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Insane Asylum In The 1800s

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LIVING IN AN ANSANE ASYLUM
What was it like to live in an insane asylum in the 1800’s?
The first colonists blamed mental illness on witchcraft and demonic possession. The mentally ill were often imprisoned or sent to poorhouses. If they didn’t go to one of those they were left untreated at their home. Conditions in the prisons were awful. In 1841, a lady named Dorothea Dix volunteered to teach a Sunday-school class for the female inmates. She was outraged with the conditions of the prisons that she witnessed. Dix then went on to be a renowned advocate for the mentally ill. She urged more humane treatment-based care than what was given to the mentally ill in the prisons. In 1847, she urged that the Illinois legislature to provide an appropriate …show more content…

But other patients had reasons to be in the asylum. On Tennessee Genealogical Society web site you can read why mentally healthy women went to the insane asylums. Some of the women were put in the asylum because they questioned the authority of their husbands or they were not good housewives. Any woman was at risk of being put in an insane hospital if they did either one of those. Also, if women got to old the husband could have her put in a hospital and take a younger wife. Once a woman was committed, it was as if she died, an obituary was published, usually. A landlord could have a person committed for not paying rent. A boss could have an employee committed if they were slow or a bad employee. People could be committed if they were poor, being an alcoholic, a person with a short fuse, or anyone who deviated from the normal thing society thought was right. These could go for men or women, but most were filled with women. Also, children who acted out or had mental or physical disabilities were also placed in mental asylums. A blind child or a child with a speech problem would be locked away for the rest of their life just because they had a birth

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