Haunting images show segregated mental asylum in Virginia
Haunting images reveal dark history of a segregated mental asylum in Virginia where black patients were sterilized without consent and forced to undergo horrific treatments for mental illness
- Photographer Leland Kent of Abandoned Southeast captured images of what was known as the ‘Central Lunatic Asylum’ when it opened in Virginia in 1870
- The hospital was built specifically for black patients, and it wasn’t until the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that the state-operated facility was desegregated
- The use of mechanical restraints, hydrotherapy and hypnotics were common practices to treat mental illness in the late 1800s
- Kent’s eerie photos show a bed strewn in a crumbling corridor, patients’ cell-like bedrooms complete with personal effects and the dingy staircases
- The photographer said the abandoned hydrotherapy bathtubs in the hospital were one of the ‘most fascinating things’ he found left behind
- In 1980, an investigation uncovered that 1,700 patients had been sterilized without their consent between 1924 and 1973 at the hospital
Creepy images reveal the dark history of a segregated, abandoned mental asylum where black patients were sterilized without consent – the first facility of its kind in America.
Urban explorer and photographer Leland Kent of Abandoned Southeast took pictures of the sprawling grounds and central brick building of what was known as the ‘Central Lunatic Asylum’ when it first opened in Virginia in 1870.
He captured his incredible images using his Canon RP and a DJI drone while visiting the hospital – which is still partially open.
Creepy: Photographer Leland Kent of Abandoned Southeast captured images of what was known as the ‘Central Lunatic Asylum’ when it opened in Virginia in 1870
View from above: Kent used a DJI drone to capture aerial shots of the hospital – which is still partially open
Aerial drone shots showcase the sprawling grounds and central brick building, while the other haunting images were captured inside the abandoned facility.
Kent’s photos feature a bed strewn in a crumbling corridor, patients’ cell-like bedrooms complete with personal effects and the dingy staircases that join the floors.
Another eerie picture shows a huge metal hydrotherapy bath that had been left to rust. Hydrotherapy was a popular method of treating mental illness at the time but is now considered inhumane due to its punitive nature.
Central Lunatic Asylum was the first facility of its kind in America – built specifically for black patients – and it wasn’t until the Civil Rights Act of 1964 that the state-operated facility was desegregated.
During the 1890s, the use of mechanical restraints, hydrotherapy and hypnotics were common practices, but the patients at the hospital were encouraged to use the asylum’s surrounding farmland to grow crops and produce food as part of their treatments.
The hospital grew and by the early 1900s, it had over 80 buildings with men and women housed separately. Patients were assigned to wards for the acute, chronic, demented, tubercular, epileptic, criminal and suicidal.
In 1980, an investigation uncovered that 1,700 patients had been sterilized without their consent between 1924 and 1973 at the hospital.
A mass sterilization program was put in place by doctors to allegedly eliminate social misfits and promote the white American race.
In the 1990s, the Department of Justice investigated the hospital over excessive use of restraints.
The two-year investigation revealed that some patients were placed in restraints for as long as four days at a time, and one patient died after spending more than 400 hours in restraints in a month.
‘This particular state hospital remains partially active which made it an exhilarating experience,’ Kent said.
‘You never know when you may run into someone or be observed from a distance.
Different places: There was also a hair salon within the walls of the hospital (pictured)
Horrific: In 1980, an investigation uncovered that 1,700 patients had been sterilized without their consent between 1924 and 1973 at the hospital
Monstrous: A mass sterilization program was put in place by doctors to allegedly eliminate social misfits and promote the white American race
Cruel: In the 1990s, the Department of Justice investigated the hospital over excessive use of restraints and found some patients were placed in restraints for as long as four days at a time
‘Although the building has been empty for decades, you can still get a sense of what life may have been like for the patients that once called this place home.
‘The rooms, more like cells, are small with little ventilation or lighting. Some of the rooms are so small you can stretch your arms and touch both walls.
‘I think one of the most fascinating things left behind would be the hydrotherapy bathtubs.
‘That sort of treatment has long been abandoned and is something you would only see in a television show or movie.
‘I try to be as inconspicuous as possible when I enter a place like this. I love to discover what is left behind, whether it be old records or equipment. That sort of thing is fascinating to me and gives life to an empty building.
‘I think it is important to preserve the past through photography. These old asylums are often off-limits to the public and most are demolished before any sort of documentation can be done.’
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