Tag Archives: McLean Asylum

Debating Restraints

Straitjacket, courtesy National Library of Medicine

Illustration Showing a Black Man Sitting in a Chair Wearing a Straitjacket, courtesy National Library of Medicine

When British physician Dr. John Bucknill visited U.S. insane asylums and wrote an article about his observations for the October, 1876 edition of the American Journal of Insanity (see last post), he discussed the issue of restraining patients. British asylums had done away with restraints almost entirely, and Bucknill did not like to see them used as freely in the U.S. as he saw during his visits. In his discussion about their use in America, he made the following observations:

Dr. Green of the Georgia State Asylum said that he did not like to use restraints, but did with four classes of patients. These were: suicidal patients, persons who will not remain in bed, persons who persistently denude themselves of all clothing, and inveterate masturbators.

Bucknill also mentioned that Dr. Ranney, who prided McLean Asylum with bringing its use of restraints down to a very low level, still used mechanical restraints on the following types of patients: those exhibiting acute mania; patients who wound themselves, creating ulcers that would never heal themselves unless their hands were confined; epileptic patients who so often became violent; persons whose feelings are greatly perverted and prone to see insults or evidence of conspiracy, who were sometimes little less ferocious than wild beasts; and persons in the throes of acute delirious mania.

McLean Asylum, courtesy Boston Public Library, Digital Commonwealth

McLean Asylum, courtesy Boston Public Library, Digital Commonwealth

“It will be observed,” said Dr. Bucknill, “that . . . we already have nine classes of lunatics who need mechanical restraint, in America.” He added that Dr. Slusser of the Ohio Hospital for the Insane added another class: “. . . those who persistently walk or stand, until their extremities become swollen, and they give evident signs of physical prostration. I have no way of controlling such, but by tying them down on a seat.”

This addition made ten classes of patients needing restraint, but Dr. Bucknill continued with a list of other reasons doctors restrained their patients until he named “fourteen classes of the insane altogether who absolutely need mechanical restraint in the State Asylums of America.” Bucknill noted some ways that British asylums found to avoid restraints, but realized that the American mindset was simply different on this issue.

Mock-up of a Patient in a Restraining Device Called a Utica Crib

Mock-up of a Patient in a Restraining Device Called a Utica Crib

Bucknill did say, “Is it surprising that, at the present time, the management of asylums for the insane in America is the subject of mistrust with the people?”

Plight of the Sane

Part of the Original Asylum, Previously Known as the Asylum for the Insane. The Facility Opened in 1818 as a Division of Massachusetts General Hospital

Part of the Original Asylum, Previously Known as the Asylum for the Insane. The Facility Opened in 1818 as a Division of Massachusetts General Hospital

People who were tricked into an asylum by relatives or friends have given heartbreaking accounts of the experience, and Elizabeth T. Stone was no exception. After attending a family gathering on Thanksgiving, she went with her brother to what she thought was a boarding house. She was puzzled by the odd way she was treated upon arrival, the barred windows, and the regimented meals and bedtimes, but it was not until her second day that she learned she was at McLean Asylum and that her brother had had her committed there.

Stone’s despair was enormous, but she had the wit not to show her frantic emotions. She knew her protests and defensive statements would be put down to her “derangement” and that this easy label would not help her with the physicians there. Stone attributed her commitment to the asylum from the religious disagreement she had with her family, but her experience is so much more a lens on the easy commitment laws that prevailed at the time.

A Gilbert Stuart Painting of John McLean, Who Bequeathed a Fortune to the Asylum

A Gilbert Stuart Painting of John McLean, Who Bequeathed a Fortune to the Asylum

A Sketch of the Life of Elizabeth T. Stone and of her persecutions

A Sketch of the Life of Elizabeth T. Stone and of her persecutions

Stone apparently broke down within a short time and and made up her mind to commit suicide by tearing off a strip of her sheet so she could hang herself. The sheet gave way before she actually died, but the incident brought her more restriction. She continued to deteriorate mentally and lost a degree of self-control, though she was always aware of her surroundings. Stone eventually was released to one of her brothers and wrote a bitter account of her stay at McLean. Her book, A Sketch of the Life of Elizabeth T. Stone, was published in 1842.