wrote:
It don't really matter considering that these things will probably be pulled down anyway.
brings back so many memorys of when i was a kid n we visited . thanks very much
just cant believe how this place has gone so quick, i used 2 love coming here when it was a workin hospital.
allan means out so the whole thing means way out. its a shame the place burnt down now after most haunted were there.
i remeber walkin through here when the hospital was open, and i was visiting my uncle, was only a kid. it was scary as hell even then.its mad how the place has fallen apart in 10 yrs
does any1 realise how haunted this place is!! my uncle was a resident b4 it shut down in 95, hes told us the storys of what he'd seen while in there. scary shit man!!
wrote:
this is great...I love how the grass brightens the photo up!
wrote:
Ffordd Allan means way out in welsh !
wrote:
what the hell has gone on here!! how sad!!
wrote:
it obviously a person!! he's standing behind dirty glass - why it looks distorted! we found letters from patients to their familys in that spot and suicide watch forms.... scarey shit.... who took these pictures? did you find the morgue? by the church?
wrote:
I've been in there and its either a smoke alarm or a light fitting.
wrote:
W and Y are vowels in Welsh... 'Denbigh' was a by-word for mental illness when I was growing up.
wrote:
I thought *I* wrote run-on sentences! I must have missed the memo that abolished punctuation. Either that, or grammar is one of the casualties of the technology revolution. (just friendly teasing, please don't take offense) :-)
wrote:
When I was in college, I kept track of my weight by stepping on the freight scale (just like this one, except with a digital readout) in the back of my dorm's basement. It was used there to weigh bulk quantities of food brought in from the loading dock, before the deliveries were taken upstairs to the kitchen.
wrote:
A common expression in mental health care for those patients who cycle in and out of psychiatric hospitals, never seeming to stabilize enough to be successful in community living, is "revolving door" patients. This gives a new, literal, meaning!