The Western Pennsylvania
Hospital at Pittsburgh ended its first year of operation in 1853, and it was
evident that there were a greater amount of patients in jails and almshouses
than could be provided for in the 26 beds designated for that express purpose at
the hospital. Managers of the hospital used a $10,000 appropriation from the
state to purchase a large amount of farmland, on a hill overlooking the Ohio
River, to the south of Pittsburgh. The land lay in what is now the Kilbuck/
Emsworth Twp areas. They originally wanted to build the institution in the city,
but this idea was rejected by Dorothea Dix. The facility was named Dixmont, but
Dix allowed the name only as a memory to her grandfather, not in honor of
herself.
A grand ceremony took
place on July 19, 1859, when the cornerstone of the Dixmont Kirkbride building
was lain in the foundation. A glass jar was placed in the cornerstone,
containing numerous objects, papers, and a letter from Dorothea Dix herself.
Also contained was a copy of her 1845 "Memorial", the 55 page
county by county study of the conditions for the mentally ill in Pennsylvania,
which had a great part in jump starting early mental health care reform in
Pennsylvania. Unfortunately, the time capsule was recently recovered, only to
find it had broken, and most of the contents were unrecognizable.
The Kirkbride building
at Dixmont was typical of other Kirkbride facilities with the exception that the
outermost wings swept forward instead of to the rear in the typical V-shape.
This was to afford a better view of the river valley, and better airflow, which
was said to be more calming to the patients, in keeping with the want of a
serene setting. It had gas lighting, a central hot air system for heat, and more
than ample supply of water from the Ohio River. Construction of the west wing
was not complete until 1868, at which time construction of the east wing began.
It
was named Reed Hall, after the first superintendent of Dixmont, Dr Joseph A.
Reed. Behind the Reed Hall, was the Dietary Building. This building contained
the main kitchen at Dixmont, the large freezers, and storage areas where food
was kept. Also part of this building were the loading docks, cleaning supplies,
and upstairs were the auditorium, and the cafeteria. To the right of Reed Hall,
was the Mens Annex, which housed many of the patients who were trusted with work
details in he further reaches of the property, which would reach a size of
approx. 407 acres. To the left of Reed Hall was the gym.
Other buildings on the
property included the Hutchinson Building, which was the infirmary of the
hospital. In this building you could find intensive care, x-ray facilities, a
small cafeteria, a barber shop, isolation units, physical therapy areas, and
observation rooms, instrument sterilization equipment. Each floor had patient
rooms on the ends of the building, surrounding a nurses pod, all separated by
half glass walls so the nurses could easily observe all of the patients easily.
Also in this building, were the morgue, laboratory, and autopsy. This building
is where electroshock therapies, lobotomies, and other medical procedures. The
Cammarrata Building was built in the early 1950's. This building was the
geriatric center of Dixmont. This building has been renovated and is currently
home (yet again coincidentally) to the a foundation for the disabled (The
Verland Foundation) a private school, (The Glen Montessori School) and offices
for the construction company owned by the family that purchased the property
Dixmont State Hospital
was originally named the Department of the Insane in the Western Pennsylvania
Hospital of Pittsburgh. The original patient population of the hospital was a
meager 113 patients, who were transferred from the Western Pennsylvania Hospital
in Pittsburgh. Before the 1800's were out, somewhere between 1,200 and 1,500
patients called the hospital home. In 1907, the facility was individually
incorporated as the Dixmont Hospital for the Insane after separating from the
Western Pennsylvania Hospital system. Dixmont was completely self sustained from
the beginning. It had it's own farmlands, livestock, rail station, and post
office. Also part of the facility was a water treatment plant, a sewage
treatment plant, and electricity generating facilities. They had their own
butchers, bakers, farmhands, electricians, laborers, pipe fitters, botanists,
chefs, and even a barber and a dentist.
However, in 1947 the
hospital was in dire financial need. It was at this time that the Commonwealth
of Pennsylvania took over operations at the facility, and renamed it Dixmont
State Hospital. Throughout the years, other buildings were added to the
facilities grounds. Then, in the 1960's, changes in the political clime, and in
views on care for the mentally ill or handicapped brought changes in funding and
care. Declining funds and population of patients, along with a shrinking staff
eventually brought the closing of the facility in 1984 after 122 years of
operation.
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