Friday, September 18, 2009
Central State Hospital, Milledgeville, GA
View of a hallway and into a bathroom in the Walker Building, Central State Hospital.
Central State Hospital, formerly known as the Georgia Lunatic Asylum, the State Asylum for the Insane, and the Georgia State Sanitarium, is the oldest and largest psychiatric facility in the state. Located on a sprawling 1,750 acre campus in Milledgeville, GA, which was at the time the state capitol, the Asylum admitted its first patient in 1842. Patient population exploded rapidly, and by the 1870s overcrowding was an issue; new buildings and additions to existing buildings were rapidly constructed to deal with the ballooning need for beds. This trend continued through the 1960s, when Central briefly contended with New York's Pilgrim for the title of largest psychiatric facility in the world.
In 1884, the Walker Building was constructed for the reception of white male convalescent patients. Unlike the state-run public health facilities in the North, segregation was common in Southern asylums; at Milledgeville, the practice continued until at least the 1940s. The extent of segregation from state to state varied wildly, as did the degree of difference in quality of treatment. At some asylums and sanitoriums, white patients received treatment in airy dayrooms of sturdy buildings, whilst black patients were crowded into poorly insulated tents. Central State Hospital was somewhat more forward in its thinking; the first building for "coloured" patients was erected in 1866, albeit far from central Powell administration building. This evolved into a distinct campus of buildings for black patients. Somewhat more stark and institutional than the more ornate buildings for white patients, the remaining structures constructed for African Americans have now been repurposed as a prison.
The more ornate Walker Building, on the other hand, was abandoned around 1974, and over thirty years of disuse have not been kind to it. The heat and humidity of central Georgia have taken their toll; much of the third floor lacks a ceiling, and the walls are a tapestry of peeling paint, algae, mold, and disintegrating plaster. Foliage has grown over large portions of the building, and invaded the interior spaces. Insects and small mammals have made their homes here, as has a large coyote. Yet through all this, some aspects of grandeur remain in this venerable building, used for almost a century.
The roof gone, vines have begun to overtake this third-floor bathroom.
Third floor hallway, the roof long rotted away.
A typical patient room, with a viewing window to allow orderlies to look in on patients.
A curtain still hangs in a dark patient bedroom.
The lack of a roof creates interesting interplays of light at various times of day.
Although in somewhat better condition than the top floor, water damage and humidity have wrecked havoc on the floors below as well.
Among the few artifacts left in the building, this cabinet still contains the last patients' toothbrushes, each labeled with a surname.
Plaster has collapsed into a sink in a tiny corner bathroom.
In the violent ward hallway at the Southern end of the building, the doors were outfitted with spinning platforms that could be used to provide food to patients without opening the door.
A closeup of one such platform. A deadbolt separate from the one locking the door would keep the platform from rotating when not in use.
As the sun sets, the reflection of light off the red brick building colors the walls facing the courtyards.
A typical scene as the sun hangs low over the Walker building.
A large corner room near sundown.
Foliage is overtaking the building; here, an intact window provides a climbing point for vines which are beginning to slip into the building through the cracks.
Thank you! These photos are hauntingly beautiful......
ReplyDeleteone can't help but wonder what it must have been like to be a patient in such a place.
I was a patient there in the 1990 I have seen and heard things unimaginable truely a dark place
DeleteWait, really? Information, please?
DeleteGood morning I was their for fifth years. I can tell you all truth on this place.contact me 4044253402
DeleteI'm trying to get my story out there. This place was very bad.
DeleteFantastic photos as usual. I wonder how you manage to get into these places, how dangerous they are (risk of collapse) and why they are still standing at all.
ReplyDeleteYou have done exactly what I've wanted to do since moving to Milledgeville over a year-and-a-half ago. And the result is excellent.
ReplyDeleteI am a writer for the local newspaper in Milledgeville. If you would be at all interested, I would love to talk with you about these images and your decision to photograph other mental health facilities that are undergoing the same fate as central state.
I apologize for appropriating one of your images to link to your blog. If that is not okay I'll take it down.
Thanks again for capturing these great images.
You might want to call me 6789979018
DeleteGood morning I have a story to tell and one to be sold. See I was born in prison and raise up in central state hospital. I have the story just need support. Call me anytime day and night.
DeleteI was their last month will be their this week inside.
DeleteI was their last month will be their this week inside.
DeleteMy mother gave birth to me in Central State Hospital Jan 1968. I grew up never knowing my Fatheresume. Birth Certificate said unknown. I've grown up believing that my mother was taken advantage of by someone in that facility where I was born. Does someone knows a way I can find out how to obtain her records or someone who was there on 1968? Please leave a number and I will contact you. Thank you.
DeleteDo you remember who her dr was?
DeleteHello you can call me anytime at 404) 425- 3402 I was there for many years.. just need a writer. Check me out on Facebook pullins malinda my email is shortyfine2008@gmail.xon
DeleteAwesome, Mr. Nickel Jr. That place was so awesome and we must go again sometime.
ReplyDeleteYour work is simply incredible & captures so much, it is almost overwhelmingly evocative, like a scent can be.
ReplyDeleteThank you for posting all these images, I have been a fan since I first came across your photos of Admiral's Row.
I love your work. I have a fascination with door, iron railing, and peeling paint. Your work is beautiful! I love browsing your blog.
ReplyDeletethis is probably one of the creepiest places ived ever seen. Great pictures!
ReplyDeleteHi! Your blog leave my speechless! Is it ok for me to show one of your picures on my blog together with your name and link to your website? /Johanna, Sweden
ReplyDeletePs: check out my post of an old abandon house in Småland Sweden.
ReplyDeletehttp://blogg.aprillaprill.se/2009/july/odetorp.html
Amazing pictures. Thanks for sharing both the images and the story of Central State.
ReplyDeleteAs a child in Ga. in the 60's I was taken on a field trip there. I had nightmares for months afterwards. Had to see these pictures to acutally believe I was remembering what I thought I was. Thanks for the wonderful shots. This place has haunted my dreams for years.
ReplyDeleteWanda
Wow... Now that is what I call some good pictures... I was going to go there, but now I'm not so sure.
ReplyDeleteMy grandfather lived at Central State Hospital fom the early forties until the early seventies. These are the first pictures that I have ever seen of the place where he basically lived his adult life. My eyes filled with tears as I realized what he must have experienced as a man with a chemical imbalance in his brain before the dawn of psychtrophic medications. How he suffered... Thank you for further humanizing a terrible memory. It doesn't make it any easier to deal with, but it does bring to my heart what my mother, grandmother, and aunts had to deal with so long ago. May God truly rest his lovely soul.
ReplyDeleteMy daddy was there in 1963
DeleteHe is passed now but said he remembered a man who told everyone he met I'm Jesus
My daddy got released after 3 days as at the time he ws struggling to become a minister and my mama didn't understand him
Anyway after a 3 day stay he got out and went on and preached for 31 years till passing in 2009
I have always wondered what happened to the man who called himself Jesus and if anyone ever knew or heard of him
Thank you for reading this and God Bless
I'm Still at age 56 try to find my biological mother,was born there,My adopted Mother who was a social worker their Eloise Myles has passed.It would be wonderful to reunite.478-353-2296 if anyone can help me.
DeleteI was born in 1965
DeleteSorry..."psychotropic" on the previous post...
ReplyDeletedo you wear protective masks in these places? Great stuff
ReplyDeleteThese are absolutely gorgeous photos! You have captured the colors and the light in such interesting, evocative ways! I especially love the intact window and the blue door.
ReplyDeleteHow do you feel about walking on some of those floors knowing the degree of rot the rood has undergone?
We have so many derelict buildings up here in Upstate NY...not institutions however. I always want to photograph them but don't want to trespass.
Erin :)
Wow! Great images!
ReplyDeleteBeautiful, poignant photographs. My grandparents live in Milledgeville and I remember riding through the grounds in my grandfather's truck when I was little. The high, barred windows on the of the buildings and occasional glimpses of the patients (mostly Down syndrome sufferers and schizophrenics) were extremely creepy to me back then.
ReplyDeleteIncredible place, Incredible photos!
ReplyDeleteI'm writing you from Italy, do you think can I find this building in GoogleMaps? I've tried but looking around Milledgeville is very hard to recognize it?
Someone can helps me?
Thanks for your help and that wonderful picture,
Giampaolo (Arezzo, Tuscany, Italy)
Hey Giampaolo, you can drop down to a good shot of the roofs & sides on Google earth.you can also use it to get a rolling 3 or 4 side street view. The Powell building is the huge white domed building at the top of the hill. Leaving the front of the Powell and across the st. to the rt. Is the Walker building you viewed in his photographs. Also below the Powell is the large pecan orchard that devide the two rows of the main relics. Across the pecan orchard from the Walker building is the amazing Jones building. Should you desire more info you could contact me at deepbluecrow@gmail. com
DeleteLinked to your blog for a recent article on Central State and its inclusion on the 2010 Places in Peril list. Lovely photos, good work.
ReplyDeleteI drive by this relic daily. Wish you could have shown its beautiful front. Late evening shots would rival some of the ones taken inside except being less damaged by the years. The Jones Building would be a candidate for another shoot.
ReplyDeleteThanks for the great work.
This comment has been removed by the author.
ReplyDeleteAs one writer mentioned, a photo of the exterior would have helped put it in perspective. I worked in this building 1974-75, at a time when mental health care was becoming more enlightened. [So, the person who bemoaned her relative living most of his adult life in this hospital need not dispair.]
ReplyDeleteIn 1975 it was abandoned for patient care, but used many more years as a storage facility.
If memory serves, there is a plaque on the front of the Walker Building identifying it as having been named to honor a nurse, the history of the hospital, the only building so named.
love these pictures...so interesting and perfectly captured! great job!
ReplyDelete-margot
http://redlighttgo.blogspot.com/
I'm a "going-on 74" Great-Grandfather who spent 7yrs active duty, US Army; then 2yrs working at Emory University; then back home to Milledgeville(Baldwin, County) where I was reared and learned to roller skate on the sidewalk right outside the Walker Bldg. Also, back in the early '40s, '50s, '60s & '70s a small store was operated in the corner of the bldg where one could pause for a refreshing drink or ice cream, etc. I also worked @ CSH(MSH back then) for about one year as I started to college on the GI Bill @ GA Military College. I could tell you some stories about many oddities there during those years but sure enjoyed reading and viewing your articles re: Walker Bldg. Buford M. Pennington.
ReplyDeletePlease contact me at
Deletedeepbluecrow@gmail.com as I would find Any story fascinating and I may well have a book in me. Grateful, Trent
Did you know Mike Hieber or Jose delgado?
Deletemy sister which was 11 years old died after a month there...this was in Feb 1968...no one xan tell me anything or have no records I can find..do you know if they still have records that far back and where I can find
DeleteThere are still patient files and paperwork in one of the buildings.
DeleteDarryl, Wow! My office was on the 3rd floor. june 1969, right out of college. Social Work Tech. Can't believe it looks that bad inside the building.
ReplyDeleteThis comment has been removed by the author.
DeleteI am not sure how I stumbled across your blog, but I have spent the better half of the morning looking through your posts. These photos are absolutely amazing! I am currently an intern at Central State Hospital in Milledgeville, GA and I was curious about why you chose to photograph the Walker building and not another. Did you have a chance to tour the museum? The tours are by appointment only. Also, they will be doing larger campus tours soon with limited space, and I would love to get in on that! Maybe I could send you some photos to inspire you to come back!
ReplyDeleteHow do you get permission to visit this place
Deletethose photos are haunting! absolutely fantastic
ReplyDeleteWhen facing the Powell Building (big white building), is this building to the left or to the right? Is it the one with the big columned portico? I know the three/four abandoned buildings right on the pecan grove, but I can never keep their names straight.
ReplyDeleteTo Chris, whose grandfather spent 30 years here as a patient, I have tears in my eyes after reading your post. Thanks for the eloquently stated tribute to the poor people who were treated in this hospital. We really should think of them too and not just architecture when looking at these images. My brother was hospitalized for 2 years and is now doing great; imagine what his life would have been decades ago.
ReplyDeleteHow did you get into this place?...i could not find a way in
ReplyDeleteIncredible. My mother was here for almost two weeks. Until now, I had not ever seen this place. It was something we were not to discuss. When she passed a few years ago, I guess she took the images with her. What a horrific place! What healing pictures! Thank you.
ReplyDeleteTHESE PHOTOS BRINGS BACK MEMORIES AS I WAS A PATIENT THERE FROM 1971-1972. IN THIS BUILDING. I SOON GOT A JOB IN THE STORE DOWN STAIRS.I STILL TRULY HAVE GOOD AN BAD MEMORIES ABOUT THIS PLACE.I TRULY ENJOYED THE PHOTOS. THIS IS NOT A PRANK I TRULY WAS A PATIENT HERE!
ReplyDeleteMY DOCTOR'S NAME WAS. DR RAY..
@Anonymous.
ReplyDeleteBack in 2001, you could make it onto the main grounds via the woods back behind the grave fields where they buried so many of their patients. There was an old dirt service road that cut through that part of the property accessible via the woods surrounding those fields, which you could get to via a culdesac in an adjascent neighborhood. Not legal of course, but doable.
Hello,
ReplyDeleteWould it be okay with you to use these pictures on another site if you were given credit and people could be linked to your blog?
I am perfectly happy with being reblogged including a link and credit so long as your website is not commercial; if, on the other hand, you are a for-profit website such as WebUrbanist etc, you may feel free to contact me at my email address to discuss licensing fees.
ReplyDeleteI worked there as an attendant in a receiving ward at the Rivers building from 74 to 76. It is as bad and sad as you can imagine. It was the end of the line, people that could not take care of themselves, had no money and their family didn't want them. The pay we received was low and the budget for this huge place low. Mainly staffed by Dr's from Cuba (they were fine) working on getting their license from the US, and intern Psychologist, and Social workers from the near by college.
ReplyDeleteI know you get this all the time, but I really do love your pictures. I hope I have your talent!
ReplyDeleteI am the granddaughter of a Cuban doctor who worked at the hospital between the years of 1965-1978. I still remember many stories that he would share with us. But most of all I remember how honored he was to work in the Central State Hospital. I would like to know if there is any one out there that worked with my grandfather Dr. Roberto R. Perdomo Sr.
ReplyDeleteThank you to the people of Milledgeville and The Central State Hospital for giving my grandfather the opportunity to work and do what he loved so much “being a physician”.
God Bless you......
My Name is Debra Myles The Daughter of Herman k.Myles Mother Eloise B.Myles they both worked at central state..She Was A Social Worker...She Adopted me from there.I'm still looking for my birth Mom and family..I'm 54 years old now..
DeleteMy Number is 478-353-2296...The hospital on the Grounds I was born.Thank you for Any assistance
DeleteYour photos are very telling. My Grandmother was a patient here from 1950's to mid 1960's. She was so desperate to get out that she jumped from the 2nd story building and broke her leg. After much digging, I found that my Grandfather had put her in Milledgeville so he could continue in his wicked lifestyle.She never recover from her experience in Milledgeville. So sad
ReplyDeleteBeauty in decay is very strange and very real
ReplyDeleteThank you; your photos help me visualize the hospital of times past. My grandmother died there in 1929 from pellagra. As you may know, it is a disease caused by a B-vitamin deficiency and common among Southern poor people in the early twentieth century. Dementia is one of the main symptoms.
ReplyDeleteits as if the whole building has a disease.
ReplyDeleteThese photos hit me hard: my grandmother spent her last 30+ years here and as children we were afraid to go inside with mother to pick her up for our annual visit. I had to go with mother while my brother and sister stayed in the car with the doors locked. Of course it was in much better condition but I remember the stares and shuffling walk of the patients. So sad.
ReplyDeleteThe toothbrushes are very eerie....do you ever get scared doing these?
ReplyDeletethe pictures are beautiful, certainly, one would be inclined, after seeing them, to forget how terrible the people are who recently ran the place, and the horrible things done behind closed doors to adolescent female patients. One might be so inclined, were it not still so fresh a memory.
ReplyDeleteGreat Photos! I went to GCSU and have visited the campus many times. It was one of my favorite places to show people who were new to Milledgeville. I've always wanted to go into these buildings, but those cops are vigilant! It's really great to see what the Walker building looks like inside! I've read some pretty crazy stories about people sneaking in at night and I can only imagine what this place looks like in the darkness. Thanks again!
ReplyDeleteYou have done such an amazing job on this series. I envy your sewing skills and your patience and your diligence. If anyone ever asks me how to sew, I'm sending them to your blog and this series. Congratulations on such an extensive, well thought out and clearly presented set of tutorials
ReplyDeleteturbulence training review
my grandmother died in Central State Hospital about the year 1941 before my birth. Unfortunately, I did not know her, but the idea of her mistreatment here makes me sad for her and thousands of others who suffered because of our lack of understanding of medical and mental conditions.
ReplyDeleteI am crying for the grandmother that I never knew who died here. Haunting pictures....
ReplyDeleteHey this is very scary pictures..but nice photography.good work keep it up!!
ReplyDeleteYou should send these photos to TAPS and maybe they could get in to investigate! Awesome pictures.
ReplyDeleteThese pictures are amazing. My great uncle was wrongly incarcerated in the hospital and lived there until his death in 1963. In the late 1940's, my 78 year old aunt resided at the hospital while completing part of her nursing training and she would often visit with him. She is still haunted by the image of him at the window of his room waving at her as she left the hospital. It was the last time she ever saw him. Last year I took her back to visit the facility and it was an incredible experience to hear her describe what life was like back then. We did visit the museum and for her it was like stepping back in time. I took many exterior photos and was so disappointed that we couldn't take any of he interior. Your photos have helped to fill that void. Thank you for sharing them. JDF
ReplyDeleteI've really enjoyed exploring your blog! Your pictures are wonderful!! My favorite pic is the very last Central State pic. That's amazingly beautiful! :)
ReplyDeleteYour work is fantastic! I'm an over the road truck driver and have been near many of the places you have done research on. Thank you for such inspiration!! By the way, I think Opie (Greg Hughes) on Opie and Anthony radio show would like to talk to you about Underground NY. They were talking about it the other day and how he could take a tour.
ReplyDeleteMy uncle was hospitalized in Central State for many years. Amazing, gorgeous, haunting images. Thank you--
ReplyDeleteHello I read all these posts about the Kingston Lounge. I must say, I was raised up in the "Kingston Lounge" which was called "The Walker Building" in the 1960s until 2000. I was in the adolescent unit, "The Boland Building", and put there as a child illegally. There were many children and people that were buried under the buildings there, including children. Children died there, raped, overdosed by medications, received electric shock treatments. I am trying to do a movie as well as a book. If anyone is interested, please contact me at mg4454@ymail.com.
ReplyDeletewould like to know how the hospital was like in 1968...my sister was there a month and died
DeleteDo you know how or if there are records of patients from the 40's and 50's? I would like to see if my grandfather was there.
ReplyDeleteMy grandmother spent over eight years in Milledgeville Asylum in the 1940's. She went after my uncle was severly burned and survived. My grandfather got government contract jobs that caused him to leave his eight children alone. The baby died and my mother and siblings were placed in the Clara Steel-Pitts home. in the fifties my grandfather was to get his family together in Chicago. My grandmother lived to be 80, never dangerous but was not allowed to live alone. The did get decent drugs to help her live outside the asylum.
ReplyDeleteThank you for these excellent phosting
I went in there at night and it was creepy. If you go there ask the ghost to turn outside lights off we did and one turned off. It was crazy.
ReplyDeleteI went in there at night and it was creepy. If you go there ask the ghost to turn outside lights off we did and one turned off. It was crazy.
ReplyDeleteNice Work! It is so very sad and, for lack of a better word,"INSANE" how they treated individuals before the 60's. My grandmother 'ROSA' was a patient/resident there from 1938-1974, she died there! there are so many graves on those grounds! I am in the processs of gathering information. They experimented with helpless individuals, and moved inmates in with civillians! I am happy to see these photographs, we should not forget these poor souls who suffered there!!!! thank you so much!!
ReplyDeleteYou can go to this site and request information about a relative if you wish! apparently the web site is swamped right now, because i cant access it, Best Of Luck with your Search!!
ReplyDeleteThe website is Centralstatehospital.org/genealogy
do you think they kept records from 1968 there
Deletewill be there tuesday....treatinng people....scary
ReplyDeleteI think it's fascinating. Old buildings always seem to tell a story. There is something mystical about them. The pictures capture that perfectly.
ReplyDeleteSuperb site you have here but I was wondering if you knew of any community forums that cover the same topics talked about here? I’d really like to be a part of online community where I can get suggestions from other knowledgeable individuals that share the same interest. If you have any suggestions, please let me know. Appreciate it!
ReplyDeletei absolutely love these photos. i went there yesterday and today and took some photos on the outside of the building.
ReplyDeleteamazing photos! my art has been totally influenced by these sorts of images as well as researching the history of some of these places — my latest record was even inspired by this place! http://marktulk.bandcamp.com/album/central-state
ReplyDeleteMy birth mother resided here for about a year in 1967. I was born in this building in September. To be a single mother was shameful at the time and at least three relatives committed her there. I'm glad she chose to give birth. Thank you for showing me what it looked like inside. When I visited there they would not allow me to go in. Thanks and keep taking photos.
ReplyDeleteI found your blog from a link on Wikipedia. My very first clinical class in nursing school was held in the Walker Building in the fall of 1973. I was a very frightened 17 year old and certainly questioned my career choice after that visit. Only a few short months later, I started working in the Jones Building just across the pecan orchard from the Walker Building, and worked there until May of 1976. About a year ago, my college roommate came to visit and we drove over to Milledgeville to spend the day and tour our alma mater. While there we also drove out to CSH for me to view the location of my very first job. I was saddened at the condition and disrepair of these grand old buildings which are adorned with interesting architectural ornament. If only these walls could talk.....
ReplyDeleteThank you for your awesome photo journal. I would certainly be interesting to know how you learned of this building and what brought you to middle Georgia to do this photo shoot.
Hi... I am an urban explorer now residing in Milledgeville. I visited this site and got some great shots of the various buildings a couple of years ago, but security would not allow me to go inside of any of the buildings or remain on the grounds for very long. I was wondering if you were able to obtain special permission to enter the buildings or if you had to sneak in. I am dying to go inside and see everything before they decide to destroy the buildings. Thanks.. C.Smith loveusandletuslive@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteI not only experienced being taken away from my mom at the age of three but she was taken to this horrible so called hospital because(they) thought it would help her mentally, after losing her three little kids to welfare. Shock treatments were her only answer. Instead of helping her keep us. They drugged her and God only knows what else. Who cares now? Right?
ReplyDeleteThis place is amazing . I'd love to go and take some pictures for a photography contest . Where exactly in Milledgeville is it ? Would you mind sending me some more details about the place ? I'd really appreciate it . Courtlynn1415@yahoo.com
ReplyDeleteMy great grandmother was in this place in the early 1900s. I tried to get records but they couldnt find them; I think I will try again. These photos are creepy. I have many photos of great grandma Minnie. I wish I knew more. Thx for this amazing website & photos.
ReplyDeleteMy mom was a patient there in the 50's and 60's. Hearing some of the stories she tells, makes me feel so sorry for her and every patient who went through that place. She was put there simply because she didnt want to be tied down to a child.She also went through shock treatments. She & I were just looking at this site together.
ReplyDeleteAs I was working on a slide show about the hx of client mh rights in GA for staff at a GA behavioral health facility, came across this site. Remembered visiting CSH in 1969 way before getting my MSW degree. So many professionals now really don't know what that past was like for so many folks who didn't have any rights or advocates to help them get out and back into society. Things have improved, however now many are residing off and on in our jails and prisons as "deinstitutionalization" has never been funded to meet the needs particularly with appropriate transitional housing and support in GA. The State only just responded in greater details after a federal lawsuit required such.
ReplyDeletephotos are nothing compared to actually experiencing the horrible life someone had to live in this place of hell! how could anyone comment on it's place of beauty. where were all you caring people when all this bull.... was happening? we do live in a sick world but it's people like you that should have suffered!!!
ReplyDeleteAppreciating architectural and photographic beauty has nothing to do with minimizing the goings on of old places like this one. Just saying.
DeleteIt is really sad to see that part of Central State hospital. I spent almost a year at the hospital in 2007. However where i was at looked nothing like these pictures but then again the area could have stood some improvements.True the doctors weren't the best but, if not for them i would probably be DEAD!!!! So yes it saddens me to hear of them closing because they saved my life and helped me get housing as i was homelessn and helped me get my social security. Thanks to them I am now thankful for each and everyday that i wake up because i know regardless of what the world and people throw at me i will make it through
ReplyDeleteWhile doing some family research, I found that my maternal great -great grandfather, Benjamin F Littleton was a patient (inmate) at the Georgia State Sanitarium aka Central State Hospital and died there on February 7, 1907. He was married to Mary C Fackler in Monroe, County, GA. They had 9 children, the youngest, William B Littleton was my great grandfather and his oldest son; Robert Franklin Littleton was my grandfather. My grandfather never spoke of his mother or father (they were divorced) or his grandparents. I only knew some of his 7 siblings. It would be interesting to know more facts about his health and why he was admitted to this place. Your photos are haunting, tender, fascinating and beautiful. Thank you for sharing. Deborah Nunn Adair, Fort Worth, TX
ReplyDeleteYour photos are hauntingly beautiful. I know it didn't look like this when being used, but they give me the feeling of the loneliness of the people who were and are here. My grandmother and her family grew up near Covington and Starrsville. We didn't know until 5 yrs. after gm's death that she had a sister here. We know nothing about her, but I have a hurt in my heart from seeing these and thinking of the fact that we didn't know of her at all. Looking for her family, but I don't know if she had anyone. I pray someone cared for Ozie.
ReplyDeleteWell I worked with several state hospital and the picture surely depict loneliness and that is the feeling you have even working at these places. The families have a tendency to forget their loved ones. The patient staff ratio is horrible and unfortunately the more things change the more they stay the same.
ReplyDeleteall you stupid people saying, now, how beautiful this place was are really and truley the sick ones. you do not even get it, people suffered here, and was mistreated so bad. How in the world can all this destruction be any where near beautiful? All these so call photos are just making this man rich and you are to stupid to know or care. you didn't have family here. so get a life and let others be at peace. no one needs to see how awlful someone else was treated. It was bad enough just having to live through it all. What is wrong with you people???
ReplyDeletewho ever you are taking and saleing these pictures is a very sick person, out to make a fortune off of other peoples' pain and misfortune. some one should lock you up and see how you would like it then. me for one would love to see you suffer. Who is giving you the special privilege of going inside when others are not allowed to ? You are making money off of other helpless peoples pain. They call this beautiful work? You are insane!!!! For real
ReplyDeletedKMy grandfather was Dr. Thomas G. Peacock, it seems as if he was the cause of many of the painful conclusions to those who were living here during the 20 - 50's. I guess if it makes anyone happy, his grandchild, and great grandchild would have given him much reason to keep working.. Thank goodness he isn't alive anymore to watch this.
ReplyDeleteMy Grandmother was a patient here in the 60's and 70's.. She doesn't talk about it at all. And in some kind of attempt to better understand her, I was wondering if anyone knew how you find out what happened there?.. I would really appreciate it.. Actually no one in my family will talk, I don't even know the name of the hospital, all I know is it was in Milledgeville.. Thanks again.
ReplyDeleteI am in the same shoes...these pictures hault me.. my sister was 11 and died after a month there in 1968.. I know nothing and want to so bad I was 9 and no one will tell me anythibg
DeleteAs a student nurse at CSH in early 70's I saw and experienced many sad situations. No doubt I will forever have seared in my mind unamaginal things that no one would believe unless you were there to see. One quarter from graduation i almost quit nursing school the sadness was overwhelming. Will never forget.
ReplyDeleteyou people should look to the future of central state hospital. the clients out there are not being treated like that now. i should know, my mom has been in central state for some years. but i think their being treated wrong by forcing out of the only home they have ever known, some of them. its just wrong. if the walker building gave so many bad memories, why are they going to renovate it? its just dumb and stupid, they're not caring about all the jobs that will be lost. just like the timeclocks its just a waste of money and a bad idea.
ReplyDeleteMy grandmother lived in the community of Hardwick right outside of the hospital grounds and worked in the sewing room in the basement of the Jones Building. My mother and father met at a dance on the grounds of the hospital. My father was a patient at the hospital in 1964 and again in 1971. My father's medical records show that he was released on furlough both times with condition improved. In 1978 my father shot and killed someone. My father was a evil man and should have never been released.
ReplyDeleteWhere did you get medical records...I have been trying for years and told me my sisters were burned in a fire...70s
DeleteI visited the grounds 2 weeks ago and captured some great outside photos. I emailed and called rearing a tour but never to a response. Did you have to get permission to go inside or was that part of the tour? I would love to know more about the history of this place
ReplyDeletegreat pictures. kudos to you for being able to get in there, especially in daylight. georgias central state hospital has its own sheriffs office "central state police" right across from the building.
ReplyDeletethe tour is bullshit. nothing like the real thing. if you actually go you people will find that the old buildings have signs in front of them saying there off limits and "unsafe bulidings and grounds". and no, he is exposing the truths of this hospitals PAST which is a beautiful thing. also, part of the hospital is still running. only some of the buildings are condemned so this is a functional hospital still. that's why its so heavily gaurded
How can this building still be used when the pictures cl^arly show it's not safe
DeleteI started working at CSH in 1977 and this building (Walker) was closed then.
DeleteI think your photos are inspiring and breathtaking! I would love to get a chance like you have to explore all these delapidated buildings. Ones that once held so much life good and bad. I live in Georgia and my passion is photography and buildings like these are my dream to photograph. I was wondering how you got permission to go in Central State. If you could please help me my email is snevets2@yahoo.com Thank you so much!
ReplyDeleteYou have done exactly what I've wanted to do since moving to Milledgeville over a year-and-a-half ago. And the result is excellent.
ReplyDeleteI am a writer for the local newspaper in Milledgeville. If you would be at all interested, I would love to talk with you about these images and your decision to photograph other mental health facilities that are undergoing the same fate as central state.
A couple of things from me:
ReplyDelete1) My aunt was the head of food services for the State of Georgia's prison systems. They are based in the large kitchens that are on the Central State campus. Right out the back of the kitchens building, the crematory (plus about seven or eight gravesites marked only by small roundstones) are right there. Even the occupied buildings there at Central State have a strange feeling to them.
2) My grandfather stayed in the Georgia War Veterans Home, which is also on campus. While it has no direct link to the old hospitals, it does continue the good work of the hospitals there. Many of the veterans there are sweet older people who crave visitors. If you go, make sure to stop there for a few.
Is this place still there? Could someone post the address? I want to check it out!
ReplyDeleteYou can't go on grounds
DeleteThank you for your photos. When I see photos like these they always touch my heart, People do not know some of the stories behind the now peeling paint rooms at one time there was someone there. My grandmother was a patient there from 1942 until 1974.
ReplyDeleteAs a little girl my first visits in the 50's was in a building with wood flooring with rocking chairs. Later into a building with half green,half cream painted walls and a dark green vynal sofa to sit on.My grandmother couldn't verbally communicate. She always had the saddest eyes. One year My mother,father and I visited only to find my grandmother with all of her fingers on both hands had been broken and dried feces were matted in her remaining hair they had cut her hair right before they brought her out for a visit. My mother vowed somehow she would get her mother out. In 1974 she did. My grandmother you could say was one of the lucky ones she got out. My grandmother passed away 1986. Every empty room have a soul and every soul have a story.Thanks M.D.georgia
My aunt was institutionalized at the hospital because she had seizures caused from having been accidentally dropped when she was an infant by an older sister. I never met her, but I have been told she was taken there when she was 16 or 17 and died there at age 40 in 1961. I was told she was institutionalized to protect her from getting pregnant, which blows my mind considering what must have happened to teenage girls there. I was told that whenever family members visited her she would cry and beg for them to take her home. This just kills me. Her father was a prominent physician, so I really have a hard time understanding my sweet aunt being left there. So very, very sad. I would like to honor her memory by visiting her grave, but have read the cemetery is mostly unmarked. I requested her records, but never heard from anyone at the hospital. Being one of only a few of her remaining relatives, I want to do whatever I can to honor her memory. I just wish I'd been old enough to rescue her from that horrible life.
ReplyDeleteI am a social worker at a Georgia Regional Hospital, and today I visited Central State for training. Although I have been to the campus many yeas ago, today I really looked at the condemned buildings with rusty iron grates and broken glass. I could not help but wonder about the hundreds of people who once occupied these buildings and their stories. So intrigued, I looke up the hospital's history tonight. I stumbled across this pag, and I have mixed feelings. I think the photos are awesome...they show the loneliness that I can only assume many patients felt. In regards to the treatment of people with mental illness, I KNOW things have greatly changed! I'm not saying they are where they should be, but they are not where they were.
ReplyDeleteAs a mental health provider at a state hospital, thes pics are important to me, because they refocus my view of how I work with individuals...reminding me that they people who are vulnerable, scared, lonely, and often without a voice loud enough for others to listen. So, thank you for your work in displaying these photos.
These photographs are Brilliant! They speak to the truth of time and deed. I was surprised you didn't shoot the exterior or the interior of other buildings. Looks like a fine afternoon s work.
ReplyDeleteWhat price have you placed on individual shots?
If anyone believes anybody has Ever Received Permission to enter these buildings I'm afraid you are dead wrong. The buildings are deeply saturated with nasty water, drifts and drifting asbestos, tons of lead paint, crumbling heavy plaster, areas where the floors are giving-way, etc. sect.... You are on your on getting in.
You've done great photo work. Thank You.
ReplyDeleteI had two relatives that lived, died, and are buried at this place. I never met them as they both died before I was born, but am very interested in history and tours. I am researching them for my family history. One was my grandmother's aunt and the other was my grandmother's brother. I have the numbers for their burial plots and would be interested in visiting the cemetery there. I am looking for information on tours and visiting hours. The pictures provided here are amazing. It paints a really sad picture. Any information would be very helpful. wcoordsen@aol.com
ReplyDeleteat one point the largest employer in central ga by far, both my parents took jobs here in 1968 when I was 3 and my brother was 4.
ReplyDeletewe spent the next 15 years living on the csh campus,about 5 minutes walk from walker bldg. for those who have not been and are asking for an address, you must understand that this is not just one hospital building but many hospitals and support structures spread out over vast acreage, it is more like a city than anything else with its own police and fire departments.
I can remember as a child that patients roamed the grounds freely and we even had some of them walk into our house on several occasions! I also remember lying in bed on full moon nights and listening to the howling and screaming of the more "lost" patients. I suppose that seems odd now, but at the time it was all we knew and it seemed
'normal'.
my mother became friends with several patients there, a lot of women were put out there to get rid of them so their husbands could live free of them, I guess divorce was seen as unseemly.
also remember my cousin visiting from fla. and him being blown away by the naked patients in the windows of the building across from our house "boland bldg.?".
as I said, this is not just one bldg., it would take you a few hours to just drive around all of the buildings, much less tour any of them. I still live just a few minutes from here and would be glad to take some exterior shots if anyone is interested.
Do you know who owns the building
DeleteMy mother was there in the 1960s. She hated it - the whole place. She would beg my father to let her come home. Medical and psych communities were naive and stupid back then. She received shock treatment and drugs but never recovered because what she needed was someone to talk to who understood her issues, and that was never the dumb, southern men who comprised most of the medical community. And why would an institution bury people without some documentation? Now that is insane. I am saddened by these photos.
ReplyDeleteMy great grandfather was admitted and died here in 1924. I cannot seem to find any burial information for him in any of the counties he lived in. Makes me wonder what happened to him.
ReplyDeleteI am 61 years old and just found out that my grandmother was a patient. It is so sad that I never knew her.....Thank you for the beautiful but haunting pictures. I find a need to visit. I am amazed that the buildings still stand.
ReplyDeleteMy aunt lived here for a time, until her ward closed down. From there, she was moved to one nursing home to the next. It breaks my heart for her as she could've lived a seemingly "normal" life had she not been "put away" per the advice of doctors. My grandmother and Grandfather I can only imagine had no idea ho to help her, but at the same time I can't help but to wonder if the just didn't want to deal with her given that she wasn't "normal". I don't like to think that she wasn't wanted, but it's hard to come to any other conclusion. Driving down there recently and riding thru just gave me such a sense of overwhelming loneliness as I can only guess that's how the patients must've felt, lonely and unwanted. So disturbing and sad.
ReplyDeleteI found these photos while I was looking for articles relating to an escape from this institution. I was 7 and in the second grade when someone escaped, broke into a home, then proceeded to hold a second grade class and 2 third grade classes hostage at gunpoint on the playground at Southside Elementary School. It was just before Christmas in 1975.
ReplyDeleteIn 1974 or 1975, I was required to go there for part of my education at UGA. All I remember is walking through a huge room, for the criminally insane. They were drugged up and chained to the crib-like beds. I left and cried out to God all the way back to Athens.
ReplyDeleteI have worked for many years with students who probably would have been sent there, had they been living 40 years prior. I am so thankful to have helped them with a quality of life and loving care. I can't imagine how horrible it was.
Thanks for posting the pictures and allowing us to comment. There are many bldgs. in Bwk., GA that need your camera!!
I lived on Central State Complex for 9 years when I was married to a prison warden. There were 5 prisons in the area. Baldwin State Prison is where my husband was warden. Buildings on the Central State Complex that had been converted into prisons were known as: Rivers, Bostick, Men's, and Scott. My son worked at the auditorium (which is thought by some, to be haunted). He had keys to the museum and if someone wanted to tour it, they scheduled it with him. I was amazed at the poor conditions under which old photos, documents, & news articles were being maintained. There were unlocked filing cabinets with old patient files and old photos falling out of cardboard boxes. While it's a sad part of the past, it's still items that can never be replaced. One newspaper article I saw there, was mentioned in a previous comment by someone who was in 2nd grade when a patient escaped and went to a school. My son has some VERY INTERESTING stories about maintenance employees, inspectors from state fire marshals office, etc., who wouldn't go alone into certain areas of the auditorium or Jones Building next door. We also experienced strange occurrances in the state house assigned to us on the complex. Central State Hospital is a very interesting , but sad place. There's too much to be learned from what remains of it, for it to be forgotten.
ReplyDeleteTo the commenter who left the following comment- I grew up hearing that my grandmother was a nutritionist out at CSH for many years- don't know if the term "nutritionist" is code for cafeteria worker or what, but her name was Mamie (Johns, Rowland, Duncan, Hall) She was married several times. Wondering if we may be talking of the same person... Her sister was Lila Mae Johns (Tyndal).
ReplyDelete"My aunt was the head of food services for the State of Georgia's prison systems. They are based in the large kitchens that are on the Central State campus. Right out the back of the kitchens building, the crematory (plus about seven or eight gravesites marked only by small roundstones) are right there. Even the occupied buildings there at Central State have a strange feeling to them."
I am a survivor of central state want to tell my story
ReplyDeletePlease tell
DeleteI haven't seen anyone make a comment about the Arnall Building. I'm not sure I spelled it right, but I worked there while I was a student at Georgia College in 1971. I remember many of the patients there who were very interesting people. One in particular was Margaret Harrow, she was a beautiful older women who really didn't like being with the others. She called them Commoners. I also remember that Herman Talmadges , secretary was in and out while I worked there. She stood out because she was dressed so much nicer than the others.
ReplyDeletethat building is now a probation/ parole office I believe
Deletethat building is now a probation/ parole office I believe
DeleteMy great grandmother was in this hospital for most of her adult life. It is heart-breaking to imagine how she lived. Thanks for these!
ReplyDeleteThese photos reminded me of the closing credits of the film, "Papillon".
ReplyDeleteI can remember being a little girl and having to go down vinson HWY and passing by this place. The people at the windows looking out always scared me to death, then later how they would just walk up to your car and try and get in. Didnt they just open the doors and release the ones that had no where to go?
ReplyDeleteI remember very well about the one that escaped and went to a school. The name of that school at the time was Southside elm. Thanks to a teacher at the time she and her class were saved due to her putting a bullet in wrong in the gun and it jamming!!
ReplyDeleteI have many memories of Csh.
To the young lady asking about her grandfather, Dr. Roberto Perdomo...I worked with him in the Freeman Building on a male admissions ward. If I remember correctly (and I may not), he had also been trained as a dentist before completing medical school. He was a very nice man with a pleasant demeanor and I enjoyed working with him (I was a Social Work Technician at the time).
ReplyDeleteWow - really brings back really bad memories of the "insane asylum". Great pictures - I've walked many of those hallways while tripping out on glue or lsd / meth during the mid 60's. For some of the people there, they really didn't need to be on the streets - one of my friends on the 1st floor (people on the 1st floor weren't a threat to society; people on the 3rd floor were BAD... I found many of them slept on straw!) had a frontal lobotomy and would walk around all day just standing. Shock treatments were given daily. I was a "good" patient and earned rights to walk to the store nearby where I would buy glue to sniff to get high (learned how to do it at the asylum and got addicted to it - long story; read my book). Anyway, ***I*** "had problems because dad would strangle me 3 feet off the floor in drunken rages and would strangle mom in front of me on the floor..... like who WOULDN't have problems after this? Anyways - good news is an interested pschiatrist found there's nothing wrong with this boy - get him OUTTA' here. Died died in 82 from his heavy drinking. Just a portion of my story. Again, thanks for the haunting pictures!!
ReplyDeleteI cried while viewing your photos. My mom passed away two years ago at age 84. She spent almost 2 months at this horrible place in 1960, where she received shock treatments. My dad delivered her to this place. Mom had a fear of doctors and hospitals all her life. She carried a certificate of competency (a document) in her purse for over 50 years, that stated she was sane. Mom's terrible ordeal was never forgotten by her, or by my sisters and me. So, to some the pictures may be beautiful, but all I see is cold, haunting and evil. By the way Dr. I.H. MacKinnon was the superintendent and Dr Charles A. Stewart, director of Psychiatric Social Work signed off on her papers. I have a copy.
ReplyDeleteI was a nursing student attending Piedmont Hospital School of Nursing in Atlanta, Ga. We did our psychiatric rotation at the State Hospital where we lived for 3 months. Looking at these pictures evokes all kinds of old memories, some funny, some horrifying. We were all in our late teens mostly from affluent families and insulated from the ugly side of life. What an eye opener this experience was to us girls. I've forgotten the name of the building we lived in but I do remember we were on the 3rd floor and patients resided on 2 and 4. This was in 1971/1972. We were the last class to attend.
ReplyDeleteI am trying to find record of a relative - Norman S. Peacock who was committed to a Georgia mental institution when he was around 16 years old. This would have been in the mid-1940's. It is likely that this place is where he spent the next 53 years of his life(I found a death date for him). My grandmother (his sister) never spoke his name. What little I know is handed down from other relatives. If anyone out there who worked at this place in the 1980's or early 1990's remembers a Norman?
ReplyDeleteWhile researching my great, great grandmother, Kitty, I noticed that she died in Baldwin county, Ga., instead of Jefferson county where her family lived. I knew about the hospital, having grown up in Ga. and wondered if Kitty had been a resident there. I simply called the hospital, told them of my question and was immediately connected to a very nice employee who asked me for her name and county of her birth. Within seconds I was told that she had been a patient there, her admission date and diagnosis. When I asked about any records, she said that in the early days, there were no charts...just occasional written comments from the Drs. She referred me to an office in Atlanta where records were "stored". I was mailed a copy of the available notes on Kitty. I was shocked that even names of residents were still available, since she was there from 1886 to 1908, when she died. I was devastated to know that she was taken from 3 small children and lived there for 22 years for what we now know as seizure disorder. Today this condition in treated with a pill. Brain surgeons may have this disorder and keep it under control. I grieved for Kitty, her simple condition and the ignorance that kept her there. I visited the hospital, took the tour and felt as another person commented, lonely and incredibly sad. I can't rid my mind of the images of the crumbling buildings, wondering in which one Kitty lived. Thank you for bringing beauty to a terrible memory.
ReplyDeleteHow do you get permission to tour the hospital
DeleteIn the 70's my Mom ran a personal care home, in which she took in two older ladies in their 70's which had lived their entire lives at Gracewood, an asylum in South GA, not sure if this is the same one but think so. They told us stories of how for punishment they would be thrown into icewater baths. or stripped naked and hosed down and made to sleep on concrete floor. Both were taken there at a young age. Ones step mother simply did not want her and dropped her off there when she was four. The other was a wild teen and sent there for life. Nothing was wrong with them except from the environmental institutionalism they had bore. Sad, had to share! BABSPARROW@AOL.COM
ReplyDeleteSo haunting and beautiful. I would not want to spend the night there but I truly enjoyed your photography. I do believe I am a new fan!
ReplyDeleteYes, there are still people housed @CSH PEYTON COOK BUILDING and not sure but also the Nursing Home. Some still face adversity and poor treatment. Some are still lifers whose families have forgotten them. They are lost in a system of not caring and employees who are stressed and need a job, insurance. Lol to often a statement is made saying they need a body (employee to go to an area and work). A sad and lonely place not to be glorified.
ReplyDeleteI was a patient here in 1970 due to sever depression. I repressed so much that I never wanted to find out if it was still operating or closed. This tells me all I need to know. Horrendous experience; however, i learned a lot there and was able to cope with life better, so it was a total loss. Thanks for giving me closure after all these years.
ReplyDeleteIn the above comment I meant to say it was NOT a total loss. My situation was a lot better than some of the poor folks housed here. Just say a prayer for all of the lost souls.
ReplyDeleteMy ggrandmother spent most of her life in in this facility. Family legend says she tried to drown my grandfather in about 1900. but so far Ihave not found documentation. The event occurred in Savannah but the newspaper of that era is missing. Police records apparently do not exist. does anyone have a clue?
ReplyDeleteMy Great Grandfather George Kee was an African American Chef/Cook at Central State Hospital. He was killed there in 1912, where he had gotten in an argument with a fellow worker in the kitchen (apparently a cousin whom he helped get a job there)and was stabbed. He subsequently died a few days later, leaving four children the oldest being my grandfather Andrew Kee and siblings Arthur, George Jr. and Sara Lee(Salaria).
ReplyDeleteSome friends and I got arrested for trespassing there in January 2015. They have night guards that patrol all of the buildings. The cops didn't want to press charges but the build owner/director guy made them. And because is government owned the charges are considered a felony. The buildings are narrow so there's no way to hide using a flashlight.
ReplyDeleteDo you know the guys name that owns ]t
DeleteMy wife and I are from Australia. We were visiting friends in Macon a few years back and they drove us out for a look.
ReplyDeleteIt was fascinating, but somewhat haunting. My wife swears and declares she saw a strange female looking apparition in an upstairs window.
I would love to go back some day and have a better look about.
Whom do you contact to get permission to tour/walk the grounds? Don't want to get arrested for tresspassing but would love to visit the abandoned parts not just the museum!
ReplyDeleteWhat were the names of the doctors that worked at Central State Hosp. in the Jones Bldg. in 70's and 80's. I remember a Dr. Cardosa and a Dr. Pinero. Also, there was a Dr. Keeler that wrote articles and books regarding genetics.
ReplyDeleteI just got through reading Dr. Peter Cranford's "But for the Grace of God" which is a history of the hospital and a diary of his experiences there in early 1950s. I am so pissed off. The book can be bought cheap at Lulu.com if you want to learn more about this hell hole.
ReplyDeleteLast week I rode by the hospital on my way north for a trip to Atlanta ... it was my first time seeing it for myself - I did not even get out of the car because the tears started as soon as I drove up to the main building. My grandmother was taken away from my dad and his 3 brothers when he was 6 years old. His lasting memory is of her being shoved into a police car with cops standing on the running boards to keep her from getting out as it whizzed off down the street. He never knew where she was taken until later years. He only saw her once ... and she did not know him, just aksed "where's my piano?". She was taken away in 1936 and died at the Milledgeville hell hole in 1955. My dad grew up a virtual orphan because someone somewhere made a decision she was not fit to raise her kids and should be locked up with no chance of regaining freedom and no possibility for rehabilitation (made impossible by who knows what drugs, shock treatment and lobotomy procedures administered). My grandmother was a beautiful woman who may have been driven crazy by a bad husband, post-partum depression, or who knows what - and we'll never know.
I have a good mind to dig up the records of the local county where she was "arrested" and then petition for the hospital records and put them all online for the world to see.
Unhappy,
B.M.R.
In 2004 I talked to someone there who researched my grandmother who died there in 1956. She was there for less than a month. In a letter from the DHR, I was informed that the records for 1955 - 1966 were destroyed in July of 2001. The only thing they had available was a couple of index cards with my grandmother's admission information. I guess I was somewhat fortunate to have gotten that info. Sadly way too many families will never know what happened to their loved ones.
DeleteI have worked for the GDC in the Arnall Building, and have visited several other buildings in the course of my work. I now work at another GDC facility.
ReplyDeleteIn response to one individual who referenced a lack of burial records, I learned that there were some very basic records kept. They had patient names, ID numbers, and dates of commitment and death. However, many of these records were maintained on paper and were destroyed by fires in the 1960s and later in the 1990s. Additionally, most of the marked grave sites on the campus are merely symbolic. There are perhaps 30,000 un-marked graves on the grounds.
The architecture of the buildings is beautiful, and it is a shame that so many of the buildings are slatted for demolition. Currently, there are State/County plans to demolish the following buildings within the next 15-20 years: The Arnall Building, Bostick SP, Rivers SP, Men's SP, Frank Scott SP, various warehouses, Binion Bldng, Boland Bldng, Boone/Craig Bldng, Central Laundry, Central Shops, Dental Clinic, Freeman Bldng, Lawrence Bldng, greenhouse, NDI Bldng, Old Music Therapy, old steam plants, nursing home center, and various maintenance/electrical support buildings.
While there were many bad things that happened there, there were also good. Additionally, it is important that people understand that insane people are... insane. Some can get better; however, some never do. Until you have personally witnessed the actions of the mentally disturbed, you cannot imagine the terrible and unreasonable things they are capable of. These actions often force re-actions that a judgmental public readily calls cruel and not necessary. Some people must be locked away from the public. This is our current state in society and technology.
I have worked for the GDC in the Arnall Building, and have visited several other buildings in the course of my work. I now work at another GDC facility.
ReplyDeleteIn response to one individual who referenced a lack of burial records, I learned that there were some very basic records kept. They had patient names, ID numbers, and dates of commitment and death. However, many of these records were maintained on paper and were destroyed by fires in the 1960s and later in the 1990s. Additionally, most of the marked grave sites on the campus are merely symbolic. There are perhaps 30,000 un-marked graves on the grounds.
The architecture of the buildings is beautiful, and it is a shame that so many of the buildings are slatted for demolition. Currently, there are State/County plans to demolish the following buildings within the next 15-20 years: The Arnall Building, Bostick SP, Rivers SP, Men's SP, Frank Scott SP, various warehouses, Binion Bldng, Boland Bldng, Boone/Craig Bldng, Central Laundry, Central Shops, Dental Clinic, Freeman Bldng, Lawrence Bldng, greenhouse, NDI Bldng, Old Music Therapy, old steam plants, nursing home center, and various maintenance/electrical support buildings.
While there were many bad things that happened there, there were also good. Additionally, it is important that people understand that insane people are... insane. Some can get better; however, some never do. Until you have personally witnessed the actions of the mentally disturbed, you cannot imagine the terrible and unreasonable things they are capable of. These actions often force re-actions that a judgmental public readily calls cruel and not necessary. Some people must be locked away from the public. This is our current state in society and technology.
I worked in the Whittle Building circa 1970 before moving from Hardwick. There were some good and kind people working there, and I tried to model my patient approach to theirs.
ReplyDeleteThe pictures and text made me nostalgic. The grounds are only about an hour and a half maybe of driving, and I'm sure I can remember my way there and around the grounds.
Thanks for the pictures and blog. They brought back many an old memory.
Jack
My 3xgreat grandmother died in this hospital in 1875. The more I read about the conditions in the hospital during that time, the sadder I get for her. I can't imagine what it must have been like. Thank you for the pictures. It gives me a better understanding of how she lived.
ReplyDeleteI just recently found out that my aunt was a patient here for her entire life until the mandated downsizing caused her to be moved to another hospital. Her name is Nettie (Betty) Medley and she was taken to this facility because of her birth defects in late 1940s when she would have been around 3-5 years old. If there are any doctors, nurses, patients who has information about her, please contact me at k_elmore@rocketmail.com. I would like to learn more about her.
ReplyDeleteI am trying to find out information about my uncle that was there, I was always told that he was 12 when he died in a fire there but I recently found his grave that shows his birth and death dates as 1957 - 1961 so I'm not sure what years ghee was there but any help in locating record from that time would be great melissablue76.mb@gmail.com
ReplyDeleteI remember that day in 1975 on the play ground.I have never been able to find any info.Years ago I tried doing a research paper for school but never find anything concerning that day.
ReplyDeleteI was a patient here for four months, and I wasn't noncompliant or violent or anything. My only rescue out of this horrific excuse for a "hospital" was my adoptive mom and aunt who had the wherewithal to realize I was just going downhill and not getting any better. I was being sedated constantly, and I was so depressed I wasn't eating. I think when I was released to my family I weighed less than 100 lbs. Too painful to remember. Some of the memories I'm glad were repressed, and I'm glad they won't ever resurface again.
ReplyDeleteYes I was there and I knew the man that call himself Jesus.
ReplyDeletehow did you get in to get those images. when I tried security was all over me and then escorted me off grounds
ReplyDeleteI was raise up in this place for 50 years.
ReplyDeleteI visited the area recently and the vibe is very eerie. Thank you for these photos and allowing people to make comments. The history of mental health care all over our nation is tragic. This document concentrates on females: https://getd.libs.uga.edu/pdfs/varner_laurie_j_201108_phd.pdf
ReplyDeleteThe state is considering alternate uses for the area (2000 acres and 200 buildings).
www.developcsh.com
Everyone who is seeking info about their relatives should sign up for a free trial at ancestry.com. It's amazing what records they have online. It's possible that another Ancestry member has researched your family and you just have to review their information. You can also find the US census records (through 1940) on other web sites. You should also pay for the ancestry DNA test, which will send you the names of others who have taken the test and are related to you. Those people may have info that you don't. My husband and I have both learned a lot about our ancestors over the past 8 months.
Wishing closure, peace and healing to all......
My grandmother was there most of her life Pearl Parks any info greatly appreciated
ReplyDeleteMy wife sherrx laveders grand parents retired from there
ReplyDeleteThe first tragedy is that nobody really understood mental illness in those days and there is still a huge stigma attached to it to this day.
ReplyDeleteMy mother was committed to several institutions in Ga as a young woman throughout the 1960's. While at Milledgeville she received 36 electric shock treatments. This was the latest treatment trend in mental health at that time. I remember visiting her a couple of times there when i was a little girl. The facility didn't scare me;not understanding why my mama acted like she did scared me. The way mentally ill people have been treated throughout time is so tragic.
She had a close knit family but nobody had any idea what to do. Thank God for modern medicine! If you need medication take it, don't suffer.
My mom suffered from schizophrenia her entire life but my brother and I took care of her until she passed away 6 years ago. Mental illness stinks!
My mother had an uncle who was committed as a young man to Milledgeville. He died there. The rest is vague. I would certainly like to find out anything possible on him for family genealogy. Any idea on how to obtain records?
Grace, Mercy and Love.....
My mother was sent to Milledgeville when I was about seven years old in 1957. She spent about a month or two in this horrible place. She received electric shock treatments, she never ever forgot about how she was soak with water, laid down on a cold table, arms and feet tied down, something put in her mouth so not to bite her tongue off, and then the electric running through her body. She died at age 85 and still could remembered every detail about Milledgeville. Millegeville was her worst nightmare.
ReplyDeleteI need any way to get records of my sister that died there...1968.please any information would be helpful
ReplyDeleteI need help also 478-353-2296 maybe we can help each other
DeleteContact janetbell354@yahoo.com. please help
ReplyDelete
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My great grandfather, Elias Miller, lived in this building from 1915-1918. His report said that he didn't eat well and was violent at times. Other information indicates he had Alzheimer's whereas he wasn't committed to the Central State Hospital until he was eighty. Precious little information in his file so your pictures really helped me imagine what it was like for him to be there, even over one hundred years ago. Thank you.
ReplyDeleteSo sad but interesting may all souls rip
ReplyDeleteDebra ,have you done a DNA test?
ReplyDeleteThere are stories the dead need to tell. The State of Georgia should allow professional investigations of these buildings while sme lost souls could still be crossed over.
ReplyDeleteThe more ornate Walker Building, on the other hand, was abandoned around 1974, and over thirty years of disuse have not been kind to it. sofa covers sale , export quality bed sheets pakistan The heat and humidity of central Georgia have taken their toll; much of the third floor lacks a ceiling, and the walls are a tapestry of peeling paint, algae, mold, and disintegrating plaster. Foliage has grown over large portions of the building, and invaded the interior spaces. Insects and small mammals have made their homes here, as has a large coyote. Yet through all this, some aspects of grandeur remain in this venerable building, used for almost a century.
ReplyDeleteSometime within the next few weeks I'm going to do a road trip up to Milledgeville, Hardwick, and Macon to see those places I remember when working at CSH and living in Hardwick. I'm looking forward to seeing those places again. I suspect going inside most of the CSH buildings is not possible, but I think those such as the old Whittle Building are still in use, though maybe for other things now.
ReplyDeleteDid you know my mother she was a social worker one of the first black to work there.Eloise Myles..Steve was her husband, my father, they adopted me .from there..I'm Debra 478-353-2296
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