runawaywidow

Haunted Walk at the Kings Park Psychiatric Center

Easy to access on Long Island, New York is the abandoned Kings Park Asylum, formally known as the Kings Park Psychiatric Center. Opened in 1885 due to overflow from mental hospitals in Brooklyn, which at the time was called Kings county, the asylum was designed to get away from abuse in crowded city hospitals and focus on a farm colony as therapy. Designing the spacious acres in Suffolk County as a place for patients to work with animals and crops to provide their own food as well as with medical doctors was innovative and revolutionary.

While walking around the remains of the over 100 abandoned buildings and grounds, I wanted to know more about this place. It definitely has that haunted feeling. The buildings are locked or fenced in. It is illegal to enter the buildings but that doesn’t stop people from ghost hunting or daring each other to enter. Police do frequent the deserted roads so fair warning to my local curious friends.

The Bluffs

I started my tour headed toward a trail easily identified with a sign and some steps. Another couple and their puppy followed me up the trail, then sat down to enjoy their cold coffee drinks. The trail winds along the bluff with occasional gaps in the trees offering spectacular views. From the top of the bluff I could see Sunken Meadow State park where I got married in 2019, one of the last big parties before the pandemic!

Nissequogue River and Long Island Sound

After taking a few photos from this scenic overlook, I located a parking lot near what appeared to be abandoned buildings.

In fact, the former hospital and some of the abandoned buildings are part of a state park with plenty of parking and trails for hiking, biking and walking dogs. I parked and walked along the path toward the buildings. A few men were working on a roof, but it seemed to be OK to get out and walk around the grounds.

Advancing towards the first building I was in awe of how the dormant trees and bare vines gave the old building with broken windows an even more haunted look. The photos I took of the buildings were cool, but looked even better in tinted black and white.

All the space around these buildings led me to use my imagination. Were the mentally ill brought here to work the land and learn new skills? Could this have really been a helpful form of therapy for the former patients? The state of New York made the asylum a self -sufficient community with its on-site creation of heat and electricity, a train stop and even staff housing.

I imagined the people who lived in these buildings which looked much like a college campus. The 873 acres were used to house patients and also ran a farm colony where therapies included farm related activities like feeding animals and growing food. The objective was to move patients from being secured in dinghy basements in the cities to getting more sunlight and leading productive lives by learning skills and keeping busy with work.

In reading up on the history, I was surprised to learn that more women were usually retained in the mental hospital than men. One famous paranormal legend is about the female patient Mary Hatchett. She was hospitalized due to violent murders and her ghostly apparition is said to roam the grounds and even a nearby bar in a white dress with an ax.

One hundred fifty years ago women could be sent to the nearby lunatic asylum for a number of ailments that seem very commonplace today. Grief from the loss of a spouse or child could lead a woman to depression or agony. PMS could be mistaken for insanity.

Unhappy husbands committed their wives based on their own subjective observations. Being admitted for substance abuse with alcohol or other addictive substances were common. Alzheimer’s disease wasn’t identified yet, so if women became forgetful or confused, off they were sent to the asylum.

Of course once admitted, it was often difficult to leave.

In 1905, State Hospital for the Insane changed its name to Kings Park State Hospital. Also the previously established school of nursing was registered with the State Department of Education.

I knew this place reminded me of my years at a State University of New York.

Building 93: used to house geriatric patients and drug addicts, also believed to be haunted
Third floor housed the Shock Therapy Department

In 1948, following World Wars l and ll, and the Spanish- American war, the hospital census included 1748 veterans suffering from mental illnesses. Many veterans required some type of therapy. Experiences in battle led to long lasting traumatic effects such as PTSD (post traumatic stress disorder) and the hospital was able to offer support in the way of hypnosis therapy which sometimes caused amnesia.

The numbers kept climbing at the Kings Park Psychiatric Center as it was later called and soon became overcrowded. In the town of Kings Park which had 16,000 residents, the patient population grew to 10,000 ill people housed on the state property serviced by approximately 700 employees.

Yes, some inmates did escape.

While the hospital with all its land and good intentions were an improvement from insane asylums of the previous centuries, abuses still happened. Reports of patients beaten, even killed due to becoming problematic were common. Patients beating each other by choking was considered common. Patients locked away in isolation or treated with electric shock therapy were doled out to difficult patients. There were even rumors of patients being taken down into the underground tunnels to be tortured due to bad behavior.

In the year 1951, the hospital started to perform pre-frontal lobotomies on a select group of women.

By 1955, 5% of the patients were receiving Thorazine or Serpasil as drug therapy and the use of restraints declined by a whopping 50%!

The farm buildings were eventually phased out and replaced with community centers for the mentally ill and funding for psychoactive drug research.

Some buildings still stand in the Nissequogue River State Park which is open to hikers, bikers and even dogs on leash as far as I could tell. Walking among the buildings made me curious as to who stayed here and why. I’d love to imagine a cooperative environment where people healed from mental anguish. I’d love to think that counselors were available to console the bereaved and to help people move forward to becoming productive and well adjusted members of society,

I’ve seen enough scary images of mental institutes, or as they were called, lunatic asylums, to have a vague idea what may have happened on these grounds.

For more detailed information about this place, I recommend the book: Kings Park Psychiatric Center: A Journey Through History Volume 1 by Jason Medina

It’s a peaceful place to walk and spend a warm early afternoon with your thoughts. If you are having a bad day, like I was, just walk around this place and imagine what life could have been like.

Then go home and count your blessings. What are you grateful for today?

Kings Park Psychiatric Center has a history of over 100 years: The insane asylum that featured a farming colony is now a state park with deserted buildings and paved trails.

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ABOUT AUTHOR
Runaway Widow
Join me, Kristin, on my journey to adjust to the sudden death of my husband and learn to live as a young, middle-aged, remarried widow.
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