• About
  • Archer Paranormal Investigations (API)
  • Contact
  • Media
  • The Haunted Librarian Show

The Haunted Librarian

~ Researching, investigating, and writing about the paranormal.

The Haunted Librarian

Category Archives: Hospitals

This Week on Archer Paranormal Radio

11 Tuesday Mar 2014

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Conferences, Famous Locations, Ghost Hunting, Hospitals, Hotels & Motels, Live Paranormal, Paranormal, Radio Show, Universities

≈ Comments Off on This Week on Archer Paranormal Radio

Tags

Ghost Hunting, ghostock, hotels, sanatorium, unmarked graves, waverley hills, waverly hills

Waverly Hills Sanatorium

Waverly Hills Sanatorium

This week on the Archer Paranormal Radio:

1. Owners of Waverly Hills Sanatorium want to convert it to a 4-star hotel. Would you book a room?

2. In the News: Lost to History. University discovers 2,000+ unmarked graves in construction expansion.

3. Parting thoughts from GhoStock 2014.

4. Why attending paranormal conferences enhances your education.

Tune in to Archer Paranormal Radio every Thursday evening at 7 pm EST on www.liveparanormal.com.

Lost to History

09 Sunday Mar 2014

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Cemeteries, Hospitals, Radio Show, Universities

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

asylum, kirkbride plan, unmarked graves

Mississippi State Lunatic Asylum

Mississippi State Lunatic Asylum

Lost to History

Abandoned cemeteries are lost to history. I’ve previously blogged on this topic; however, the subject-matter has made headlines in the past month. The University of Mississippi Medical Center broke ground for an expansion and discovered the mother lode of coffins. Before it was not uncommon for construction workers to uncover a few gravesites. In fact, this university has had its fair share of discoveries, but the numbers hovered well below 100. This recent discovery is in the thousands—roughly 2,000 unmarked pauper-type coffins.

History: The Mississippi State Lunatic Asylum was constructed based on the Kirkbride Plan, where patient areas were to be bright and open. The facility opened on January 8, 1855. One hundred and fifty (150) patients were housed there then. In 1892, a fire broke out; however, only one person was killed. The Kirkbride Plan was abandoned at the turn of the century. At its peak, the asylum housed over 2,500 patients—well above the proscribed limits of care. The facility was antiquated and lacked sufficient funding when it closed in 1935. The building was demolished in 1954.

Kirkbride Plan

Kirkbride Plan

Questions quickly mounted as who were these people and where did they come from. Historians dismissed the possibility of Civil War soldiers being buried there. Although the institute was seized and the property pilfered, the area did not see significant battle. State archives also eliminated the possibility that it was a slave cemetery.

A team of anthropologists determined that the graves were connected to the asylum because the remains lacked personal effects. The bodies were either pitched into the wooden coffins in the nude or with a simple shroud. Initially, the number of coffins was estimated at 1,000. Ground-penetrating radar was used to survey the area. More coffins were discovered. Today the number sits at 2,000.

Re-interment of the bodies is cost prohibited. Officials state that the cost would surpass $3 million dollars. For the time being, the bodies will remain where they are. The expansion project has been halted while another viable location is identified. But ancestors are still seeking answers.

Although the building is gone, the asylum records remain. The state archive has 16 bound volumes of handwritten records detailing every patient. Digitizing the records will take years. Some answers will have to wait.

 

Unmarked Graves

Unmarked Graves

 

Coming Soon: Hotel Waverly Hills Sanatorium

03 Monday Mar 2014

Posted by The Haunted Librarian in Diseases, Famous Locations, Ghost Hunting, Hospitals, Hotels & Motels, Paranormal

≈ 6 Comments

Tags

hospital, hotels, kentucky, sanatorium, tb, tuberculosis, waverley hills, waverly hills

Waverly Hills Sanatorium

Postcard from Waverly Hills Sanatorium

Coming Soon: Hotel Waverly Hills Sanatorium

Charlie and Tina Mattingly, current owners of the infamous Waverly Hills Sanatorium, located at 4400 Paralee Lane, Louisville, Kentucky, announced plans to open a 4-star, 120-room hotel catering to the paranormal connoisseur. But would I book a room?

First, a little history:

Major Thomas H. Hays purchased the property in 1883. He built a modest schoolhouse and hired Miss Lizzie Lee Harris to educate his children. Miss Harris christened the schoolhouse “Waverley School” because of her fondness for Sir Walter Scott’s Waverley novels. Major Hays renamed the entire estate Waverley Hills. When the Board of Tuberculosis purchased the land, they kept the name but changed the spelling to “Waverly.”

Tuberculosis (TB) was known as “The White Plague.” It ran rampant in the early 1900s and prompted the opening of a sanatorium. In its heyday, the 2-story Waverley Hills accommodated 130 patients, adults and children. TB persisted. In 1924, construction commenced to build a 5-story, 400 bed facility. The renovated facility opened on October 17, 1926. However, the popularity of the prescription medication streptomycin decreased the need for extended hospital stays. This led to a drastic decline in patients. The sanatorium closed in 1961.

The sanatorium reopened as the Woodhaven Geriatric Center. Excessive reports of patient abuse led the state to close the facility in 19801982 (Websites vary). A tunnel runs underneath the building and allowed for the convenient concealment of dead bodies from patients.

Subsequent owners sought to reopen the building as a maximum security prison and a religious facility, which would have included a colossal statue of Jesus Christ. Both plans failed.

Today, the Mattingly’s run ghost tours at Waverly. Recently a proposed zoning change request passed. The submitted plans show a restaurant, conference venue, 120-rooms, museum, and liquor bottling business. Ghost tours would continue. Waverly Hills attracts over 10,000 visitors annually. But it begs the question: Would I book a room?

Honestly, I don’t know. Part of me wants to think that I would, but the other half knows that I never travel alone. So, my family would have to go along. Doubtful. That’s a lot of convincing on my part. Would it be worth it? Again, doubtful.

If Waverly Hills is one of the most haunted places on the earth, why would I submit myself to continual paranormal activity? I like my haunts in short bursts. That’s why I don’t live in a haunted house. Well, it’s one reason why I don’t. Here are some additional reasons why I would not book a room:

Room 502: Ghost Hunters conducted an investigation claiming that an unmarried but pregnant nurse hanged herself in Room 502. This story is unconfirmed and highly suspect; I cannot find anything that substantiates it. Still, no thanks.

Suicidal Nurse: Another urban legend is another nurse attempted suicide by slitting her wrists and running through the hospital trailing blood. Another generic story, but I still don’t want to see that at a conference.

High Death Rate: Rumors of exceptionally high death rates to the tune of 62,000 people have circulated over the years. Historical research brings that figure way down to roughly 8,000. Still too many deaths for me.

Existence of the “Body Chute”: While I understand the need and agree to the convenience, I am not compelled to body slide down the chute. Nor do I want to tour a tunnel of death.

Don’t get me wrong. I love to tour abandoned buildings. I think that is part of the allure to Waverly Hills—the graffiti and shear emptiness. By covering the walls and remodeling the building, the Mattingly’s are covering the true essence of Waverly Hills. A museum cannot capture that type of visual emotion. I think the restoration and 4-star hotel concept misses the point. Ghost hunters like old, abandoned buildings. It’s all part of the hunt.

Waverly Hills Sanatorium

Waverly Hills Sanatorium

Staff at Waverly Hills Sanatorium

Staff at Waverly Hills Sanatorium

Newer posts →

Registered Trademark

The Haunted Librarian

The Haunted Librarian

The Haunted Librarian

Gainesville, Florida

Enter your email address to follow this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

Archives

Categories

Top 50 Paranormal Blogs & Websites

Top 15 Paranormal Blogs of 2019

Banners for Top 15 Paranormal Blogs of 2019

A WordPress.com Website.

  • Subscribe Subscribed
    • The Haunted Librarian
    • Join 643 other subscribers
    • Already have a WordPress.com account? Log in now.
    • The Haunted Librarian
    • Subscribe Subscribed
    • Sign up
    • Log in
    • Report this content
    • View site in Reader
    • Manage subscriptions
    • Collapse this bar
 

Loading Comments...
 

You must be logged in to post a comment.