Texas A&M University Press


Life at the Texas State Lunatic Asylum,
1857–1997

by Sarah C. Sitton

"For the better part of a century, superintendents, medical staff, modes of treatment, and patients came and went, but life in the wards and on the grounds went on much the same. Secure behind its fences, the self-contained world of the asylum cycled through its daily and yearly rounds and passed on its way largely unchanged. The experience of living and working in the asylum altered little until deinstitutionalization emptied its halls. Presently, the hospital houses fewer than three hundred inpatients. Most of its spacious grounds have been leased for commercial and residential development, and its historic administrative building is in dire need of restoration. By the time of my study, many of the hospital's records had been lost or destroyed, and much evidence resided only in living memory."—from the Preface
The nineteenth-century "cult of curability" engendered the optimistic belief that mental illness could be cured under ideal conditions—removal from the stresses of everyday life to asylum, a pleasant, well-regulated environment where healthy meals, daily exercise, and social contact were the norm. This utopian view led to the reform and establishment of lunatic asylums throughout the United States. The Texas State Lunatic Asylum (later called the Austin State Hospital) followed national trends, and its history documents national mental health practices in microcosm.

Drawing on diverse sources—patient records from the nineteenth century, papers and reports of the institution's various superintendents, transcripts of interviews of former employees, newspaper accounts, personal memoirs, and interviews—Sarah C. Sitton has recreated what life in "our little town" was like from the institution's opening in 1861 to its deinstitutionalization in the 1980s and 1990s.

For more than a century, the asylum community resembled a self-sufficient village complete with its own blacksmith shop, icehouse, movie theater, brass band, baseball team, and undertakers. Beautifully landscaped grounds and gravel lanes attracted locals for Sunday carriage drives. Patients tended livestock, tilled gardens, helped prepare meals, and cleaned wards. Their routines might include weekly dances and religious services, as well as cold tubs, paraldehyde, and electroshock. Employees, from the superintendent on down, lived on the grounds, and their children grew up "with inmates for playmates." While the superintendent exercised almost feudal power, deciding if staff could date or marry, a multigenerational "clan" of several interlinked families controlled its day-to-day operations for decades.

With the current emphasis on community-based care for the mentally ill and the negative consequences of deinstitutionalization increasingly apparent, the debate on how best to care for the state's and the nation's mentally ill continues.

This examination offers historical and practical insights which will be of interest to practitioners and policy makers in the field of mental health as well as to individuals interested in the history of the state of Texas.

SARAH C. SITTON is an associate professor of psychology at St. Edward's University in Austin, Texas. Her interest in the Austin State Hospital grew out of research she conducted for Austin's Hyde Park: The First Fifty Years, 1891–1941.

Number Eighty-two: The Centennial Series of the Association of Former Students, Texas A&M University


Life at the Texas State Lunatic Asylum, 1857–1997
ISBN 0-89096-859-4
$34.95s

6 1/8x9 1/4. 256 pp. 24 b&w photos. Bib. Index.
Texas History. Medical Ethics/Humanities. Public Health.

Publication Date: May 1999.



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