Retardation, or "feeble-mindedness" was caused primarily by defective heredity and inbreeding ... Society therefore, had to be protected from such people. The Belchertown State School for the Feeble Minded was the result. Solidly built "14 miles from anywhere" in isolation, the men and women were segregated to prevent any sexual contact.
- The Tragedy of Belchertown, Springfield Republican, in describing the philosophy that Belchertown's School for the Feeble Minded was founded under in 1922.
"The Tragedy of Belchertown" - Springfield Republican, 3/15/1970 |
Looking back over the last 100 years of Massachusetts' history, it's hard to find a more disturbing story than of those who resided in Belchertown's School For The Feeble Minded. The name alone will tell you this is the product of a different generation, and though established as a way to care for people unable to survive independently, for many of the residents who lived and died at this facility theirs is a story of neglect, dehumanization, and treatment in a way that many constituted downright torture.
As were many of the state hospitals from this era, Belchertown was not just a single building but dozens, constructed as a campus style facility where both patients and staff resided. It operated until 1992 when a series of lawsuits, in addition to society's change in how it viewed disabled people, finally led to its closure. Some of these buildings have since been demolished, but many remain, serving as both a reminder of our past and a modern day ghost town for urban explorers.
"State Breaks The Law Every Day" - Springfield Republican, 3/16/1970 |
In the Springfield Republican's six-part series "The Tragedy of Belchertown", many of the horrific conditions in which patients were kept were brought to light. It was said that some legislatures who toured the buildings became physically sick from the stench and could not continue, a stench due in part by patients being forced to sit in their own filth. Not only did many of the buildings average just one shower per 50 residents, some were punished for infractions by being locked into small rooms without a toilet.
"The Tragedy Of Belchertown" - Springfield Republican, 3/15/1970 |
This was a complex built for 1,000 patients, but by 1967 there were over 1,600 patients housed at Belchertown. The Springfield Republican described conditions in which during the night only two attendants oversaw every 100 residents, and sometimes it was only 1. Worse yet, the buildings contained no sprinkler systems, beds were crammed together side by side, and fire escapes remained locked.
"State Breaks The Law Every Day" - Springfield Republican, 3/16/70 |
As outrage built over how officials could let conditions get so bad, the former Director of Federal Programs at Belchertown explained it by saying that superintendents were "rewarded" for not spending all their budgeted funds.
Prior to several of the buildings being torn down last year, I spent an afternoon wandering among them, wondering at their history while at the same time seeing what 30 years of uncontrolled nature can do to modern structures.
Although many of the buildings were boarded up tight, you're not going to have this big of a playground without teenagers prying a few of them open, and those were the holes I looked for.
Of the handful I entered, it's hard to imagine if they'll even remain standing long enough for the city to come tear them down. What you're looking at below is not some sort of outdoor patio, but the third story of a building whose roof has collapsed and vegetation has taken over. I did not enter the room, this picture was taken from the relative safety of a cement stairway.
Rather than taking a thirty foot plunge, I exited this deathtrap and explored some of the smaller buildings where management lived. Not only were these much safer, but the remains of appliances and furniture added to their creepiness.
A 2015 fire destroyed one of these staff building, and considering there hadn't been working utilities out here for over 20 years, yeah it was considered suspicious.
Plans have been approved to develop these 900 acres into housing units, and with that vision in mind more of the buildings were taken down last year. It may not be long before this land is stripped of every last reminder of the institute and put into use once again. Not only will this remove one giant headache the town has to watch over, it will put the black eye society gave itself by its treatment of these people farther into our past.
Bless their souls
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