Tag Archives: Willard Asylum for the Insane

Ways to Treat the Insane

Leisure Time at Southwestern Lunatic Asylum, circa 1890, courtesy Southwestern Virginia Mental Health Institute

Leisure Time at Southwestern Lunatic Asylum, circa 1890, courtesy Southwestern Virginia Mental Health Institute

Around the time of the Civil War, alienists were still hammering out the best ways to treat the mentally disturbed. Asylums were much more common, and a great majority of alienists felt that removal to one would benefit most patients more than home care. What they particularly stressed was an immediate change of scenery–either to an asylum or by travel–for a patient in the first stage(s) of insanity. By getting this person away from the environment that had brought on the problem, doctors could often snap the person out of the state of mind causing the insanity.

Labor of some kind was also beneficial for the physical health and mental recovery of the insane, which led most asylums to set up gardening and workshop programs for their patients. The author (Dr. J. Parigot) of an 1864 article “General Mental Therapeutics,” did stress that labor must be voluntary. “Free-will labor has the advantage that patients instinctively choose occupations in accordance with their state of health,” Pargot noted. But he also gave the following caveat: “. . . patients ought never to be converted into machines and tools for private speculation.” He was very much against using patient labor to keep down expenses so that an asylum could be self-paying or profitable.

Interior of Shoe Shop, Willard Asylum for the Insane

Interior of Shoe Shop, Willard Asylum for the Insane

Unfortunately, therapeutic labor soon came to include drudge work and difficult farm and dairy tasks that most patients probably did not enjoy. As asylums took in more patients with less per capita state funding, they had to rely on patient labor to offset the costs of food and other goods.

Patients Picking Cotton at Alabama Insane Hospital

Patients Picking Cotton at Alabama Insane Hospital

My next post will continue to discuss therapeutics during the Civil War era.

Was There Any Way Out?

Force Feeding a Patient at the Willard, Asylum for the Insane, llate 1800s, courtesy The Inmates of Willard

Force Feeding a Patient at the Willard Asylum for the Insane, late 1800s, courtesy The Inmates of Willard

Horror stories abound about the cruelty and sadness of life in an asylum. Especially as asylums became overcrowded and less well-run, it was hard for patients to recover from whatever condition had sent them there. Even worse, the patients’ relatives often had no desire or incentive to bring them home–whether they did get better or not. Sometimes, patients simply had no relatives or friends to return to.

Physicians at asylums had more incentive to discharge patients so that their “cure rates” could go up, but if they had nowhere to send an “improved” or “cured” patient, they might feel they had no choice but to keep them in the asylum. Additionally, many physicians were too busy–or didn’t care enough–to spend much time with patients and couldn’t determine whether or not they had improved. All these factors could lead to a lifetime of treatment for what had been a temporary problem.

Doctors and Administrators at the Florida State Hospital, circa 1920s, courtesy State Archives of Florida

Doctors and Administrators at the Florida State Hospital, circa 1920s, courtesy State Archives of Florida

An 1880 report from the Insane Asylum of California summed up the facility’s overall cure rate (since its creation) as just under 47%. This was certainly an admirable rate, but the superintendent also pointed out that very sadly, some patients were being sent to the asylum who more properly belonged to a state hospital or infirmary. He was speaking specifically about patients who were senile or had chronic diseases, but he also mentioned a state law against sending “cases of “idiocy or imbecility, or simple feebleness of mind” to asylums. The law was obviously being ignored.

An Advocate Went a Long Way Toward a Patient's Release, courtesy Portraits of Eloise blog

An Advocate Went a Long Way Toward a Patient’s Release, courtesy Portraits of Eloise blog

Some patients did manage to get out of asylums even though the odds were stacked against them, and I will discuss these cases in an upcoming post(s).