Pilgrim Psychiatric Center
Pilgrim Psychiatric Center | |
---|---|
Geography | |
Location | 998 Crooked Hill Road Brentwood 11717, Suffolk County, New York, U.S. |
Coordinates | 40°47′40″N 73°17′13″W / 40.794351°N 73.286952°W |
Organisation | |
Type | Psychiatric hospital |
Religious affiliation | none |
Affiliated university | New York State Department of Mental Hygiene |
Patron | N/A |
Network | New York State |
Services | |
Standards | N/A |
Emergency department | yes |
Beds | 200–700 |
History | |
Former name(s) | Pilgrim State Hospital 1931–1995 |
Construction started | 1928 |
Opened | October 1, 1931 |
Links | |
Lists | Hospitals in U.S. |
Pilgrim Psychiatric Center, formerly known as Pilgrim State Hospital, is a state-run psychiatric hospital located in Brentwood, New York. Nine months after its official opening in 1931, the hospital's patient population was 2,018, as compared with more than 5,000 at the Georgia State Sanitarium in Milledgeville, Georgia.[1] At its peak in 1954, Pilgrim State Hospital[2] could claim to be the largest mental hospital in the U.S., with 13,875 patients.[3] Its size has never been exceeded by any other facility, though it is now far smaller than it once was.
History
[edit]By 1900 overcrowding in New York City's psychiatric asylums had become a serious problem. There were several strategies implemented to deal with the escalating patient overload. One was to put the patients to work, farming in a relaxed setting on what was then rural Long Island. The new state hospitals were dubbed "farm colonies" because of their live-and-work treatment programs and emphasis on agriculture. However, these farm colonies, Kings Park State Hospital, (later named Kings Park Psychiatric Center) and Central Islip State Hospital (later named Central Islip Psychiatric Center), became overcrowded, like the institutions they were meant to replace.
New York State began making plans for a third farm colony, which was to become Pilgrim State Hospital, named in honor of the former New York State Commissioner of Mental Health, Charles W. Pilgrim. The state bought approximately 1,000 acres (400 ha) of land in Brentwood and began construction on the hospital in 1929. Pilgrim State Hospital opened on October 1, 1931, as a close-knit community with its own police and fire department, courts, post office, a LIRR station, power plant, swine farm, church, cemetery and water tower, as well as houses for staff and administrators. A series of tunnels were used for routing utilities. Each set of buildings were known as quads, a pattern of four buildings situated around a center building, where the kitchen was located.
The hospital continued to grow as the patient population increased greatly. Eventually, the state of New York bought up more land to the southwest of the facility to construct Edgewood State Hospital, a short-lived facility that was a subsidiary of Pilgrim State Hospital. In fact, Pilgrim State Hospital was so large that it reached into four Suffolk towns: Huntington, Babylon, Smithtown and Islip, and had two state roads passing through its grounds.
During World War II, the War Department took control of Edgewood State Hospital, along with three new buildings at Pilgrim State Hospital, buildings 81 to 83. The War Department constructed numerous temporary structures and renamed Edgewood State Hospital and buildings 81 to 83 "Mason General Hospital", a psychiatric hospital devoted to treating battle-traumatized soldiers. Renowned filmmaker John Huston, who received a special commission in the U.S. Army Signal Corps during World War II, made a documentary at Mason General Hospital called Let There Be Light, which showed the effects of war on mental health. The film was highly controversial and was not seen by the public until 1981.
After World War II, Pilgrim State Hospital experienced an increase in patient population that made it the world's largest hospital, with 13,875 patients and over 4,000 employees (for every 100 patients there was one doctor, thusly there were over 50 doctors working there). In the 1950s more aggressive treatments, such as lobotomy and electro-convulsive therapy (ECT) were implemented. The best known controversy about this surrounded the case of Beulah Jones, a patient there between 1952 and 1972 who received both such treatments and was left seriously impaired. However, Pilgrim State Hospital and the other state hospitals began to decline shortly afterwards with the advent of pharmaceutical alternatives to institutionalization. The number of patients dropped greatly.
Henry Brill was the director of Pilgrim from 1958 to 1974 and presided over both the introduction of the new anti-psychotic medications and the large numbers of discharges related to good response to these medications.
Death of the "Farm Colonies"
[edit]As psychiatric medication and community care became an increasingly viable alternative to institutionalization, large mental institutions began to decline. Edgewood, the last psychiatric hospital to be built on Long Island, closed its doors in December 1971, following decentralization. Kings Park and Central Islip remained open, while slowly downsizing. During this time Pilgrim was not exempt from downsizing either, with parts of the campus closing throughout the 1970s and 1980s. Buildings 81–83 were briefly used as a correctional facility in the 1980s, but after community protest they were renovated and reverted to psychiatric use. In the early 1990s, with declining patient populations in the three remaining hospitals, the New York State Office of Mental Health (formerly the Department of Mental Hygiene) began making plans to re-organize the Long Island hospitals, which were implemented in the fall of 1996, when Kings Park and Central Islip were closed, and the remaining patients from those facilities were transferred to Pilgrim or released into community care. Parts of Central Islip Psychiatric Center became a campus for the New York Institute of Technology, as well as a residential and commercial development. At Kings Park, two buildings housing community residences administered by Pilgrim remain open. A 52-acre (0.21 km2) portion of former parts of the Pilgrim campus has become the Brentwood State Park athletic field complex,[4] while the rest sits unused. In 1972 half of the pilgrim property became the Suffolk Community College Grant campus that opened in 1974 and most of the old medical buildings and houses became halls and security offices for the college. A former hospital building became Camusett Hall in 1972 and by opening day, half of Suffolk Community College was finished. The former post office and vegetable garden property became Paumanok Hall in 1995 and old barns and other buildings became more education centers and classrooms by 1999. Sagtikos Parkway science hall was built in 1980 whereas Captree commons opened in 1984. Nesconset Hall was finished in 1991 and was built 1989. By 2003, most of Pilgrim Psychiatric Center was demolished and gone. Today the old barns are custodian offices or maintenance plants.
Today
[edit]Today, the much smaller Pilgrim Psychiatric Center still stands. The original farm was sold, rebuilt, and developed to become the Suffolk County Community College Grant Campus (formerly West Campus) in 1974.
Gerald Wolkoff bought 462 acres (187 ha) of the remaining property for $21 million in 2002 and announced a plan to build a $4 billion residential/office complex, called Heartland Town Center, on the site which borders his Heartland Business Park, which is to the west of the complex.[5][6] In preparation, several former hospital buildings were demolished in 2003, however, rebuilding has not yet begun. In 2011, the former housing facilities for the hospital staff were demolished in further preparation of redevelopment. Demolition of the old medical/surgical building, male and female admissions buildings and the old administration building was completed in 2012.
Another proposed project for the site is the Pilgrim Intermodal Freight Transportation Center, which would be a facility for transloading freight from trains to trucks. It would be built on a 120-acre (49 ha) tract owned by the state and use a rail siding of the Long Island Rail Road that previously carried freight and visitors to the hospital.[7][8]
Long Island Psychiatric Museum
[edit]Pilgrim Psychiatric Center hosts the Long Island Psychiatric Museum, which displays items from Kings Park, Central Islip, Pilgrim, and Edgewood, such as photos, newsletters, relics from abandoned and demolished buildings, and other historical information. It is located in Building 45 and is open to the public. On November 5, 2020, building 45 flooded and destroyed most of the museum. It is currently being restored.[9][needs update]
Miscellaneous
[edit]In 1985 the film Murder: By Reason of Insanity , starring Candice Bergen, was filmed on the grounds of Pilgrim State Hospital, in Building 14. The film was based on Adam Berwid, who had murdered his wife on a day pass from the hospital. Staff working at the facility were able to audition for small roles. The case was also the subject of a 1980 segment of CBS's 60 Minutes.
Allen Ginsberg's mother, Naomi Livergant Ginsberg, who suffered with schizophrenia throughout most of her life, died at Pilgrim State Hospital in 1956. "Pilgrim State" is mentioned in Ginsberg's poem "Howl."
Pilgrim State Hospital is mentioned in the 2009 documentary Cropsey, as having reportedly housed the mother of convicted child kidnapper Andre Rand.[10] One of Rand's supposed victims, Jennifer Schweiger, was found buried in a shallow grave behind the grounds of the abandoned Willowbrook State School which was built under the same design as Pilgrim State Hospital.
In an event described as the "Easter Sunday Chair Assault", an aide used a chair to beat Barry Waszcyszak, a one-armed disabled patient. The patient found with cuts on his head and bruises to his body; the aide arrested and charged with second-degree assault.[11]
Currently, Pilgrim Psychiatric Center is protected by members of the New York State Office of Mental Health Police. OMH Police officers have New York State Peace Officer status which is granted under the Mental Hygiene Law (section 7.25), Public Health Law (section 455), and Criminal Procedure Law (section 2.10 subsection 12) which allows officers to issue summonses and effect arrests. Some of the duties performed by officers include, but are not limited to, enforcing state and local laws including vehicle and traffic laws, apprehending absconded patients, filling out motor vehicle accident reports and performing motor vehicle accident investigations. Officers also are responsible for conducting fire service procedures which include conducting fire drills, fire extinguisher inspections, and building inspections.
Recently the building was featured in the Book: “Gotham 1919-1939” by Giantpandaking the book featured the front of the building
References
[edit]- ^ Damnation Hospital, Collecting the classic Central State Hospital texts: But for the Grace of God by Peter G. Cranford and Posey with the Insane and Sane by Lois W. Lane (Milledgevile: Old Capital Press, 2009), p. 98
- ^ "Pilgrim Psychiatric Center".
- ^ "Pilgrim Psychiatric Center". New York State Office of Mental Health. Archived from the original on March 30, 2012.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link) - ^ Lauren Cioffi (September 25, 2009). "Brentwood State Park Athletic Field Complex opens". Newsday. Archived from the original on June 4, 2015. Retrieved June 3, 2015.
- ^ Wolkoff closes on Pilgrim property – Long Island Business News – February 1, 2002. Accessmylibrary.com. Retrieved on May 31, 2012.
- ^ "Wolkoff's $4B dream" Long Island Business News January 17, 2003
- ^ Stewart Ain (August 17, 2003). "Freight Yard Faces Questions". The New York Times. Retrieved May 31, 2012.
- ^ 2030 Freight Rail Forecast Update. Pilgrim Intermodal Freight Transportation Center. Cambridge Systematics, Inc. May 10, 2005
- ^ "Pilgrim Psychiatric Center: Museum". NY State Office of Mental Health. Archived from the original on March 30, 2012. Retrieved April 1, 2015.
- ^ 2009 documentary Cropsey
- ^ “Aide Is Charged in Patient Assault .” Poughkeepsie Journal, April 10, 1980, p. 20.