Comments

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Gee, Yaggy, I can't imagine why.

Yeesh ... glad I live where our biggest worry is finding somebody's pot field in the middle of nowhere.
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Dis_One - You're on the wrong site if you expect an answer to that.
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Okay, we'll go with that, Grifs.
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Great photo. It really makes you think about mental illnesses, and how the patient must face their illness once they come to terms with it.
Lynne, never mind about the 'chemical lobotomies'. I used to visit my uncle John in Whittingham Mental Hospital, he was a tall man with a pre-frontal lobotomy that made him look like Frankenstein's monster. They gave him electric shock treatment too. All I remember is this gentle giant who'd never been the same since the war. Even back in the seventies I thought that councelling a patient's mental health issues with a scalpel was just plain wrong.
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Its amazing that these beautiful places were ever abandoned in the first place. Have you ever thought of a trip to Povilia, Italy? ((im sorry if i spelled that wrong))
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How sad that The Abram Hewitt was left to rot. She was so beautiful.
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Now I really need the captain after looking at scary snoopy.
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Awyper, if those are Captain Morgans feet, I'm on my way there. Always ready to sail with the Captain.
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yeah that block looks like it went through some heavy usage. Perhaps the enzymes in deceased bodies helped to break it down some.
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i was there last night and didnt find the morgue in this building. itz huge. but thro the place where they had the fire, how do u get to the morgue??
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It's on the Hudson River in central NY, visit bannermancastle.org for more info
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There were bellows in back where one could push and pull a handle to "breathe" for a person inside.
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Nope, it's still hanging there, but it will inevitable fall with the building's impending demolition.
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Thanks guys, and to answer your question yes the steel track remained inside.