Comments

THANK YOU so MUCH for the photos. I just found that my great Aunt Mary was there cira 1930/1941. Such a beautiful place, I hope there is some way to save it.
wrote:
Hi, Im interested in filming here. Is this place often to the public? how can I come to take a look at it ?

please respond to my email:
Elephanteloquence888@gmail.com

or my cell #: 443 356 1550
The character 聖 on the other side means “holy,” so “holy mother”
These were removed and restored (gummed up from setting too long), then used at a drive-in theater in ohio for three years. Removed again because of digital and currently in safe storage.
wrote:
Hello, my name is Matt. I was a patient in the summer of ‘83. I believe Ward D. Hoping to connect with anybody who remembers me. I was best friends with Mike I and Sandy W.
Thx
This area is rough. If you explore it be careful. Ghetto!
I walked pass this prison for first grade At goode school. Inmates would yell stuff to us kids from the windows. I remember them having blankets tied to the out side of the bars. Never actually got inside the old prison but after it closed the guard shacks were awesome forts for some of the local kids. Would love to tour it.
I think they were either airing them out or maybe it was the bed bugs?
the doorway just on the other side to the entrance to Elysium
Mr mitts. If your planning to write another book. I would like to be a part of it , I can only tell you the experiences that I went through and it wouldn't be hell and back , in places such as gaebler is how you make it in other words if you want the help or not. A lot of us kids were testing the boundaries because a lot of us were angry of the situation we brought upon ourselves , so needless to say when we get in the institution we acted out, I can go on and on about this and tell you the truth of what I experienced, if your interested. I will check back on the sight from time to time for your response , if you are interested it would be a hell of a book , we can exchange info to get in touch with me. , I can write up a rough draft of what I went through and look of how I turned out today , very successful
I look back at all of this. Yes it was crazy times but you know what people change for the better if they want to, I live in maine ,I own my home and I build log cabins for a living for the past 20 plus years, I say to everybody that went through this at this awful times of your life, keep it on the back burner and dont let it interfere of what you are doing now, keep a positive attitude and move on, yes I do understand that it was terrible for all of us but a lot of the staff were very supportive and this is coming from a patient that was on ward e from 82 to 84 I can only speak for myself that I didn't have any bad experiences with the staff ,they were only there to help me with my anger issues and thank God they did , I wouldn't be the person I am today, you all take care and take it one day at a time, love. Patrick
Corey was a staff member I very much looked up to when I was going through hard times, if this is you Corey. Thank you
Who ever wrote this. Very well said
wrote:
Lynne,
I painted my walls that color and only after did I realize it was the same color I hated when I was in the Isolation Hospital.
wrote:
Mr. Motts, fantastic photo.
Such a lovely piece. The thought of the clock being there and the shelves filled with literature is a beautiful notation.
wrote:
What a beautiful find. To see a piece of history in good condition still in it's environment is a privilege.