America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (2024)

From the 19th to mid-20th century, huge asylums were constructed around the United States that acted as their own closed communities, and often included separate cemeteries. Forgotten in life, the patients sent to these mental institutions often were outcast in death. The unclaimed bodies of the deceased were buried beneath grave markers that rarely were graced with a name, usually just a number if anything at all. When this style of asylum started to close in the later part of the century and many were abandoned,the cemeteries were likewise left to decay, a final stroke of obscurity forthe forgotten.

AUSTIN STATE SCHOOL FARM COLONY
Austin, Texas

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (1)Cemetery at Austin State School Farm Colony (photograph by Andy Mistler)

Opened in 1933, Austin State School Farm Colonyin Texaswas constructed as a 436-acre facility for mentally disabled boys. It started under the name “State Colony for the Feeble-Minded” and gradually expanded to a massive complex of 1,800 residents. This area included a cemetery on its southside, and despite the colony’s closure the graves ofan estimated 3,000 peopleremain in the rough ground. Each was unclaimed by family or friends, lowered into the earth in a simple pine box beneath simple markers.

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (2)Shrine on the way to the cemetery (photograph byAndreanna Moya/Flickr)

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (3)Austin State School Farm Colony (photograph byAndy Mistler)

DANVERS HOSPITAL FOR THE CRIMINALLY INSANE
Danvers, Massachusetts

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (4)Danvers State Hospital Cemetery (photograph by Rana Xavier/Flickr)

While theDanvers Hospital for the Criminally Insanein Massachusetts that inspired both the Arkham Asylum of Batman and horror of H.P. Lovecraft with its gothic spires has been mostly demolished and converted to condos,its cemetery still lurks in the surrounding forest. Opened in 1878 as a forward-thinking institution for treating mental health, by the 1930s lobotomies and shock therapy were not uncommon. It was closed in 1992, and while its cemetery was then left to the overgrowth, theDanvers State Memorial Committeenow works to keep it preserved. Hexagon-shaped concrete markers stamped with just a number remain a reminder of the place’s former identity.

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (5)Danvers State Hospital Cemetery (photograph by Zach/Flickr)

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (6)Danvers State Hospital reborn as condos (photograph by John Phelan/Wikimedia)

ATHENS LUNATIC ASYLUM
Athens, Ohio

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (7)Athens Lunatic Asylum cemetery (photograph by Justin Masterson/Flickr)

Much ofAthens Lunatic Asylumhas been absorbed into Ohio University, but traces of the abandoned mental institution linger, including its cemetery. Established on 141 acres and opened in 1874, the asylum, also known as “the Ridges,” stretched over 1,000 acres by the 1950s, and at one point employed the most people in the entire state. Patients worked the grounds in the early years as therapy, while in the later years psychotropic drugs, lobotomies, and shock therapy slowed the labor down. The institution closed in 1993, and its cemetery fell into decay with the rest of the asylum, subject to vandalism and weathering. However, in recent years the cemetery with its more than 1,900 interments has seen dawning attention, with maintenance from theNational Alliance on Mental Illnessand even aRidges Cemeteries Nature Walkpast the low, numbered tombs.

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (8)Epitaph on a patient tombstone (photograph by Justin Masterson/Flickr)

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (9)Part of the Athens Lunatic Asylum turned into the Kennedy Art Museum at Ohio University (photograph by Angela/Flickr)

MARLBORO PSYCHIATRIC HOSPITAL
Marlboro Township, New Jersey

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (10)Marlboro Psychiatric Hospital’s cemetery (photograph by Jackie/Flickr)

TheMarlboro Psychiatric Hospitalin New Jersey started demolition last year, but out on a gravel road nearby are the leaning graves of its former patients. The institution opened in 1931 on 468 acres, and shuttered in 1998 after controversies over patient treatment which included some fatal food poisoning in the 1970s. In the cemetery, the patients are buried sequentially, with the oldest markers in stone, and the last in metal that is now rusting.

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (11)Inside Marlboro Psychiatric Hospital before its demolition (photograph by kathryn/Flickr)

LETCHWORTH VILLAGE
Rockland County, New York

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (12)Letchworth Village Cemetery (photograph by George F/Flickr)

A memorial at the cemetery of the abandonedLetchworth Villagein Rockland County, New York, reads: “Those Who Shall Not Be Forgotten.” T-shaped markers made of now-rusting metal are each embossed with a number, whichaccording to Abandoned NYC, wasn’t just an act of simplicity or bureaucracy, but a way of hiding names due to family shame. Letchworth Village opened in 1911 as a residential facility for the disabled, both mentally and physically, but closed in 1996 after years of reported abuse and a lack of funding.

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (13)Letchworth Village Cemetery (photographbyTheTurducken/Flickr)

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (14)Letchworth Village in 2011 (photograph by Doug Kerr/Flickr)

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (15)Letchworth Village Cemetery grave marker (photograph by TheTurducken/Flickr)

FOREST HAVEN
Laurel, Maryland

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (16)Forest Haven cemetery memorial (photograph by Jack Says Relax/Flickr)

Before it shut down in 1991, the serenely-named Forest Havenhad become synonymous with patient mistreatment and overcrowding. The Maryland institution opened in 1925 idealistically enough, adopting the work and community ethos of many of these asylums, but over the years never embracednew approaches to mental health treatment. Now abandoned, its 200 acre site includes the remains of a cemetery with an unclear number of dead, the graves of which have reportedly been repeatedlyexposeddue to erosion. One large granite marker dedicated by the families, friends, and staff of Forest Haven includes the names of as many who are known at rest beneath the shallow ground.

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (17)Abandoned Forest Haven (photograph by Forsaken Fotos/Flickr)

America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (18)Abandoned Forest Haven (photograph byForsaken Fotos/Flickr)

31 Days Of HalloweenOctober 2017
America's Abandoned Insane Asylum Cemeteries (2024)
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