Sunday, November 25, 2012

Northern Michigan Asylum for the Insane.

When Joe and I took our weekender to Traverse City in October, Joe said he wanted to visit the old state mental hospital.   He regaled tales of sneaking in as a teenager...climbing over and under barbed wire, lighting torches to see, creepy, dark, abandoned.  So, I assumed we'd be climbing over some fence and sneaking around.  But then, a few other people (people that had not climbed through the barbed wire) told me how lovely it was and that we should stop by.  Joe's auntie said that his great grandmother worked as a social worker there for many years.  And so we went.  And here is it's tale...

In the year 1885, the two state mental hospitals in Kalamazoo and Pontiac were getting full, and it was deemed necessary for a third to be built in Michigan.  Lumber baron Perry Hannah, the "father of Traverse City," secured the location in his home town.  The hospital grew and flourished over the next century, finally closing it's doors in 1989.

At the turn of the century, during a time when other state mental hospitals were employing horrifying methods of drug therapy, constraints, electroshock, and even lobotomies, the Northern Michigan Asylum for Insane was employing other methods.  The first superintendent, Dr. James Decker Munson, believed in "beauty as therapy."  Patients were treated with kindness and all comfort measures were administered.  Straight jackets were forbidden.  Greenhouses on premises grew flowers year round and each patient's room was beautifully adorned with fresh arrangements daily.  They also believed in "work as therapy" to encourage a sense of self fulfillment.  The asylum was completely self sufficient, housing its own animal, fruit, and vegetable farms, furniture making studios, canning and preserving operations - all patients encouraged to participate wherever their heart felt at home.  This warms a music therapist's heart!!!   Conventional medicine is not always the cure - music, art, compassion and kindness go a long way in this world.

After the hospital closed its doors in 1989, someone had the brilliant idea to develop the property - in a historically appropriate way.  "The Village at Grand Traverse Commons" was born.  There are posh restaurants, sweet little boutiques, coffee shops, bakeries, wineries...you name it.  The upper floors are apartments and condos, and all are beautiful stripped down to the original brickwork, the arches that separated room from room still intact down every corridor.

We strolled in on a Monday afternoon.  The air was warm and beautiful for late October.  There was a farmers market on the main green, and a lovely girl playing guitar and singing.  We found a winery and grabbed a tall glass of hard cider and piece of carrot cake from the bakery, and just took it all in.  This is the stuff that dreams are made of for me.  

And then...we wandered around the grounds and took pictures!!









Crate after crate of the Merlot harvest had just come in off of the trucks.  So beautiful!




The main buildings are renovated, but many are still in their original state.  What lovely architecture and details!  And, what a lovely day with my dear one.

xoxo, e.

2 comments:

  1. Hello, Erica, this is Jeanie in Lansing. I came upon your post when looking for more on the asylum. In the course of doing my genealogy research I learned that my great grandfather was an inmate there for 13 years and died in the asylum. His story is a fascinating and sad one and I'm putting it into a narrative for my family. So, of course, doing research on the asylum itself. I appreciate your wonderful post and the background it provides. I hope to do the tour there myself this fall. Thanks for adding to my info bank and for the wonderful photos you shared.

    ReplyDelete
  2. There exists no complete list of all asylums in the US. Odd, don't you think, considering America is claimed to have a history of about 250 years, yet the first poorhouse (admitted to becoming insane asylums later on) was allegedly established in 1660 in Boston. We should have the most complete and accurate history of any nation, yet find me a schematic on how they built the ore docks and a complete list of all 6-10 thousand shipwrecks in the Great Lakes. And there should also be a complete list of all asylums in the US since the fir was built as recently as 1818. Why isn't there? America is the most resource dense continent in the world, so why would there be a need for a poor camp in the late 1600's in Boston? unless of course the city was ancient and filled to the brim? Impossible? The records of the beginnings of that city are incredibly dubious. And it also would make sense however, if these alleged poorhouses and asylums were actually slave camps, which when we look at the horrific conditions of those with good enough records to find, such as the Wakefield death camp, they are absolutely that: White slave camps. And the overwhelming, if entirely, demographic in these institutions? Low Deutsch? Celts, which are genetically identical-only differentiated by language. Interesting that 98% of the demographic to be put on the front lines in every war since AT LEAST 1812-low Deutsch/Celtic, 98% of the demographic which are in the Missing 411 books-low Deutsch/Celtic. 98%-100% demographic of the orphan trains in both Europe and America? Low Deutsch/Celtic. Asylums? They are that same demographic. Why is no one putting all of this information together?

    ReplyDelete