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Asylum,
Prison, and Poorhouse
The Writings
and Reform Work of Dorothea Dix in Illinios
David
L. Lightner
June
ISBN
0-8093-2163-7 / paper / $29.50s
128 pages / 5.5 X 8.5
American History
This illustrated collection of annotated newspaper articles and memorials
by Dorothea Dix provides a forum for the great mid-nineteenth-century
humanitarian and reformer to speak for herself.
Dorothea Lynde Dix (1802 - 87) was perhaps the most famous and admired
woman in America for much of the nineteenth century. Beginning in the
early 1840s, she launched a personal crusade to persuade the various states
to provide humane care and effective treatment for the mentally ill by
funding specialized hospitals for that purpose. The appalling conditions
endured by most mentally ill inmates in prisons, jails, and poorhouses
led her to take an active interest also in prison reform and in efforts
to ameliorate poverty.
In 184647 Dix brought her crusade to Illinois. She presented two lengthy
memorials to the legislature, the first describing conditions at the state
penitentiary at Alton and the second discussing the sufferings of the
insane and urging the establishment of a state hospital for their care.
She also wrote a series of newspaper articles detailing conditions in
the jails and poorhouses of many Illinois communities.
These long-forgotten documents, which appear in unabridged form in this
book, contain a wealth of information on the living conditions of some
of the most unfortunate inhabitants of Illinois. In his preface, David
L. Lightner describes some of the vivid images that emerge from Dorothea
Dix's descriptions of social conditions in Illinois a century and a half
ago: "A helpless maniac confined throughout the bitter cold of winter
to a dark and filthy pit. Prison inmates chained in hallways and cellars
because no more men can be squeezed into the dank and airless cells. Aged
paupers auctioned off by county officers to whoever will maintain them
at the lowest cost."
Lightner provides an introduction to every document, placing each memorial
and newspaper article in its proper social and historical context. He
also furnishes detailed notes, making these documents readily accessible
to readers a century and a half later. In his final chapter, Lightner
assesses both the immediate and the continuing impact of Dix's work.
David L. Lightner teaches American history in the Department of
History and Classics at the University of Alberta. He is the author of
Labor on the Illinois Central Railroad, 18521900: The Evolution of an
Industrial Environment.
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