State schools, US (for people with disabilities) explained

State schools are a type of institution for people with intellectual and developmental disabilities in the United States. These institutions are run by individual states. These state schools were and are famous for abuse and neglect. In many states, the residents were involuntary sterilized during the eugenics era. Many states have closed state schools as part of the deinstitutionalisation movement.

History

Hopes of reformers

Many progressive reformers in the mid-1800s noticed the horrible conditions experienced by people with disabilities and wanted to improve them. Many people with disabilities were put in prison or poorhouses.

Dorothea Dix described:Samuel Gridley-Howe and other reformers wanted to establish training schools where people with intellectual disabilities could learn and be prepared for society.

The history of state schools and psychiatric hospitals are linked throughout history. State schools started being built in the United States in the 1850s. People often used the term "feeble-minded" which could apply to both intellectual and developmental disabilities and mental illness, or in some cases, perceived sexual promiscuity.

Establishment

In 1848 Howe founded the Massachusetts School for Idiotic and Feeble-Minded Youth, a private boarding school for people with intellectual disabilities. In that same year, Hervey Wilbur founded a private school in his home in New York. Both schools taught according to the teachings of Édouard Séguin. These early training schools sought to educate students and provide schooling, assistance with self-care tasks and physical training.

The first state-funded school was the New York Asylum for Idiots. It was established in Albany in 1851. This state school aimed to educate children with intellectual disabilities and was reportedly successful in doing so. The school's Board of Trustees declared, in 1853, that the experiment had "entirely and fully succeeded." That success led the New York state legislature to found another building, which opened in Syracuse in 1855. The superintendent of this school for the next 32 years was Hervey Wilbur.[1] In 1852, a school for "feeble-minded" youth opened in Germantown, Pennsylvania, and another in Columbus, Ohio in 1857.

While the number of schools continued to increase, the amount of training did not. These "schools" soon became custodial institutions, places to house people to keep them out of society. Rather than preparing students to join the community, these schools only trained people to do work in an institution setting. The residents that were able were put to work in the institution. Institutions began to argue for funding, saying that they are housing people that would otherwise be in almshouses or poorhouses. These larger custodial institutions were established in many states in the following decades.

Schools, colonies and farms

Training schools sought to train people with intellectual and developmental disabilities, even if that aim was almost never followed through. Other models of institutions also arose, but all of them were often called state schools.

Superintendents of institutions believed that people with different disabilities should be separated. Often, institutions would establish separate buildings, such as an "epileptic colony" and places for "high-grades," which was the term used to refer to people with disabilities who were forced to work in institutions. One specific way people were forced to work were farm colonies. People would purchase cheap rural farm land and force the residents to work on the farm growing food and harvesting dairy products. The food produced was either used for the institutions or sold. Many institutions sought to develop self-sufficiency. This was another way to keep people with disabilities separated from society.

Eugenics

These large custodial institutions continued to be built into the 20th century. At the same time, eugenics began to gain proponents throughout the United States, as well as Europe. Eugenics centered around the aim to increase the "genetic quality" of the human race. Eugenicists decided that some traits were "undesirable." One of the primary undesirable traits was "feeble-mindedness." Scientists and doctors became much less concern with teaching or training people with disabilities and focused more on separating them from society, stopping them from reproducing, and in some cases, advocating for their murder.

Many eugenicists thought that white Western Europeans were superior to other races and peoples. They developed extremely flawed measures to "prove" this superiority. The Stanford-Binet IQ test was developed to identify people who were feeble-minded. In 1913 the United States Public Health Service administered the newly invented Binet IQ test to immigrants arriving at Ellis Island. Professional researchers recorded that "79% of the Italians, 80% of the Hungarians, 83% of the Jews, and 87% of the Russians are feeble-minded." These findings, as well as others, were used to justify racism and anti-immigrant xenophobia in the United States and Europe.

In addition, new compulsory public school laws required children to attend school. Teachers had more chances to notice people who struggled and recommend them for an institution. Eugenics proponents also taught classes to teachers on identifying the "feeble-minded."[2]

Throughout this era, the most popular belief was that intellectual and developmental disabilities, as well as mental illness, were entirely genetic and resulted in poverty, drunkenness, sexual promiscuity, crime, violence, and other social ills. People with disabilities were considered "menaces." Dr. Henry Goddard, a psychologist at Vineland Training School in New Jersey, wrote a book claiming that they investigated the family history of a woman at the institution and demonstrated that "feeble-mindedness" was genetic and caused all of social ills. Goddard said,Painting so many people as a threat led to increasing numbers of people sent to institutions. Institutions became even more overcrowded. Superintendents, concerned about overcrowding and of the "threat" of people with disabilities having children, started to sterilize the inmates. Many of those sterilized against their will were living in state schools or state hospitals. Over thirty states had compulsory sterilization laws and over 60,000 people with disabilities were sterilized.[3]

Buck v. Bell, the infamous Supreme Court case that legalized involuntarily sterilization, was about Carrie Buck, a woman diagnosed as "feeble-minded" after she was raped by her foster brother and put into an institution.[4] A family tree (that was later shown to be falsified) said that she was the third generation diagnosed with feeble-mindedness. US Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr. famously declared "three generations of imbeciles are enough!"

American eugenicists would go onto serve as a model for Nazi Germany to replicate as they sought to institutionalize, sterilize, and murder the "undesirables" in their own country.[5]

Lists of state schools

Alabama

Alaska

Arizona

Arkansas

California

Colorado

Connecticut

Delaware

District of Columbia

Florida

Georgia

Hawaii

Idaho

Illinois

Indiana

Iowa

Kansas

Kentucky

Louisiana

Maine

Maryland

Massachusetts

Michigan

Minnesota

Mississippi

Missouri

Missouri State Colony for Feebleminded and Epileptic/Missouri State School (1899–present), split into the following three state schools in 1959

Montana

Nebraska

Nevada

New Hampshire

New Jersey

New Mexico

New York

North Carolina

North Dakota

Ohio

Oklahoma

Oregon

Pennsylvania

Rhode Island

South Carolina

South Dakota

Tennessee

Texas

See main article: Texas state supported living centers.

Utah

Vermont

Virginia

Washington

Wisconsin

Wyoming

See also

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Early State Schools of New York – Museum of disABILITY History . 2023-02-05 . www.museumofdisability.org.
  2. Web site: The Forgotten History of Eugenics . 2023-02-06 . Rethinking Schools.
  3. Web site: Eugenics: Compulsory Sterilization in 50 American States . 2023-02-05 . www.uvm.edu.
  4. Clare . Eli . 2014 . Yearning toward Carrie Buck . Journal of Literary & Cultural Disability Studies . 8 . 3 . 335–344 . 10.3828/jlcds.2014.26 . 1757-6466.
  5. Farber . Steven . December 2008 . U.S. Scientists' Role in the Eugenics Movement (1907–1939): A Contemporary Biologist's Perspective . Zebrafish. 5 . 4 . 243–245 . 10.1089/zeb.2008.0576 . 19133822 . 2757926.
  6. Web site: Staff Reports . September 14, 2021 . Former Wallace Center to become AIDB North, offering services, education for deaf, blind . 2023-02-08 . The Hartselle Enquirer.
  7. Web site: CONTENTdm . 2023-02-08 . digital.archives.alabama.gov.
  8. Web site: Clark . Meddie I. . Understanding the plan to consolidate centers . 2023-02-08 . Gadsden Times.
  9. Web site: Inclusion Daily Express – January 23, 2004 . 2023-02-08 . www.inclusiondaily.com.
  10. Web site: Ricky Wyatt . 2023-02-08 . Alabama Disabilities Advocacy Program (ADAP).
  11. Web site: July 2, 2013 . The History . 2023-02-05 . Morningside Hospital – In territorial days, Alaskans could be one of three places... Inside (in Alaska), Outside (anywhere else), or Morningside (Morningside Hospital)..
  12. Web site: A Study on the Impact of Deinstitutionalization on the Former Residents of Harborview Developmental Center . State of Alaska Governor's Council on Disabilities and Special Education.
  13. Web site: Relay . Patty . August 2, 2013 . Harborview Center . 2023-02-05 . Valdez Museum & Historical Archive.
  14. Web site: Timeline of State Events in the History of Developmental Disabilities . February 5, 2023.
  15. Web site: Human Development Centers . 2023-02-05 . Encyclopedia of Arkansas.
  16. Web site: 2022-10-03 . Costa Mesa begins planning for homes at Fairview Developmental Center site . 2023-02-11 . Orange County Register.
  17. Web site: PDC to close in Dec. 2021 . 2023-02-11 . Porterville Recorder. April 6, 2016 .
  18. Web site: 2020-05-08 . Canyon Springs - CA Department of Developmental Services . 2023-02-11 . www.dds.ca.gov.
  19. Web site: 2019-02-07 . Developmental Center Closures - CA Department of Developmental Services . 2023-02-11 . www.dds.ca.gov.
  20. Web site: October 27, 2015 . The Dark History of an Abandoned Institution . 2023-02-05 . Denver Public Library History.
  21. Web site: Pueblo Regional Center Colorado Department of Human Services . 2023-02-05 . cdhs.colorado.gov.
  22. Web site: Adams . Wes. A Look Back at the Teller Institute at Grand Junction Regional Center . 2023-02-05 . 99.9 KEKB. November 27, 2021 .
  23. Web site: Wheat Ridge Regional Center Colorado Department of Human Services . 2023-02-05 . cdhs.colorado.gov.
  24. Web site: History of the Arc . 2023-02-05 . the-arc-in-hawaii.
  25. Web site: Facility Open and Closed Dates . 2023-03-25 . risp.umn.edu.
  26. Web site: September 17, 2016 . Frankfort State Hospital & School . 2023-02-05 . Kentucky Historic Institutions.
  27. Web site: The unfortunate story of the Frankfort State Hospital School and Cemetery . Roger . Barlow . July 25, 2018 . FRANK Magazine.
  28. Web site: Timeline . 2023-02-05 . Out of the Shadows.
  29. Web site: Rosewood . Parallels in Time: A History of Developmental Disabilities.
  30. Web site: Davey . Katie Jean . LibGuides: State Hospitals: Historical Patient Records: Faribault State School & Hospital . 2023-02-05 . libguides.mnhs.org.
  31. Web site: History of Ellisville State School Ellisville State School . 2023-02-05 . www.ess.ms.gov.
  32. Web site: History of the Division of Mental Diseases dmh.mo.gov . 2023-02-05 . dmh.mo.gov.
  33. Web site: McConnell . Kaitlyn . July 11, 2022 . Once tied to a 'mental asylum,' this cemetery in Nevada, Missouri has a dark past . 2023-02-05 . Springfield Daily Citizen.
  34. Web site: Community Support Network, Inc. . 2023-02-05 . Community Support Network, Inc..
  35. Web site: History . 2023-02-05 . Fort Stanton, NM Where history comes to life..
  36. Web site: January 9, 2015 . Timeline . 2023-02-05 . The New Mexico Disability Story.
  37. Web site: Goldsboro News-Argus News: Turning grayer: O'Berry takes on task of caring for elderly in nursing home facility . 2023-02-05 . savannah.newsargus.com.
  38. Web site: Always There History Project Ohio County Boards of Developmental Disabilities . 2023-02-05 . Always There for Ohio.
  39. Web site: Developmental Disabilities Services: History . 2023-02-05 . Human Services Department – OKDHS.
  40. Web site: The Ladd School . 2023-02-05 . www.abandonedamerica.us.
  41. Web site: SD Department of Human Services . 2023-02-05 . dhs.sd.gov.
  42. Web site: Developmental Centers . 2023-02-05 . www.tn.gov.
  43. Web site: Utah State Developmental Center: Celebrating 100 Years . February 5, 2023 . UVU Fulton Library.
  44. Web site: Brandon Training School (BTS) Developmental Disabilities Services Division . 2023-02-05 . ddsd.vermont.gov.
  45. Web site: April 2, 2020 . Central Virginia Training Center Closes . 2023-02-05 . disAbility Law Center of Virginia.
  46. Web site: Rainier School DSHS . 2023-02-05 . www.dshs.wa.gov.
  47. Web site: Three UW Faculty Members Research Wyoming History in Developmental Disability Care News University of Wyoming . 2023-02-05 . www.uwyo.edu.