Eloise (psychiatric hospital)

Eloise Psychiatric Hospital was a large complex located in Westland, Michigan. It was named after Eloise Dickerson Davock,[1][2][3][4] the daughter of Detroit's postmaster.

Eloise Psychiatric Hospital
Map
Former namesWayne County Poor House
General information
Address30712 Michigan Ave.
Town or cityWestland, Michigan
Coordinates42°17′14″N 83°20′33″W / 42.2873°N 83.3426°W / 42.2873; -83.3426
Named forEloise Dickerson Davock[1]

It operated from 1839 to early 1982. Starting out as a poor house and farm, it eventually developed into an asylum, sanatorium and hospital. In 1832 it was called the Wayne County Poorhouse; in 1872 it was the Wayne County Alms House; in 1886 it was referred to simply as the Wayne County House. In 1913 there were three divisions: The Eloise Hospital (Mental Hospital), the Eloise Infirmary (Poorhouse) and the Eloise Sanatorium (T.B. Hospital) which were collectively called Eloise. In 1945 it was named Wayne County General Hospital and Infirmary at Eloise, Michigan. In 1974 it had two divisions - the Wayne County General Hospital and the Wayne County Psychiatric Hospital. In 1979 it was officially called Wayne County General Hospital with the psychiatric division closing in 1982.[5] In its prime, Eloise consisted of 78 buildings on 902 acres with 10,000 patients along with 2,000 staff. It was the largest psychiatric facility in the United States. Only five of the 78 buildings and the Eloise Cemetery remain. The firehouse, power plant, commissary and D buildings still stand as of July, 2023. The bakery burned down due to arson in 2016.

History

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The Wayne County Poor House was founded in 1832. It was located at Gratiot and Mt. Elliott Avenues in Hamtramck Township, two miles from the Detroit city limits. By 1834 the poorhouse was in bad condition and 280 acres (110 ha) in Nankin Township were purchased. The Black Horse Tavern, which served as a stagecoach stop between Detroit and Chicago, was located on the property. In those days it was a two-day stagecoach ride from Hamtramck Township to Nankin Township. The register shows that on April 11, 1839, 35 people were transferred from the poorhouse in Hamtramck Township to the new one in Nankin Township. One hundred eleven apparently refused to go to the "awful wilderness." Many were children, and homes among the residents of the city may have been found for them.[1] The log cabin, which was formerly the Black Horse Tavern, became the keeper's quarters, and in 1839 an A-frame building was put up to house the inmates — more appropriately termed, by today's standards, patients. An A-frame cookhouse was erected in the back of the log building and was used for cooking by the inmates, the staff and the keeper's family.[2]

The complex was self-sufficient. It had its own police and fire departments along with a railroad and trolley system. It included a bakery, amusement hall, laundry facility, post office and a power plant. It had its own farm, which included a dairy herd, dairy barns, piggery, root cellar, tobacco curing building and greenhouses. Patients came from Detroit and other communities to have x-rays done.[6] It also housed the first kidney dialysis unit in the State of Michigan and pioneered the use of music therapy. Staff also used hydrotherapy, shock therapy and insulin therapy to treat patients.

As the years went on, the institution grew larger and larger, a reflection of the population increases of the Detroit area. From only 35 residents in 1839, the complex grew to about 10,000 residents at its peak during the Great Depression. Slowly over the next 40 years, Eloise's population decreased. The farm operations ceased in 1958 and some of the large psychiatric buildings were vacated in 1973. The psychiatric division started closing in 1977, and the last patients were transferred out in 1982 when the State of Michigan took over. The general hospital closed in 1986.

Inventor Elijah McCoy may be its most famous former resident. He spent a year prior to his death as a patient in the Eloise Infirmary. There were other well-known people who died at Eloise including several baseball players, among them Jul Kustus, Larry LeJeune, Charlie Krause and Marty Kavanagh. Musician Horace Flinders was also a patient and received music therapy.[7][8]

Eloise today

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Kay Beard Building

Today the land that once was Eloise has been developed into a strip mall, golf course and condominiums. However, the "D" Building (the Kay Beard Building) is still in use. It was used for psychiatric admissions, housed 400 patients and had living quarters for some employees like the Catholic chaplain. Later it was used by the Wayne County administration until 2016. The old commissary building is currently being used as a family homeless shelter.

The firehouse (the former psychiatric facility laundry) and the power plant are still standing in decay. The bakery was heavily damaged by arson in April 2016, with charred ruins still standing as of March 16, 2021. However, there are future plans to raze and remove the remainder.

The Eloise smokestack, — with the emblazoned Eloise in brick, — was deemed a hazard and demolished in 2006.[9][10]

In 1979, the Walter P. Reuther Psychiatric Hospital was opened. It is located near the northwest end of the former Eloise property, just southeast of the intersection of Merriman and Palmer Roads. The facility is currently operated by the Michigan Department of Community Health.[11]

In 1996, Oakwood Health System (later merged into Beaumont Health) opened an outpatient facility, the Adams Child & Adolescent Health Center, on the corner of Merriman and Palmer near Reuther Hospital.[12] Both facilities have Palmer Road addresses.

Eloise is featured in the book Annie's Ghosts: A Journey Into a Family Secret by Steve Luxenberg, which is about Luxenberg's secret aunt who was committed to the Eloise psychiatric hospital in the 1940s.[13][14]

The site is marked by a Michigan Historic Marker.[15]

The site and the adjoining Eloise Cemetery are reputed to be haunted.[16][17]

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It also inspired the horror movie Eloise. The film stars Eliza Dushku, Robert Patrick, Chace Crawford, Brandon T. Jackson, Nicole Forester, and P. J. Byrne. The film was released on February 3, 2017, by Vertical Entertainment.

It was featured in Expedition X: Ghosts of Eloise Asylum Part 1 and Part 2. Released August 9, 2023. Starring Josh Gates, Phil Torres and Jessica Chobot.

References

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Citations

  1. ^ a b c *Keenan, Stanislas M. (August 25, 2017) [1913]. History of Eloise (PDF) (Paperback). Detroit: Thos. Smith Press, Andesite Press. pp. 15, 17–20. ISBN 978-1376308242. Retrieved May 10, 2014.
  2. ^ a b Ibbotson, Patricia (2002). Eloise Dickerson Davock. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-1954-5. Retrieved May 9, 2014. {{cite book}}: |work= ignored (help)
  3. ^ "Entrance to Eloise Hospital, photograph of oil painting, Eloise with" (photograph). Retrieved May 9, 2014. St. Bernard
  4. ^ Hawley, Darlene (January 12, 2014). "History of Eloise". The Wayne Dispatch. Archived from the original on May 12, 2014. Retrieved May 9, 2014.
  5. ^ Clark, Alvin C. (1982). A History of the Wayne County Infirmary, Psychiatric, and General Hospital Complex at Eloise, Michigan. Detroit: Wayne County General Hospital.
  6. ^ Ibbotson, Patricia (2004). Detroit's Hospitals, Healers and Helpers. Charleston, SC: Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-3223-1.
  7. ^ "Genius In An Asylum 1946" (Film). British Pathé News. April 15, 1946. Retrieved May 11, 2014.
  8. ^ "Genius In An Asylum 1946" (Film). British Pathé News/British Universities Film & Video Council. April 15, 1946. Retrieved May 11, 2014.
  9. ^ "Old Eloise Asylum Smokestack From Roof" (photograph). Archived from the original on January 16, 2018. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  10. ^ "Old Eloise Smokestack After Chunk Fell Off In 2005" (photograph). Archived from the original on October 3, 2023. Retrieved May 9, 2012.
  11. ^ "Walter P. Reuther Psychiatric Hospital". Michigan Department of Community Health. Retrieved May 5, 2014.
  12. ^ "Oakwood Adams Child & Adolescent Health Center". Oakwood Health System. Retrieved May 5, 2014.
  13. ^ See photo in Eloise: Poorhouse, Farm, Asylum and Hospital, page 109
  14. ^ Luxenberg, Steve (May 11, 2010). Annie's Ghosts: A Journey Into a Family Secret (paperback) (Reprint ed.). New York: Hyperion. pp. 432. ISBN 978-1401310196.
  15. ^ "Eloise". Michigan Historical Markers Registered Site S0699. 2007. Archived from the original on May 9, 2014. Retrieved May 4, 2014.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: unfit URL (link)
  16. ^ Wolf, Baldassarro R.; Baldassarro, R. Wolf (2010-04-13). A Ghost Hunter's Field Guide. Lulu.com. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-557-05094-9.
  17. ^ "Wayne County Poor House - Eloise Asylum | Haunting America". 2014-05-09. Archived from the original on 2014-05-09. Retrieved 2023-10-09.

References

Further reading

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