Editing Cecil County Almshouse
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== History == | == History == | ||
− | In 1788, Cecil County purchased about 174 acres of land a few miles north of Elkton. Within a few years, a home for the unfortunate was built. An annual report from 1855 provides some details on the operation of the almshouse. Seventy-one inmates lived there, many of them aiding in work on the county farm. | + | In 1788, Cecil County purchased about 174 acres of land a few miles north of Elkton. Within a few years, a home for the unfortunate was built. An annual report from 1855 provides some details on the operation of the almshouse. Seventy-one inmates lived there, many of them aiding in work on the county farm. |
− | In 1887, the Cecil County Insane Asylum opened on the grounds of the County Almshouse (present-day Mt. Aviat Academy in Childs). When it opened, thirteen patients who’d been scattered in institutions around the state were brought back to their modern home in Cecil County. Prior to that time, the mentally ill from Cecil ended up in the county jail or poorhouse, or they were institutionalized at other insane asylums in Baltimore. | + | In 1887, the Cecil County Insane Asylum opened on the grounds of the County Almshouse (present-day Mt. Aviat Academy in Childs). When it opened, thirteen patients who’d been scattered in institutions around the state were brought back to their modern home in Cecil County. Prior to that time, the mentally ill from Cecil ended up in the county jail or poorhouse, or they were institutionalized at other insane asylums in Baltimore. |
Gradually, the state assumed responsibility for providing inpatient mental health and then in May 1915, after the Eastern Shore Hospital in Cambridge opened, 26 patients were taken for that long ride to Dorchester County. A few months earlier, nine African-American residents had been transferred to the state hospital for the colored insane at Crownsville. The asylum was torn down in 1935, when C. B. Van den Huevel was paid $50.25 to remove the structure. <ref>http://www.cecildaily.com/our_cecil/article_6a668934-ac64-11e1-ab6b-001a4bcf887a.html</ref> | Gradually, the state assumed responsibility for providing inpatient mental health and then in May 1915, after the Eastern Shore Hospital in Cambridge opened, 26 patients were taken for that long ride to Dorchester County. A few months earlier, nine African-American residents had been transferred to the state hospital for the colored insane at Crownsville. The asylum was torn down in 1935, when C. B. Van den Huevel was paid $50.25 to remove the structure. <ref>http://www.cecildaily.com/our_cecil/article_6a668934-ac64-11e1-ab6b-001a4bcf887a.html</ref> | ||
− | The actual poorhouse continued operating for several more decades. But in 1952, the county farm and almshouse went on the auction block. The land was purchased by Daniel Bathon and he donated the | + | The actual poorhouse continued operating for several more decades. But in 1952, the county farm and almshouse went on the auction block. The land was purchased by Daniel Bathon and he donated the propert to the Oblate Sisters of St. Francis de Sales. |
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==References== | ==References== | ||
<references/> | <references/> | ||
+ | https://cecilcountyhistory.com/cecil-county-almshouse/ | ||
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+ | https://cecilcountyhistory.com/cecil-county-insane-asylum-opens-in-1887/ | ||
+ | https://cecilcountyhistory.com/the-potters-field-in-childs-the-final-resting-place-for-paupers/ | ||
[[Category:Maryland]] | [[Category:Maryland]] |