700. Renamed the Coldwater Regional Center of Developmental Disabilities in 1978, the remodeled facility provides training programs for independent living and self-help. In 1985 the center began to convert to a psychiatric hospital, and in 1986 its name changed to the Coldwater Regional Mental Health Center. It closed in June 1992.
Images
Books
Waiting for Home: The Richard Prangley Story : A True Story of Strength and Survival, by John Schneider
Michigan Historical Review, Volume 61, No. 3 (Fall 1977)