Tag Archives: New York City Asylum for the Insane

Welcome to America

View of New York's Emigrant Refuge and Hospital, Ward's Island, courtesy Arno Press and the New York Times, 1969 and Original circal early 1880s

View of New York’s Emigrant Refuge and Hospital, Ward’s Island, courtesy Arno Press and the New York Times, 1969. Original circa early 1880s

When immigrants processed through New York, some were inevitably sick–and some were judged to be insane. Both groups were sent to a hospital on Ward’s Island in New York until they either got well or five years went by. If the insane had not recovered by then, they were sent to the New York City Asylum on Blackwell’s Island.

The hospital on Ward’s Island was a nightmare. The ratio of nurses to patients was typically 1:30, and graduate physicians worked there–usually without pay–simply to gain experience. Obviously, they had little to no experience caring for the insane and only stayed for a short time anyway, thereby depriving patients of any continuity in care.

Inebriate Asylum, Ward's Island, 1869

Inebriate Asylum, Ward’s Island, 1869

The hospital was overcrowded despite occasional attempts to transfer insane patients elsewhere, such as to Randall’s Island and Hart’s Island. Randall’s Island first used an old inebriate hospital for the overflow (1875), but two years later had to use an unoccupied building and also lease an old barrack building from the Emigration Department. This latter building was extremely primitive, being without either individual rooms or “conveniences”. In all these places, cheapness reigned.

Pens at Ellis Island Registry Room. These People Have Passed the First Mental Inspection, courtesy Miriam and Ira Wallach Division of Art, Printing, and Photography Collection, New York Public Library

Pens at Ellis Island Registry Room. These People Have Passed the First Mental Inspection, courtesy Miriam and Ira Wallach Division of Art, Printing, and Photography Collection,1902 – 1913, New York Public Library

In my next post, I will discuss some of the conditions there and attempts to change them.

 

 

 

Dangerous Confinement

Harper's New Monthly Magazine, 1866, Showed A Doctor Making His Rounds at Blackwell's Island Lunatic Asylum

Harper’s New Monthly Magazine, 1866, Showed A Doctor Making His Rounds at Blackwell’s Island Lunatic Asylum

The attendants working in insane asylums often had deservedly poor reputations. However, many were dedicated and capable, and performed their duties admirably. We can only imagine the outcome of any number of harrowing situations if attendants had not remained calm and committed to the people who depended on them.

An article in an 1879 issue of the New York Times reported on a fire that had broken out in a large building beside the main asylum on Blackwell’s Island. The building held about 100 female patients, who were locked in rows of cells on each floor. Smoke began pouring out of the cellar late in the evening and attendants gave the alarm. The Medical Superintendent had them unlock each cell and release the patients, but getting them outside to safety could have been quite a task given the unusual circumstances and mental state of the patients.

An Asylum Dance at Blackwell's Island

An Asylum Dance at Blackwell’s Island

However, to calm patients’ fear and excitement, the attendants told the women “there was to be a dance in the Amusement Hall, a building in which concerts and balls were given to the inmates of the asylum,” the paper reported.

The patients exited via fire escapes, and to keep up the pretense that all was well, someone played “a merry air” on the piano in the Amusement Hall. Some of the patients began to dance on the lawn as employees and others fought the fire, and every life was saved.

New York City Asylum for the Insane on Blackwell's Island

New York City Asylum for the Insane on Blackwell’s Island