27 Comments Posted by Gordon

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AVIA is, or was, also a petroleum company. When I watch British televison, I see AVIA stations on the roadsides.
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Definely duckpin...check out the balls. No finger holes.
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So you thought you might like to go to the show? I got some bad news for you, Sunshine...
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Calgon, take me away!
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Could it have once been an operating room? Maybe the adjacent rooms give a clue. Probably not, as there are no overhead, OR-style lights. Also, this building looks too new to have an OR...most state hospitals in recent times send patients to a medical hospital for surgery. Still, looks like an OR or a morgue to me.
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Stroll around the grounds until you feel at home....
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The little blue jug is....dynamo!
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Light starch, please.
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Psych rehab today is simply sending the patient home with a bottle of pills, hoping they take them, and wondering why they return in 3 months.
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Is that Greenmount Cemetery on Greenmount Ave? If not you've got to visit there--it is a famous cemetery and has a complete listing on Wikipedia. It has a gatehouse designed in the Gothic Revival style, and is surrounded by a wall built in the mid 19th century. Famous people buried there include: John Wilkes Booth, Johns Hopkins (founded the University & hospital), Enoch Pratt (funded Baltimore Public Libraries & the nearby Sheppard Pratt psychiatric hospital), & Napoleon's sister-in-law. It's a great photo op.
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Wow, I've lived 45 minutes away from this place for 40 years and never heard of it before. I must be living under a rock!
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It is amazing to see how primitive medicine was not that very long ago. You'd be hard pressed to find a medical device today that operates without electricity-I just read that some devices today require an internet connection! I had a great, great aunt who spent time in Eudowood Sanatorium in Towson, MD (long since demolished) and had an entire lung removed there. Anyway, great pictures and research. Hope you washed your hands when you left!
Ephemera: Consumption
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Nice to see folks receiving treatment from what appears to be well-trained, efficient nurses. In another 10 years, Life would publish photos taken at Byberry in Philly of naked, filthy men warehoused in hospital basements and sleeping on the floor. They were taken by conscientious objectors who served as orderlies there in WWII. Another interesting hydro treatment is the "cold wet pack" where sheets are soaked in icewater, then wrung out and wrapped tightly around a patient like a cocoon. This was done with manic patients to calm them. As their core body temperature falls, the brain shifts all of the body's energy into maintaining the temperature. As they have less energy, they calm down. It is said that the patient's lips turned blue and they shivered uncontrollably for hours.
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There better not be any explosive barrels in there.
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Ah, I knew GLaDOS was still alive somewhere.