Saturday, April 19, 2008

Norwich State Hospital - Salmon (male forensic) building


Salmon building (r) with Administration building to its left.

The Salmon building at Norwich State Hospital, Connecticut's second public insane asylum, founded in 1904, was a building built for male forensic patients, those found not guilty by reason of insanity. An original construction building, part of the initial footprint of the hospital campus, Salmon was a milestone in terms of the construction of psychiatric hospital buildings for the violent insane. Every window was barred with prison-style 2/3 inch thick iron bars built into the brick, as well as a heavy mesh screen. In order to move down the ward, the door ahead would only be unlocked when the one behind was closed - airlock style - which would insure that even in the event that a patient escaped his room, he wasn't going far.

In nearly 70 years of operation, not a single escape was recorded from Salmon.

Flanking the Administration building, in direct contrast with the Kirkbride plan which dictated that violent patients would be housed far from the administrators, Salmon was echoed by a female forensic unit named Awl, which was situated on the other side of the Administration building.

These photos were recently taken on a trip with Nate Kensinger and Sylvie Bolioli's Law & Disorder: The Insanity Defense.


A hallway in the Salmon building, showing the heavily fortified doors typical of the structure.


One of the bathroms in the structure. If needed, attendants could slam and lock the heavy mesh door, isolating patients who acted out whilst using the facilities.


A patient registry, into which the names of current patients would be inserted for census and tracking purposes.


A patient's room, heavily collapsed. Even after over thirty years of abandonment, this room would be difficult to escape from if the door were locked - the barred window is still holding strong.


An intact sink in one of the nurses' stations.


The wheel on the bottom of a bedframe, sunk deep into thirty years' worth of disintegrating plaster.


View from a hallway into a patient's bedroom; this is on the inner part of the ward, which would have been the most secure section of the building.


The patient's bed in room 26, still almost ready for a nap after decades of desertion. These beds were stuffed with horsehair, as were the pillows. Thanks Nate!

44 comments:

  1. these are the stuff of nightmares...thanks again for finding and posting these kinds of photos.

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  2. this reminds of another insane asylum near upstate NY. it's on the way to taconic state park - anyone who visits these places know what an impression these places leave. i'm sure people come out crazier than when they come in.

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  3. i love right up the road from norwich state hospital and have been inside several times. easily the eeriest place i have even seen in my life

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  4. How on earth do you get to the hospital please,

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  5. there had been plans for this property to be developed into hotels and some kind of film studio/theme park (it is right across from one of the local casinos), which seem to have been scuttled. I don't know if they were going to keep the buildings.

    Here's a link from one of the comments to a recent article about the site in the local Norwich Bulletin showing an incredible fireplace in the hospital:

    http://www.opacity.us/image3692_extravagant_fireplace.htm

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  6. The hospital has not been abandoned for 30 years, it was closed in 1996. Anyone from out of the Norwich/Preston area who wants to explore the place, be warned that state cops patrol this place like they're guarding the Crown Jewels. Pretend you're Solid Snake and sneak past them, but be warned, they may or may not be armed.

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  7. I have driven by this area several times....this is a wonderful place to explore as long as you do not get caught...beware, you will be prosecuted, but you will also be scared beyond belief if you make it into the tunnels and have a look for yourself

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  8. Several men did escape from the Salmon Building in 1964. They were all recaptured. I'm sure that you can find information about this in the archives of THE DAY, the local newspaper.

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    1. I had heard about this, I was an inmate in Salmon in 1966-67, whatever you've heard about what it was like is probably three to five times worse.I saw a treatments, like lobotomies, shock treatments high doses of seconal, thorazine and Mellaril. Very powerful tranquilizers. Isolation rooms with the worst two to five days locked up in a room with a urine soap mattress in your underwear and a strong blanket.

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  9. I went by there today in the pourin' rain. The place is captivating for sure! What is the large, newer looking, set of red brick buildings that are also abandoned, at the end of the older campus just before the bridge. There were white colored(suvs) security, parked in several locations.

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  10. wow i liver in norwich for 30 years and i find this place creepy as ever i tryed to get in to take pics,but was shuned off by a gard,i know its hunted,i could smell death this place has ghost i know it!!! dave coombs

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  11. My mother was a nurse supervisor there for 25 years. Considering what the medical community understood about mental health in those days they did good work at trying to care for people no one else wanted around. The truth is today no one still wants behavioral health patients around and no one wants to pay for their care. I have memories of the property in Norwich when it was alive and well with staff and patients. I remember attending Mass at the Chapel on campus and going in the Administration Building with my mother. It should be preserved as a historical site.

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  12. The previous poster was exactly correct. I work for the State of Connecticut today and the state does not care for its mental health population whatsoever!! The people at the bottom must pay for the greed of those at the top. Think of all the very highly paid state workers and political figures in high places! They turn to the mental health population for cuts first and foremost. And they cut services for the otherwise mentally challenged folks like individuals with developmental issues. They want to completely privatize services for the developmentally challenged and many with dual diagnoses including mental illness. I really love my clients and this is too close to my heart. The state does not value these people and those who care for them. They prefer to place them in the care of people who are paid poorly and people with little education. Since the mentally challenged or mentally ill have no value, that is no problem.

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  13. This was in my dream o.o .. me and my crush were stuck in here and it was filled with crazy insane people and they were trying to kill us. Creepy.

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  14. It's on Rt 12 down from Rt 49! Very scarry!

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    1. It is much more scary when you live there as an inmate which I did in 1966 and 67. Lobotomies were performed there shock treatments ice packing, among other crazy treatments of that time. I've thought about writing a small book about the place I have very vivid memories of being there for that year when I say vivid I mean nightmares and post-traumatic stress episodes if you want to contact me and ask some questions you're welcome to, thanks..

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  15. Thanks so much for your article, very effective piece of writing.

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  16. this kind of tells of another crazy asylum near upstate NY. it's on the way to taconic condition recreation area -- anybody who appointments these locations determine what the feeling these locations keep. i'm certain men and women appear crazier as compared to once they come in.

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    1. Salmon is going down, its pretty much already gone. The power house and laundry are already gone.

      In response to another comment, many of the older buildings were abandoned in the 70's so yeah, they were abandoned for over 30 years. The only buildings that were still open in 96 were:kettle, the lodge and bonesky.

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    2. Ohh, with the history of that place it should be preserved. Being that I was an inmate there in 1966 and 67, I witness things there that you would not believe and I remember inmates there that were really in another universe sometimes and I remember some of them very vividly.. if you want to contact me you can through my email : seer4u2axe@gmail.com.

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  17. Salmon, Awl, and the power station are smoked!

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  18. Salmon, Awl and power station are dusted

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  19. Back in 1987,after going through some tough times,i tried to kill myself. Im not suicidal, i actually only had pms, which made me very emotional. Anyways,i cut both my wrists, and was sent to the NSH to wait for a bed in a place where there was only a few patients. So i spent 2 nights there at NSH..I was housed in a ward,with many other obviously suffering people, who looked at me, and acted like i was a monster, and walked away from me. I was afraid at 1st, then i just felt bad for them. Id heard the horror stories,of abuse, and filth, and saw none of that. it was just sad.

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    1. Yes sad beyond all comprehension. I spent one year from 1966 until 1967 as an inmate in Norwich State hospital salmon building or as it was called in those days "salmon prison for the criminally insane" that place saved me from 7 to 15 years in prison and after being there oh yes I was rehabilitated all right who would ever want to go back to a place like that? I still have nightmares and I suppose it's from PTSD..

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  20. As of the late summer in 2013, is the area still heavily guarded?

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  21. The Salmon building was recently demolished. It's gone completely.

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  22. these kinds of conveys to involving one more insane asylum next to upstate BIG APPLE. it really is along the way to help taconic problem recreation area -- anyone which appointments these kinds of destinations know what the opinion these kinds of destinations maintain. i am certain people look crazier as compared to once they are available in.

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  23. I notice that they dropped the church last year. Are the tunnels still there?

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  24. Are there any buildings still standing ?
    I heard they blew up the tunnels.

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  25. Are any of the buildings there now? My friends uncle is the tour guide that showed TAPS around when they did their investigation. I used to live in Norwich and know people that were taken there in the early eighties.

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  28. Oh yes, at 24, almost 15, I signed myself in to Brigham building, I saw things in that place that are straight out of some movie like "One flew over the cuckoo's nest", but much more nightmarish. Salmon was without a doubt the worst place I had ever been in or ever would be in from that point on until I was in my mid-twenties when I stopped getting in trouble. I'm a fairly stable and good citizen today, but I will never ever forget my year in Salmon..

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