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What Made You Lunatic Asylum-Level Crazy in 1864?

reasons for admission to a lunatic asylum in 1864

I stumbled across this gem courtesy of Kate et al. of Colour of Madness. It lists reasons people were admitted to the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum in Weston, West Virginia in its first 25 years of existence, from 1864 to 1889. The building is still around, but now it’s a museum/ghost tour operation.

Trans-Allegheny “diagnoses”

There was certainly no DSM around at the time, and diagnosis was a bit of a free-for-all. While the whole list is pretty special, these would be my top 10 picks (I apologize to my visually impaired readers; the list is too long to write out the whole thing):

Lady problems

And there needs to be another top picks list for troubles of the female variety that landed people in the loony bin:

What killed you in 1632?

There was also this gem that was making the rounds on Twitter with some causes of death from 1632 (where, I’m not sure). My top 10 are:

Are there any of these reasons for lunatic asylum admission or causes of death that you find particularly interesting/appealing?

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My latest book, A Brief History of Stigma, looks at the nature of stigma, the contexts in which it occurs, and how to challenge it most effectively.

You can find it on Amazon and Google Play.

There’s more on stigma on Mental Health @ Home’s Stop the Stigma page.

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