1,382 Comments for Dixmont State Hospital
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
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- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure
I'm really sorry to hear about your friends mom. I just wanted to let you know that I will be sending up prayers for her.
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure
Now I think I understand how everything went down that day. I still want to know who alerted the superintendant that there were people on the site. I think we were there for about an hour and a half before he showed up.
I was there that day with a good friend of mine, her brother, and her mom. A few days after our trip to Dixmont, her mom had a massive stroke and is still in the hospital. She is paralyzed on one side of her body, cannot talk or eat, and can barely move. Her doctors have found a clot in her brain and aren't very optomistic that she will recover much. She is a wonderful person that I've known since I was a teenager, so if anyone reading this is a praying person, there are many of us who would very much appreciate a prayer for her recovery. She knew about Dixmont years ago and was the one who told us about it and how it was about to be torn down.
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure
Now I wonder who saw us and reported us? Of course, it was pretty stupid of me to park my Jeep right by the front door of the place, but I figured we wouldn't encounter any workers, being that it was a Sunday afternoon. Now I have to wonder who the other guy that I encountered in the cafeteria building was? He was walking around in the ballroom with a younger kid (about 16 I'd guess) and they were taking photos. We talked to him for a few minutes about the place and he seemed to be irritated that we were talking to him, so we left him alone after a while. We wondered back into Reed Hall and that is when I saw a policeman looking in my Jeep out in front. We went back out the back and walked around the building and back up to the front to see what was up. That's when we saw the two policemen and the superintendant. The superintenant seemed to be a bit of an asshat, but he never said anything to us. When he walked away to take a phone call, the cops really started to lighten up. I guess they had to look like they were doing something about people trespassing, so while the superintendant was listening, the cops were harder on us. BTW--the cops never called me or sent anything in the mail so I guess they dropped the whole thing. But when we were done talking to the cops, the guy and the kid we were talking to earlier came walking around the corner of the building and Mr. Asshat superintendant spotted them right away and told the cops there were more people and they went over to talk to them. I don't know what ever happened to those two because we got the hell out of there before we could get into any more trouble.
The tow truck driver was real cool with us. The cops told me that it was going to cost me $40 for the truck showing up and I had to pay the driver now or work something out with him. The driver told me to follow him down to a coin operated car wash down on Rt. 65 and just pay to have the mud washed off of his truck. Only cost me $2 so I was happy.
As for people going up there and screwing with the construction equipment, it is really stupid of the equipment operators to leave all the equipment unlocked. I work for a contractor and I had keys on me that day that would have operated most of the equipment on the site. We always lock our equipment if it is left on a jobsite unattended. Contractor keys will work in all equipment of the same equipment manufacturer, as you probably already know, so there are many keys floating around that will operate the equipment. I have a CAT key that would have started the CAT 330 behind Reed Hall with the claw on it. Looked like somebody already got into it and tore into Reed Hall in the back from a window on the 3rd story down to the window below it on the 2nd story. I know how to operate that machine because we have a 307B and 312BL that I have to run sometimes and the 330 is the same, just bigger. At least I have enough brains to know that it is extremely dangerous to just drive an excavator up to a 4 story building and try to tear it down. If a large section of the wall would have broke away, the cab of that machine would have been crushed, most likely killing the operator. It seems like that CAT machine with the claw attachment on it was there to pick up large trees to load them on trucks, not tear down 4 story buildings. Good God, that could get real ugly real quick.
Word to the wise: do not EVER go onto a construction site and mess with or attempt to mess with equipment/machines that you find there. You very well could get yourself or someone else nearby killed or seriously injured. Not to mention that many of these machines cost into the hundreds of thousands of dollars. It might seem cool at the time, but it's not a lot of fun to lose control of a machine that weighs several times more than your house.
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
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- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
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I understand that the buildings are in irreparable condition and have become a public hazard, but as I stated before, I think something much better could be done with this site.
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure
I suppose that it would be better determined if this is actually a misspelling if we know the year when the safe was made/installed. Very curious to see if it was installed when the building was completed in 1859.
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure
- Location: Dixmont State Hospital
- Gallery: Departure