Jump to content

Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute

Coordinates: 36°06′23″N 86°40′39″W / 36.1064°N 86.6775°W / 36.1064; -86.6775
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Citation bot (talk | contribs) at 20:16, 17 November 2020 (Alter: url. URLs might have been internationalized/anonymized. Add: isbn, date. Correct ISBN10 to ISBN13. | You can use this bot yourself. Report bugs here. | Suggested by AManWithNoPlan | All pages linked from cached copy of User:AManWithNoPlan/sandbox2 | via #UCB_webform_linked 404/3968). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

USGS aerial photo of the original hospital campus (1997)

The Middle Tennessee Mental Health Institute, originally known as the Tennessee Hospital for the Insane and later as the Central State Hospital for the Insane, was a psychiatric hospital located in Nashville, Tennessee.

History

In 1845, the patient Green Grimes wrote the book A Secret Worth Knowing, extolling the hospital.[1]

After visiting Tennessee's first mental health facility, the Tennessee Lunatic Asylum, in November 1847, Dorothea Dix urged the state legislature to replace the unfit facility.[2] The new facility, named Central State Hospital for the Insane, opened in 1852 in southeast Nashville, Tennessee on the southwest corner of Murfreesboro Road and Donelson Pike.

In 1891, much of the building burnt down.[3]

In 1963, the Tennessee Neuropsychiatric Institute was formed by Vanderbilt University and its research facility was located at Central State.

In 1995, the hospital moved to new facilities on Stewarts Ferry Pike. The original hospital buildings were demolished in 1999 to make way for Dell to build a large computer assembly plant.[4]

References

  1. ^ Grimes, Green (1845). A secret worth knowing: a treatise on the most important subject in the world, simply to say, insanity : the only work of the kind in the United States, or, perhaps, in the known world, founded on general observation and truth. Nashville, Tenn.
  2. ^ Carroll Van West, ed. (1998). "Tennessee Lunatic Asylum". Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture. Thomas Nelson. ISBN 1-55853-599-3. Archived from the original on 2007-06-10.
  3. ^ Coggins, Allen (15 January 2012). Tennessee Tragedies: Natural, Technological, and Societal Disasters in The Volunteer State. The University of Tennessee Press. p. 106. ISBN 9781572338296.
  4. ^ Lawson, Richard (December 7, 1999). "Dell Chooses Company to Build Service, Logistics Center". The Tennessean.

36°06′23″N 86°40′39″W / 36.1064°N 86.6775°W / 36.1064; -86.6775