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Hospital for Insane, Northampton

nshW.B. Gay/Gazetteer of Hampshire County, Mass. | UMass Amherst Libraries

The Northampton State Hospital was opened in 1858 to provide moral therapy to the “insane,” and under the superintendency of Pliny Earle, became one of the best known asylums in New England. Before the turn of the century, however, the Hospital declined, facing the problems of overcrowding, poor sanitation, and inadequate funding. The push for psychiatric deinstitutionalization in the 1960s and 1970s resulted in a steady reduction of the patient population, the last eleven of whom left Northampton State in 1993.

Posted in: History on 08/02/2013 | Link to this post on IFP |
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