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Asylum Street became a dead end when the highway went in. It is now sandwiched between a short highway ramp and Foley Engines ...
An asylum, not jail, saved his life. We are thankful for his placement in a mental health hospital beyond what words can describe. But roadblocks to this positive approach continue.
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ZME Science on MSNThis Abandoned Island Off Venice Was a Plague Hospital, a Mental Asylum, and a Mass GraveJust a few miles south of the dreamy canals of Venice, where gondolas glide and tourists sip espresso, lies Poveglia—a small, ...
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Basingstoke Gazette on MSNFlashback: The Story of Park Prewett FarmThe recent planning application in The Gazette to demolish the Park Prewett farm buildings has led to several enquiries about ...
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The psychological thriller, written and directed by Martin, follows the events inside a sinister facility where a dedicated ...
From the outside, the Hospital for the Negro Insane of Maryland, which opened in Crownsville, Md., in 1911, looked like a farm, with patients harvesting tobacco, constructing gardens and working ...
New book 'Madness' documents the racism of a Jim Crow-era mental health facility Crownsville Hospital in Maryland was one of the last segregated mental asylums in the country. Thousands of Black ...
New York City will set up a shelter for up to 1,000 migrants in the parking lot of a state psychiatric hospital as thousands of asylum seekers continue to arrive in the city weekly, officials said ...
The letterhead on many album pages: State Lunatic Asylum No. 3 on some, State Hospital No. 3 on others. For the next five years, Diamant and Bean tried to solve the mystery of the unknown artist.
What I did find, however, were records on an auxiliary hospital in the south of the Province of Alberta, in Claresholm. This facility was founded in 1933 and held 100 female patients and its ...
What a Jim Crow-era asylum can teach us about mental health today. From the outside, the Hospital for the Negro Insane of Maryland, which opened in Crownsville, Md., in 1911, looked like a farm ...
From the outside, the Hospital for the Negro Insane of Maryland, which opened in Crownsville, Md., in 1911, looked like a farm, with patients harvesting tobacco, constructing gardens and working ...
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