CaptLouAlbano
Banned
- Joined
- May 17, 2012
- Messages
- 2,552
I beg to differ. I think you're wrong about the quality of care the mental patients got.
My great-grandfather was a schizophrenic. Bear in mind I'm almost 50, so I'm going back to the 40's. He married, had 4 kids, then suffered a break. My great-grandmother went to work in the Depot, making munitions to support the war effort as well as her family, since her husband was a crazy man. He was locked up, and stayed there for 10 years. One day he got tired of being there, so he left. Nobody stopped him, and nobody came looking for him. He came home, and fathered 5 more children. My G-Grandmother didn't try to have him sent back because the conditions there were absolutely horriffic. Rats, bedsores, ceiling leaks, - the tales she told us when we were kids didn't really sink in at the time, but I remember them quite clearly.
Then his disease got bad again, and the police locked him up again in the '70's, which is where he was when he died.
Oh I am aware there were some horrible places - and there still are. But on the same note, there were some really nice places too. I referenced the one my family member was in, was a really nice place.