For nearly 80 years, Pennhurst State School and Hospital was a reminder of how society viewed and treated people with intellectual disabilities. Over its existence, Pennhurst was home to more than 10,600 people. Many spent d...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

For nearly 80 years, Pennhurst State School and Hospital was a reminder of how society viewed and treated people with intellectual disabilities. Over its existence, Pennhurst was home to more than 10,600 people. Many spent decades there, working to keep the institution running by performing various jobs. While some enjoyed the lives they had fashioned for themselves at Pennhurst, for many others, life there was crushing. Pennhurst also played a central role in the lives of its employees and in the rural Pennsylvania community where it was located. Controversy plagued the institution for its entire existence, and it is remembered primarily as a place where bad things happened. However, it was much more than that. This book provides a window into that separate world, reminding those who were part of it of what they saw and did there and giving those who know only what they have heard or seen a different picture of what Pennhurst truly was.

Similar Products

Life in the Victorian Asylum: The World of Nineteenth Century Mental Health CareThe Lives They Left Behind: Suitcases from a State Hospital AtticThe Hospital: How I survived the secret child experiments at Aston HallLunatic: The Rise and Fall of an American AsylumMental Ward: Stories from the AsylumLetters From The Looney Bin (Book 1)Insane Asylums: A Detailed Synopsis Of Their History And Mistreatment Of Patients (Psychopath, Sociopath, Mental Illness, Personality Disorders, Mental Health, Insanity Book 3)