This is Part 2 of the Scouting NY tour of Rockland State Psychiatric Hospital, a 600-acre abandoned mental asylum complex in Orangeburg, NY. Be sure to check out Part 1 here!

Construction of Rockland State Psychiatric Hospital began in 1927 on a 600-acre plot in rural Orangeburg, NY. Below, the Male Reception Building in its prime…

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…and today:

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Very little has changed on the complex since its construction. In most cases, it’s only the overrun foliage that gives it away as abandoned. Below, building 19 then…

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…and its twin, Building 18, now:

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I love little details from a bygone era, like this TV antenna…

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Also hidden behind a tangle of vines…

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A sign identifying the building:

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During the 1930’s, Rockland State was considered one of the best planned psychiatric hospitals in the world. Its numerous facilities, including a power plant, rendered it largely self-sufficient…

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I’m not 100% sure, but the power plant appeared to be in working operation the day I toured the facility (correct me if I’m wrong on this one). I love that the endless smoke tower steps originally went right down to the ground (er, seems like a bad choice for a mental asylum):

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And in case you weren’t sure which building this was, a helpful sign:

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In fact, during its heyday Rockland boasted a working farm and numerous industrial shops, all of which were staffed by patients. Everything from furniture to brooms were produced on location…

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And though most most of the hospital complex is abandoned today, many of the old maintenance offices are still in use…

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From an on-site locksmith…

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…to plumbing…

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…carpentry, roofing, and a tinshop…

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…to electric & refrigeration:

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Behind the facilities offices, a great old ramshackle building:

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I’m taking a guess here, but does this squat structure remind anyone else of a bus station? It’s located in the center of the complex and would make sense as its transportation hub:

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One of the most well preserved buildings is the old Administration Building…

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…which best exemplifies the Mediterranean-style architecture found all over the complex (sadly, the mission tile roofs are mostly hidden by snow in my pictures):

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I love the terra cotta entrance…

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Also very cool: two working lanterns on either side of the door. You can just make out the faded initials RPC, or Rockland Psychiatric Center:

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Very glad to see the cupola is still in great shape after all these years…

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…complete with its original weathervane!

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Directly across from the old administration building is one of the last working hospitals on the complex, the modern Rockland Psychiatric Center. Effort was made to match the new structure to its surroundings, but it just goes to show that the old Rockland campus is an artifact of the past.

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A side door to a building…

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…with a schedule I have a feeling is no longer kept (yes, of course I pressed the doorbell):

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Seems like the type of sign you’d see prominently around a mental asylum…

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…however, this one was just on the old basketball court, in the center of the complex:

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Also, note the building behind the basketball court. Another of my favorite buildings on the campus, this one resembles a stable and especially reminds me of my travels through Spain…

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Love the enormous wooden doors and lanterns overhead:

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Inside another building…

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…a reception area, plus a lone pentagram:

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Update! As a huge H.P Lovecraft fan, I can’t believe I didn’t catch this. Luckily, reader CSCottM pointed out a way too coincidental resemblance between the pentagram…

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…and Lovecraft’s infamous Elder Sign:

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As CScottM points out, very appropriate for an abandoned mental asylum. The other side of the room – looks like it was in use until fairly recently:

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A peek into another building…

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…reveals a former cafeteria…

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…also in pretty good shape.

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This facilities-related structure is surrounded by a stone fence…

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A crumbling urn on one of the posts:

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Inside, a mess. Those look like walk-in refrigerator doors on the right – perhaps a former kitchen?

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Another look inside. Would love to know the story behind that playpen…

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As I was driving past a far corner of the campus, I noticed a bunch of structures.

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At first, I thought they might be graves – mental asylums often had on-site cemeteries for indigent patients:

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On closer inspection, they’re just picnic tables!

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I’d love to know if this is a newer addition, or if hospital workers used to gather here in the 40’s and 50’s for barbecues:

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Sadly, much of the Rockland staff was drafted during World War II, leaving non-qualified workers to take their place. This resulted in just 1 psychologist for every 300 patients. Infection spread, and the hospital soon became drastically overcrowded.

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As many of you pointed out, the harrowing conditions were documented in The Snake Pit, written in 1946 by Mary Jane Ward and based on her experiences incarcerated at Rockland State (a movie based on the book was not filmed at Rockland).

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The title, according to the dust jacket, comes from an ancient form of psychiatric treatment in which patients were thrown into actual snake pits in the hope that their sudden terror would cure their mental illness.

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Though presented as a fictional tale set at the Juniper Hill Asylum, The Snake Pit documents many of the very real forms of psychiatric treatment Ward experienced during her stay at Rockland. These included hydrotherapy, in which patients were forced into baths of either scalding or freezing water, electroshock therapy, insulin shock therapy, and of course, lobotomies.

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At the time, very little anesthetic was used during lobotomies; in fact, there weren’t even teeth clamps to prevent patients from biting their tongues. Surgical equipment included drills with 1-inch bits.

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By 1970, Rockland was largely an outpatient facility, and with the onset of psychotropic drugs, only now services the seriously ill.

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I’m glad to report that Rockland State is not in immediate danger of being razed. A reader updated me that plans to turn it into a senior citizen community fell through last year, and the town is seeking new options.

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I really hope Orangeburg decides to follow in the footsteps of Traverse City, Michigan, where an abandoned state hospital was saved through its conversion to commercial and residential space.

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It’s unfortunate the sun only stayed out for the first few pictures I took – Rockland is one of those places that looks great when a blue sky backgrounds its red clay roofs…and very bleak under a recent snowfall and overcast skies.

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I urge you to take a walk around the campus to enjoy it for yourself someday. It’s public property, so you won’t get in trouble (though entering buildings is illegal), and it’s literally a journey back in time. I promise, your imagination is going to have a field day with this place.

Finally, a look at the windows of Rockland State. I’m always fascinated by windows at mental asylums. For untold thousands of patients, these windows offered what must have been a torturous glimpse at a freedom they could not have.

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-SCOUT

PS – Much of my history came from this short 1999 piece in the NY Times, and is definitely worth a read.

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  1. Rachel Avatar
    Rachel

    My name was Patricia Ann Tooker when I lived in the Student Nurses dorm opposite the Children’s building. In 9/1969 I was enrolled in the RN Diploma Program there.

    As one of the other commenters mentioned, not all the Children that where housed there were ill. Some were Wards of New York State, because they were born to Mothers who were patients. If they had family, their Families did not want them. Those innocents and the dorm residents alike woke up to the same sound early every morning, blood curdling screams, coming from the Children’s building. It was many voices. The truth is that Children learn what they live. Those Wards of New York State had no healthy example. You want to make a Movie of this place, this tragedy, of this human suffering? Reading your comments, your lighthearted banter about Architecture. Please, out of respect for those innocent Children, if you must make your movie, remember those, who would more than likely rather forget, if they are lucid. Please don’t go for your 15 minutes of fame at their expense.

  2. joe fornaro Avatar

    i worked at rockland…bld.19..also butcher shop…store house…any body who remembers me?…can e-mail me….glad to hear from you…..joe f…

  3. pamela Avatar

    i looked and read over atleast 25 other sites re; letchworth and i will say this site (pt.1&2) had me holding my breath unable to read fast enough but seeing beautiful photos of the letchworth property. this site was great, no need for me to look or read any further. also glad the sr. center is a no go.

  4. pamela cooper Avatar

    looked and read thru atleast 25 other sites re; letchworth and i must say this (pt.1&2) left me holding my breath unable to scroll fast enough, looking at great photos that alone tell a story. no need for me to look or read any further.
    great job !!
    sincerley,
    pamela cooper

  5. Mary Ellen Avatar
    Mary Ellen

    I moved to Blauvelt in Nov 1958 and I distinctly remember the sirens going off whenever a pt supposedly escaped. I also remember when they stopped the alarms because the frequency was upsetting the residential neighborhoods. I also remember taking the bus from Convent Rd in Blauvelt to the movie theatre in Pearl River and how it meandered all through Rockland Psychiatric Hospital, picking up and dropping off people. (We kids used to scare each other by telling one another that they would not let us out of the hospital grounds. They also had a Catholic mass service on Sats at either 4 or 5pm that was open to the public and I remember going frequently.

  6. Russ Nelson Avatar

    The power plant was powered by coal, brought in via a railroad spur. Every state hospital was powered by coal through a central boiler plant (as far as I can tell).

  7. J Avatar
    J

    I grew up in Orangeburg and my parents were residents of the area for their entire lives. My dad worked at Rockland State Hospital for a short time as an orderly and was attacked by a patient after which he quit the job. My mother remembered the hospital as Rockland State Hospital for the Criminally Insane. I rode the bus through the campus and later drove through as it was a short cut from Convent Rd to Orangeburg Rd. Always a creepy place from my experience. I also remember the warnings of escaped patients. The architecture may be special but that place will always be bleak and scary to me.

  8. Twitcher Avatar
    Twitcher

    The Siren blares every night…The Ghosts of Letchworth,coming to get me…Forsaken hell is Brought to this once peaceful asylum…Leave Letchworth now or Forever parish in the Depths of the Siren…

  9. Jami Avatar
    Jami

    Fascinating! I would really love to see that place in the fall…

    1. Bob Avatar
      Bob

      I was in the tunnels everyday delivering food to Building 10 and working in the Bronx and Westchester units. Creepy for sure. Very dark and damp with elevators on each that were older than all of us. Stray cats could be seen now and then running in the tunnels. Never thought I’d get used to it but I did.

  10. Don Avatar
    Don

    Anyone ever go in the tunnels below the hospital?

    1. Bob M Avatar
      Bob M

      I was in the tunnels hundreds of times to deliver food to the wards in Building 10 from Kitchen 4. Very creepy no doubt but you got used to it. Cats running through all the time. I remember 1 light bulb halfway down the tunnel. It was like a Dracula movie everyday. I worked there almost 6 years. From January 1978 to September of 1983.

    2. Bob M Avatar
      Bob M

      I was also in the tunnels that led to Bronx and Westchester buildings. Gives me the shakes just thinking about it.

    3. Bob Avatar
      Bob

      I was in the tunnels many times. I delivered food from Kitchen 4 to Building 10 and also was in the tunnels that led to the Bronx and Westchester buildings from Kitchen 4. Kitchen 4 was on Second Ave. Stray cats, dripping water, creepy sounds, poorly lit, all cement, were all part of their charm. Creepy as hell but you did it everyday.

  11. SNA Avatar
    SNA

    Rockland State was a self-sustaining, little community. It had a police department and fire department, as well as a power plant and other “shops”. I’m sorry you didn’t take pictures of the area just outside the southern fence. This was an area where many of the staff “lived” in housing that was provided. Doctors and nurses would stay in these houses or dorms. Some of them are/were quite nice. Also, a little further south on Blaisdell Ave. (after crossing Veterans HIghway), there is indeed a “Potter’s Field” where many of the “residents” were laid to rest.

    Having grown up and lived in Blauvelt all of my life, I would love to see part of RPC “preserved” and converted into a museum. However, one of the reasons that it has not been sold, is because all of the buildings have a good amount of asbestos throughout. It would cost a developer or the state literally, millions of dollars to build there.

  12. Margaret Avatar
    Margaret

    Hello- I am a nursing instructor who uses the pictures to explain the history of mental health to today’s generation. I actually worked here for a while- in the Alcohol detox center. In the early days the alcoholics were thrown in with the mentally ill. In the 1970’s an alcohol detox and rehab were opened. There are supposed to be three cemetaries on the grounds and there was a built in pool also. Sadly the Catholic Church is just closing down. The last mass will be soon (Sept 2013). The Protestant church shared the faility with the Jewish Synagouge. Unfortunatly the state swung the pedulum too far and put too many patients into the streets. When I see terrible gun crimes happening at schools I think back to Rockland and wish that it was still functioning. It had 9000 patients at one time. 1000 when I worked there in the early 1980’s. I believe part of it is still open and functioning at present. I also rode the bus in and out of it as we travelled to the Nanuet mall. As a nursing student i did rotations here. The patients charts were so thick and some even had pictures in there of them as children.

  13. April Trinka Avatar
    April Trinka

    I used to be a patient in the new buildings. I used to love sneaking in the old buildings. There still is torture and injustice in today’s psych hospitals. You never really hear about it because the ones reporting it are considered mentally unfit.

  14. Christa Maloney Avatar
    Christa Maloney

    My aunt found out through ancestry.com , that my grandmother had a brother we didn’t know about. He was institutionalized at Rockland State Hospital from at least 1940, til 1960’s or later. He was born in1918. Trying to find out now where he was buried. Trying to find out where he might have went after being deinstitutionalized from Rockland. Any way to obtain records from there? Anyone that was there during that time remember my great uncle Nathan Rose? We also have no idea why he was there or what his illness was. Please email me if you have any info. thanks.

    christamaloney@gmail.com

  15. Someone Avatar
    Someone

    I went to Rocklands Children Psyc as a child. Very nightmarish time. But I was a problem child and so where a few of the others. We even had a song that we got from Peter Pan, and changed it for RCPC. It went something like I don’t want to behave I’m an RCPC kid.

    1. Douglas Zanelli Avatar
      Douglas Zanelli

      What year i was there in the 60ies

  16. Pete Avatar
    Pete

    The building that you pointed out that resembled an old stable by the basketball courts used to be a fully functioning fire station. The Orangeburg Fire Department was the primary company that would respond to incidents in the district, including Rockland Psych. The fire station on the grounds of the facility was the secondary company whose district was limited to just the facility itself. The two companies operated together at incidents on the grounds. Even Orangeburg’s older trucks were marked with a “1”, identifying themselves as the primary while the Psych Center’s trucks were marked with a “2”
    1985 Hahn engine with the “1” insignia
    http://www.angelfire.com/ny3/orangeburgfire/111750new.jpg

  17. Tom Moore Avatar
    Tom Moore

    Does anyone know if this is where Louise Avedon (sister of fashion photographer Richard Avedon) was confined when she died in 1968? She was only 41 at the time and I am wondering if her death was by suicide or something else. I believe she’d been diagnosed with schizophrenia, a condition that began manifesting itself in her late teens.

  18. john Avatar
    john

    what year was you there I was there from 1959-1964 I was in Building 35.

  19. Debbie Avatar
    Debbie

    A wee depressing reading this from a purely “archeological” stance. Real people lived their lives there. My sister lived in the new wing for almost 2 years less than a decade back. It’s actually a very good hospital, and while there are in fact severely mentally ill people there, many who land there do so simply because there is a shortage of available housing for them. So they live on campus, awaiting residency in a local group home.

    The thought of converting it to some posh place for rich folk frankly disgusts me. If anyone should benefit from any former amenities there, it’s the thousands of mentally ill who are marginalized by society and could truly benefit from a well-equipped, well-managed facility that can house and mainstream them. These people are as forgotten as the very souls who died on these grounds.

    If it’s our desire to keep razing needed hospitals and slap up more glass buildings for the rich, surely we have lost the plot.

  20. Douglas Zanelli Avatar
    Douglas Zanelli

    I was an inmate there from time of 1961 till 1965 from the time I was 10yrs old till 16yrs old in bldg 32 , 37 & 58 and it was pure hell I still am troubled by my lost childhood that I think it made me a better father and grandfather I am so troubled by this place 50yrs later I am retired now bu think of it everyday