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Were U.S. Insane Asylums Used to Eliminate the TARTARIANS In the Late 1900's ?!?

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Were U.S. Insane Asylums Used to Eliminate the TARTARIANS In the Late 1900's ?!?
Nov 26, 2019. aplanetruth 4u
The History of Asylums in the 1800s
https://study.com/academy/lesson/the-history-of-asylums-in-the-1800s.html

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Please include promote, tune, and support and thank you in my comments! Killings need a harsh words spoken and lines up broken Bones for ages help me outfitting Heavens waiting It's time to move on Crossing that bridge with lessons I've learned Play in the fire and I can't immerse I'm in a no-watch or go in through But time is the space between me and you Life can resound in those days Just say die, not I would be pessimistic In your mind, we can walk across one Please don't cry, it's just a prayer for the dying Hey folks, welcome to another video from a plain truth for you Well, we're continuing on the Tartarian Empire Demolition destruction genocide what happened to them and their magnificent structures that seem to have been taken over by the Roman Catholics the Roman office again the book by Fumenko history Science or fiction the Russian scholars is a must read to understand what we're talking about here in the previous video I did on this I showed how the railroads in the 1850s, 1860s, 1870s in California make no sense at all if it was horse and buggy days they had built over 2000 miles of rail all over northern and more So northern California as well when supposedly they came over here to find gold so a lady Leah Stewart I want to give thanks to and shout out to for Lerning me and also inspired me to get a spark which I had in the back of my head about what happened here in California Marine County where I grew up as well which will get into a little later but I just want to cover the mental institutions the insane Assiles because I think this is where they hid a lot of the people and killed them in creating these insane Assilems taking over the Targaryen buildings and then creating a silence so no one would question it and if you did you were considered insane Anyway, so let's get into it 19th century was a time of reform in the mental health field the moral treatment theory of psychiatry sought to minimize the use of restraints Encourage a level of self-sufficiency and basically treat the insane as humans instead of animals This new line of thinking led to the building of large scale asylum structures that still stand today Despite some early successes the 19th century mental institutions often fell short of their utopian goals So you could be dunked in water hey water boarded nothing new onto the sun folks and then they built these buildings in this design And this guy Thomas story Kirk bride will get into in a minute to design the assilums You could be strapped to the tranquilizing chair for days tranquilizing chair strapped for days that would help insane wouldn't it Wouldn't make them feel better you could be forced into a straight jacket where you were sitting there He used to replace iron and chains straight jacks at gay patients that do agree a freement freedom but preventing them from hurting themselves or others And then you'd probably be left there for the rest of your life I don't know what those rods are in the back of the person here what they're trying to do But there were there were very real cures for insanity in the 18 1800s people often got better or they didn't using waterboarding It was up to the doctor to determine whether a patient was cured if the doctor said the patient was still insane They were stuck there no matter how hard they argued the case you could be locked in a self-sufficient city Look at the building folks tartarian this is an insane asylum in the 1800s Silesms were usually built in isolated places which we're going to find is not true they'd have their own bakeries butchers and dairy shops By the time of Edison men many even generated their own electricity This is for the insane in the 1800s how many were there? Oh there were a lot of insane people that were put in the insane asylum before the institutional push the asylum patient population England was a 10,000 By the end of the institutionalized institutionalization push it was over 100,000 You would follow a strict routine don't they look happy? Assignments became overcrowded in the 19th century and the structure of treatment shifted away from the individual care and more towards hurting people and hurting Life at the sign was based on routines patient get up in the morning leave the rooms be ushered into common places Sometimes they would be paraded around the grounds in between strictly scheduled communal meals and churros sounds like a prison to me You get bored you didn't order allowed any books you were allowed any reading materials Overcrowding made it virtually impossible Yada yada so let's get over to this guy Thomas Kirkbride Thomas Story Kirkbride 1809 to 1883 was a physician advocate for the mentally ill and founder of the association of medical superintendents of American institutions for the insane a precursor to the American psychiatric association Born into a Quaker family in Pennsylvania he received his medical degree from the University of Pennsylvania Jesuit school 1832 He had his own practice in 1840 he became superintendent of the Pennsylvania hospitals for the insane If you're in your sanity does that mean you're insane Kirkbride pioneered what would be known as the Kirkbride plan to improve medical care for the insane as a standardization for buildings that house the patient Kirkbride was an advocate of building hospitals for the mentally ill in a style which he believed promoted recovery and healing The style we used on many late 19th century hospitals including Saint Elizabeth's Hospital in Washington DC And many of those buildings designed by leading architects leading architects are designing insane assignments that's what they're saying here So let's look at one of Elizabeth Hospital oh my gosh look at the look at the figurehead of Saint Elizabeth's Hospital in Hitchcock Hall And we'll get into a few more center building for Saint Elizabeth's the oldest on campus has appeared in the early of 20th century Tarterian folks look at the design of this thing all Tarterian Washington DC and only patient 1917 Here's the map topographical 1860 look at how big the buildings are 1860 how many insane are they holding 1937 the West Campus So Saint Elizabeth's Hospital open 1855 federally operated psychiatric hospital the first one housing over 8,000 patients in the peak of 1850s or I'm sorry 1950s Saint Elizabeth's Hospital founded August 1852 with a hundred grand for the indigent residents of the district of Columbia and members of the US Army and Navy with Braille Nielness Isn't that interesting that it wasn't until the organic act of February 21st 1871 that Washington DC was even created with Kapedia lies They just lie all right how about another one we got going on here Traverse City Hospital in Traverse City Michigan Look at this building folks to house the criminally insane are you insane for saying this is insane for them to do this Look at these buildings Tarterian obviously And this one the history of the northern Michigan asylum was established in 1881 as the demand for a third psychiatric hospital addition to those in Kalamazoo Michigan and Pontiac Michigan began to grow Are you kidding me the hospital open in 1885 with 43 residents they're saying this is 1930 how many residences can be in those buildings here So this is from psychology today an American mental asylum and remnant of history the massive state hospitals of yesterday are a piece of psychiatric history Here you can see the Tarterian design again at one point well one point they said in 1850s half a million Americans were confined to state psychiatric but we're not concerned with that Dorothea Dix is chiefly responsible for the mass construction of state mental hospitals in the US in 1880s Dorothea Dix I know for scrolling down you see this guy Kirk bride again showing the buildings this is a western state hospital in western West Virginia Tarterian Building as a cure largest psyche has for psyche act hospital in the world Pilgrim House 13,000 875 patients that was in Brentwood, New York Here we see the one we just talked about in Traverse Michigan Traverse City Michigan and there are many more you guys can look them up and they're all across the country as well But what I want to get into is my home state and how they got all the way out to the west coast during the horse and buggy days of the 1850s The Agnews Development Center was the psychiatric and medical care facility located in Santa Clara, California What else is in Santa Clara, California? Why we have Santa Clara University and the Jesuit theological school Igniting the flames of Jesuit spirituality what's happening here in California about flames founded in 1548 Oh by the way Governor Newsom California governor he went to the school Santa Clara University Oh yeah and governor former governor Jerry Brown former minister Jesuit minister he went there as well So getting back to this we have the Agnews Center right down the road center was expanded include second campus two miles It was the largest institution by earlier 20th century so early at 20th century Agnews boasted the largest institutional population for the insane and South San Francisco served by its own train station Which stood at the west end of Palm Drive with the station building remained until vandalism and a fire you see this throughout the fire precipitated demolition in 1900s It was expanded to the eastern San Jose here you see a current picture of the clock tower again Tarterian design And going down prior to 1906 the Agnews State Hospital constructed in 1885 was modeled after the Kirk Kirk bride plan and designed by architect Theodore Lenzan the building was destroyed by the 1906 San Francisco earthquake fire Agnews became infamous as the site of Santa Clara Valley's greatest laugh of life resulting from the earthquake how convenient 117 patients and staff were killed and buried in mass graves on the site you find it most of these insane asylums they all had cemeteries where they buried them on site Agnews was rebuilt in the Mediterranean Mediterranean revival architecture styles of the mission revival spanish cloney revival in a layout resembling a college campus of two story buildings Here's where it gets interesting again the original campus was closed in 1998 the parcel the campus went to son micro systems the other part went to Oracle Larry Ellison these are your big CEOs of the corporations in Silicon Valley taking over the properties of the insane asylum who's really insane and silent now all right more in California So bringing it home to where I grew up rain county is across the Golden Gate bridge on the other side of San Francisco and this is from 1891 and this is what first got me started on this information Ryn was the name of the famous chief of the lockah to it Indians well the me walk Indians also were here but that's another story and again this was published 1891 after having vanquished the spaniards and several skirmishes that took place between 1815 and 1824 he was finally captured by his enemies so the spaniards were here in 1815 make a note of that Ryn took shelter on a smile island in the bay of San Francisco communicated his name to the mainland adjacent the chief haven't fallen into the hands of his foes the second time barely escaped and through the interference of the priests at the mission of San Rafael now with the Spanish priest or Jesuit priest who subsequently enjoyed the satisfaction of seeing him converted to the true faith he died at the mission in 1834 now remember these dates although visited in 1879 by Sir Francis Drake we early saw it in school that Sir Francis Drake came to marine county and that's what got started probably a Spanish and other adventures both before and after his time it was not until 1817 that any permanent settlement was made in marine county in that year Padre Amoroso and Seahose were sent to establish the mission of San Rafael on the extinction of the mission Rafael Garcia of Candidate who had come with the fathers in 1870 17 as a military commander took up residence near Olima how did they get here also he came to Santa Fella's the major domo of the mission in 1827 later he settled settled near Saos Lito where the Mexican government gave him a grant of land so the Spanish the Mexicans are all here and then you've got the Catholics Jesuits coming in as well so with the great boom in northern california in the years in 1848 and 1849 this is how they set it all up the great gold rush the 49ers I did a whole piece on that we have questions of how many people were actually in california at the time were in San Francisco at the time who were coming across by boat who were coming in over the across Nevada and over the Sierra Nevada by wagon train so it says I'm in took a decided turn upward in 1849 to associations in southern states both compromise of young men of good family they were the Baltimore and Virginia companies coming from the east these weren't the Spanish and Mexicans coming folks here comes the big guns the former settlement corner of the dare where they erected a huge sawmill 1850 they're erecting a huge sawmill and they're coming with with horse and buggies how why also you know the trains how do they get all these trains here rain county was organized by an active legislature approved by 1850 so 1850 they grant california status with the dog will act along with new Mexico and Utah and in 1850 they're already setting up in marine county and if you know marine county it's pretty much surrounded by water on the west on the south and on the east the only access by land is coming down from the north so 1854 there were only two post offices why did they have post offices in 1854 in marine county only two what are we talking about here post offices how do they get mail why did they get mail how do they what are they delivered you know the well as Fargo have their wagon trains already set up by 1854 and they already had two post office set up doesn't make any sense whatsoever now remember this was written in 1891 to set the story between 1850 55 and 63 the county outside of its towns received its greatest accessions of population so a huge influx and this is before the golden gate bridge the only way you can get here was by boat and 1855 Samuel P Taylor Samuel P Taylor Park out here put into operation a paper mill on log and it is creek might also be noted that mirror woods in mill valley was where they signed the United Nations Declaration to start the United Nations in 1863 Sandra felt began to come into place come into notice as a place for suburban residents is in San Francisco although communication was made at first by stage line to San Quentin San Quentin prison and then by ferry the North Pacific railroad a narrow gauge runs from to the Redwood region to Sonoma County was the first to be built in 1872 and as I've shown before railroads it was the great railroad construction over 2000 miles was put in in the mid 18 or 1850s to 1870s 1880s San Francisco North Pacific Donny who lives extended a petal him in 1884 where they get the workers from I thought they're mining gold all right so the prison was begun San Quentin prison was begun in 1853 prior to which the state's convicts had kept on board in an old hulk anchored at Angel Island now we all know about alcatraz being the prison but did you know that San Quentin prison which still stands today was founded in 1853 so what are you saying you saying these people all came over by by wagon and by by train and you had to put them in put them in jails and build a prison by 1853 that's what they're saying with this Santa fell was incorporated 1874 and in 1889 was re incorporated as a city of the sixth class the hotel refill completed in 1888 cost of almost a quarter million dollars fashionable and elegant of the state being headquarters for tennis players they're playing tennis in marine county back in 1888 oh my gosh in 1889 it was open a new hundred thousand dollar college for young ladies the center fell college by the sisters of saint Dominic the noble institution noble was founded in 1850 again 1850 founding by the generosity of dawn to Mateo Murphy the saint nearby is the saint Vincent orphan asylum with about 500 inmates oh really well let's look at that I'm going to even further home this is Saint Vincent's 1855 gold rush for some buggies 1855 they're building castles like this and what was this the school for the boys Timothy Murphy gave 317 acres mean he already owned it to archbishop alame for education purposes here the sisters of charity and 1855 found in the school hey the sisters of charity were hopping on the bandwagon literally coming across country to help found the gold rush unbelievable the story doesn't make any sense unless it's all a lie and here getting into a little more the Catholic registry here faithful drawn historic chapels special spirit this is written in 2019 most holy rosary chapel is part of saint Vincent school for boys which open in 1855 on 300 acres replacing original fire a legal church lost in fire fire is the theme throughout all of the ending of the tarterian empire originally it was called the saint Vincent orphan asylum of San Francisco following up a Demick the saint Vincent school for boys is the legacy so they created this massive massive building here for the school for boys because there was an outbreak of colora that's the story so now isn't school for boys and a church as well so just a few miles down the road for the saint Vincent school for boys where I played little league is the mission day Santa fell in Santa fell California marine county we're talking about here founded December 14 18 17 so here was an active Catholic church here you see more the tarterian look to it as well many of the neophytes nearby San Francisco became ill possibly do the damp unspittable climate fell after the establishment in Santa fell several hundred quote neophytes from San Francisco D.Sc.s mission deloerst were moved to this hospital mission so their health could be restored stumped say that San Rafael which contributed to the first background of the neophytes there what's a neophyte after Santa fell is given full mission status a recruited Indians recruited from eastern me walk whose village is extended from Saucy leader to Badega Bay and the Pomo who is extended north of the me walk researchers found that Santa fell in San Francisco Solano Solano together baptized forcibly converted 600 pomeons so then this goes back to mission deloerst so let's go across the pond to San Francisco and here we see another Tarterian building a mission day the Larus which used to be called mission day a C.C.s after Francis day a C.C.s so you know they say the Mexican the Spaniards were here but here you see the footprint mission day San Francisco a C.C.s was founded in October 9th 1776 and this fits in the Fomanko science history science or fiction the Russian scholars that saying 1773 to 1776 the Pugacov rebellion is when the great purge happened in the United States so mission day lore deloerst is the oldest intact building in the city of San Francisco and the only intact mission chapel the chain of 21 established under the direction of father Sarah the mission has been a steadfast witness the span of San Francisco's gold rush 1949 1950 and the 1906 San Francisco earthquake slash fire the mission cemetery is the only cemetery in the city limits the cemetery is the final resting place for numerous Oloony knee walk and first Californians and notable California pioneers mission deloerst is the final resting place of some 5,000 knee walks other notals includes the Mexican governor first commandment of the procedure cemetery markers date to the 1830s to 1898 so they had this was also a hospital this is also where they where they apparently had a hospital as you can see here as we scroll down 1776 folks how did they get here they were here and then the Spanish and they built their missions and what are they build them with how did they build them so here mission deloerst 18 hundred to 18 20 the damp weather and diseases carried by foreigners what foreigners took their toll on the native neophytes what's a neophyte and 5,000 died during drumroll please a measles epidemic you cannot make this stuff up the people who survived in the damp climate in 1817 the fathers open a hospital in Santa fell north of the bay which we just chronicled as the St Vincent school for boys which was declared an asylum for likely the Tarterians which they eliminated and put in all these massive Tarterian buildings that they converted to the Jesuit Catholic churches so here's more Tarterian building here and you look at this this is from the date of Napa State Hospital 1872 imposing Gothic building was meant to house 500 patients so these were all declared built these insane asylums looks like they converted the Tarterian empires into insane asylums and we'll just go through these and just look at the dates this is the Stockton California state insane asylum opened in 1853 had a tumultuous reputation from the start superintendents accused of forcing pages to build a his house under reporting deaths on his watch and this is the one we're just talking about the Napa State one massive massive hospital how many people were there in 1872 folks how many people the imposing Gothic building meant to house 500 patients but now thousands house 17 acre campus let's go on Mendocino State asylum for the insane when was it built 1889 to create the criminally insane man those covered wagon you guys coming off and you couldn't find any gold and they just went insane so we had to build these massive massive insane asylums all throughout another California here Santa Clara Agnes insane asylum located Santa Clara 1889 again 1850s to 1880s they're building massive insane asylums according to their story this is the agnos redesigned to look to feel like a college campus right next door to the University of Santa Clara Santa Clara University the Jesuit school here's UC graduate John Robertson mental disorders built in the eight eighteen hundreds doctor found his own sanitarium and livermore 1895 here we see the San Francisco Marine insane asylum sailors who needed medical care facility in 1870s 75 we got to help those that sailed all the way around so we got to build a medical look at the electricity folks look at what they had all the way back then oh and then we have a former William Chapman Ross Ross and wealthy San Francisco and founder of Bank of California now after his death what they converted into they converted it into an insane asylum Garner turned his villa into a private asylum for nervous disorders and only lasted two decades before being purchased by drumroll sister of the Notre Dame day namur the we're already here here again sanitarium in San Francisco what streets it on Masonic Avenue okay you can't make this stuff up uh... another one here this is the uh... local local women Julia juda Thomas juda was a one allegedly that got the roads are the train tracks going over location over the sear Nevada's here we see the California Association for the care and training of the feeble minded children we have feeble minded children in eighteen eighty three we got to build these huge facilities look at how big this is to the mentally disabled in nineteen ninety one inquiring a building's a facility for the words and eldritch and dozens died in the outbreak of the spanish in fluenza this was later back in nineteen thirties you see the buildings much different here again tartarians this is the alms house laguna hot hot hospital the commissioners of lunacy sometimes sent the poor of those deemed to be insane to this circuit eighteen ninety again alms house circuit eighteen ninety we care so much there's so many insane running around in the eighteen seventies eighteen eighties lots and it is medical journal from nineteen twenty four the Anderson sanitarium oakland california medical journal from nineteen twenty four doesn't have the data the building we can look it up later here's another one from uh... nineteen twenty four medical journal these are already in place folks are already there all these massive old buildings and then we can shoot down the southern california as well again for creepy the silo's in southern california still standing and disturbing opened in the late eighteen hundreds comario look at the missions look at the tartarian design served as a psychiatric facility lot of mentally ill people going on their back in the eighteen hundreds folks lot of work crazy coming back here uh... doesn't show the date it was opened uh... since thirty nineteen thirty six but there's older ones here the former side of rancho lost amigos rehabilitation center got a rehabilitate our amigos uh... opened in eighteen eighty eight and had its own functional town with on-site amenities including a mini zoo gotta keep the insane happy working farm in its own post office and was later world war two army base uh... fell into this repair and here's a uh... norwalk california opened in nineteen sixteen uh... pat and stayed hospital look at the size of this insane as silent is this insane or what insane burnadino open in eighteen ninety three originally named the southern california asylum for the insane and a nebriot it was renamed in nineteen twenty seven after harry paton was member of the board of directors became known to the public is simply the insane asylum by eighteen ninety eight the hospital was so overcrowded it was unable to properly care for its patients by eighteen ninety eight this facility was too overcrowded eighteen ninety eight is what they're saying here between the years eighteen ninety three in nineteen thirty four over two pay a thousand patients died on site and were buried to see the similar story buried on the grounds there uh... so again look at the size of this insane asylum this is where they got rid of the tarterians is they put them in their own places and they call them insane as silens and by calling them insane as silens they were able to silence everybody and you were crazy to question them the mind wonders alright folks and here is where it gets really confusing maybe all can help me with this the orphan trade movement this was about over two hundred thousand children right at the beginning of the nineteen hundred were shipped off orphans from you uh... uh... the east coast balkamar uh... new york city especially uh... they were called foundlings and they were shipped off to the midwest it was told it was said over two hundred thousand children were transported to new lives a wishful look back uh... ladden upper a cattle car were kids would line up to be chosen by new foster parents has seen above uh... and here you see a sign what does that say for children for sale inquire with in why are they selling children why are these children being put on trains look at these children folks they're being shipped off where are their parents we know about all the labor that went on with the children but we'll look at this where we're all the parents of these children these were all orphaned they got all in their little military uniforms look at that with their little capes and stuff and again the tarteian in the background nineteen hundred were talking we're talking and there's a ship coming off the ship now the tarteians were here in here they are in the trains the tarteians were here they built this great empire uh... the roman oves came over to uh... to conquer them using the advanced technology they stole from the tarteian and says the storyline we've got going now and uh... they they kill off all the adults and the parents and all that were left for the children for slave labor here's your catholic priest here's the catholics children's home society twenty nine hundred two thousand nine hundred ninety children with homes and families they need families they're looking for homes children light up to board an orphan train in nineteen twenty writers on the orphan train again where the parents why are they leaving the children behind look at these children folks these are all nurses taken care of the actually had doors little little uh... lazy susans where you could put the child and the inside of your house and turn the lazy susan to go outside and some worker would come by and grab them so this was over two hundred thousand these were you know african slaves were talking about here orphan trains to Missouri i mean these pictures tell a heck of a story and this is not a story that has been told in our our history books but look at all these boys look at these children where they going why are they being abandoned homes wanted for children December four oakland iowa nineteen o four these are articles in the paper looking for children and a parish-founding hospital how to baby raffle their raffling off children nineteen oh one kidding me we need to get this history out disseminated almost children from the east will arrive at come and grab your children do whatever you want with them well that ties it into what i just found in here and it the orphan children all the get all the way to california where the orphan children uh... already here the orphaned from the uh... extermination of their parents so this is from the child saving charities may twenty for may twenty eight eighteen ninety three james flamont the ladies protection relief society and just look at the spin this child saving charities child saving charities of saran cisco dating back from the days of california's infancy one sees nothing but the truest spirit of benevolence and christian desire to lift the burden from the unfortunate oh you christians are awesome the orphaned abandoned the link with abuse and courage will people might into the parade come out of this head each requiring separate quarters and modes of treatment what do you mean each requiring separate quarters and modes of treatment california possesses thirty four such institutions and asylum thirteen of which are located in sand francisco california's earliest chair charities the ladies protection and relief society figures prominently orphaned asylum as here to four noted cared for the parentless youth in a philithropic manner matter came to knowledge a number of charitable inclined ladies would once set to work to provide suitable shelter for this class uh... dedicated on on franklin sheet they got a building they bought some how they got the money and i'm dedicated they bought the building on august four eighteen fifty three wow these ladies were pretty good they got on the covered wagon just to help the orphan kids that were orphaned from the great gold rush that occurred just two years earlier children take under care kept as a general until suitable christian homes are provided for them remember they said the spanish were here in the mexicans were here in eighteen fifty california did the dog wax and just remember all this eighteen fifty three they have christian homes being provided for them so in the winter of eighteen ninety one a severe plague invaded the institution with fearful results dipteria the scourge of palis and codges life carried away five of the little thoughts soon after measles broke out and claimed another victim just one more victim in the fall of eighteen fifty one seven sisters of charity left the famous emits berg orfinage in merrill and came to california with the purpose of forming such an institution eighteen fifty one they were already coming out because there was orphanage problems in california uh... man uh... and they came across the arrival of panama they were stricken with call callara from which to die so they came in the state through panama all the way up through southern california up to sarah mccisco from merlin so that means they had to go down from merlin down to panama are you kidding me the five surviving good shepherds says work diligently for months and scouring funds with which to start a home they finally succeeded august eighteen eighteen fifty two with the roman catholic orfin asylum was founded on the north side of telegraph hill remember they had already founded one in eighteen fifty uh... was the date on their eighteen fifty three was the other one so they're just putting up orphanage everywhere because there's so many orphan children that just got left alone in the gold rush when they jumped off their covered wagons and uh... men and women left their children so they could get the gold that's the story in eighteen seventy three another large and comodious building was erected on mount st. Joseph a few hundred yards in the old location and the orphan children removed to this one the other being only for shelter of infants the following is a resume of the number of children cared for the different homes under the direction of the roman catholic orphanage south sarah cisco mount st. Joseph infant shelter sarah cisco technical school so we can look those up and see what dates those are not going to do that right now in the early settlement of the pacific coast when few venture some spirits came here with strangers to each other ties reform that became in many instances stronger than those of kindered and the early organised to shoulder to shoulder in every effort for the justice and purative laws in their zeal to help the suffering and afflicted it was in those days that sarah cisco protestant or if an asylum was founded thus in eighteen fifty one the first orphanage was organized in the city so it's growing down here uh... the pacific hebrough or if an asylum and existence since eighteen seventy one silo is located in the corner to visit darrow and haystreet now just it just keep in mind as i go through this this is from eighteen ninety three this accounting is going on here alright so we got the pacific hebrough asylum then we've got the armitage orphanage this is the bishop armitage church orphanage and the children seem playing about whether once unfortunate destitute and abandoned wafes we're being cared for by the goods americans twenty eight acres of the land belonging orphanage are entirely cultivated by the boys can you say slave labor and last year produced thirty five tons of a three acre vegetable garden the arty arty they're on enthusiastic about their work moving down infant homes the movement was started in eighteen seventy four when the little sister's infant shelter on five twelve ministry was founded during last year the home cared for six thousand infants remember that number later on the sisters of the roman catholic church organized a day home on haystreet between polka vanna savannah more recently another such shelter on palestreet both are doing very well indeed and serve as a great relief for self-supporting honest women and their attempt to keep the wolf from the door the girls' factory five years ago last Christmas the girls directly first opened its doors to the poor abandoned children of the city this is written in nineteen eighteen ninety three so five years previous eighteen eighty eight uh... had small quarters but then it grew then we had the eugenia home schooling going on uh... before mentioned st. Vincent's asylum in san afel we discovered in marine county as part of the state gives food shelter instruction to five hundred orphan boys the florins critting home was formally known as the pacific rescue house the so is already there under the management of jw ellsworth made objective divide shelter and friends in time of need for young girls who've had their first mission and save them from ruin children's hospital surely is notable to relieve human suffering among the poor and helpless of a large such a large city we were talking eighteen ninety three san francisco large city the building is elegant structure yes we need elegant structures built especially for medical purposes it also has a training school for nurses and value addition to the hospital there's a long list of benevolent physicians offering their services in caring for unfortunate inmates so they've got inmates they're calling these right waves and all the rest of the names are using for these children these orphan children and they've already got nurses training school they got a long list of doctors waiting to help them yada yada the maternity college of joining the building was open in may eighteen ninety two got to take care of all those unwanted babies uh... two hundred patients in the hospital remember it was elegant who care for the taxes if they were their own the pacific dispensary owned by the hospital society and located on mission street youthful malifactors malifactors those interested in the praise were the effort of preventing crime among the juvenile element of the state will regretfully acknowledged that a fearful state of a more elation demoralization exist among the lower class where examples of the property degradation and excessive in temperance are held above the impressionable youth until their stings have penetrated the weak minded and poison life which might otherwise have been fault again we have the evil evidence of cheap literature and mood performances such as are open to experience on all sides and with the aid of drug cigarettes to prevent physical development and cause nervous prostration and ruined constitution and depraved mind are again manifested this dishease often reaches into the higher ranks of society dragging down with its death like grip a lad who may have been otherwise influenced by good home examples san francisco might not just be the sole possessor such quote street arab's ever eighteen ninety three street arab's are examples of wasted childhood uh... so in the year eighteen ninety one when the own only juvenile penal institution conducted by the state the old industrial school contain no less than two hundred inmates reformatory throughout the united states of the time was near fifteen thousand of which one quarter were girls their principal offense for weight for this one principal offense being delinquency about one half the males having been committed for offenses against public policy and the other half for vacancy what would be delinquent for folks did they didn't have schools back then schools were started until the rock of fellers and japan market started in the night to public schools in nineteen tens nineteen twenty what are they talking about delinquency and vagrancy and we move down to southern california we got reform schools at wittier los angeles pressed in school of industry at i own amador county boys and girls aid society was founded in eighteen seventy four and their motto was it is wiser and less expensive to save children and to punish them all how kind of them then we have the use directories a temporary home for friendless and abused boys between the ages of seven and fourteen y seven and fourteen was founded on howard street on the third and eighteen eighty six again san francisco societies aid prevention for cruelty of children associated charities eighteen ninety three child saving child saving charities what are they saving them from look at the list look at this list eighteen fifty i mean this is some of our gone through but there's others that aren't even in here the roman catholic or phoenix island and it goes on and on i don't want to make it this all folks maybe you can help me but there's some serious serious investigating of revisionist history that we have to do to determine what happened to these children these children uh... these are these are three generations ago so maybe there's some grand parents still alive that we can talk to you i wish my grandfather still alive so i can ask him about this but again we need to get to the bottom of this we need to find out why all these the silo's were built what happened to the tarterians that were here why were the children orphaned in such massive massive massive amount of numbers and we need to get accountability to the church to the men in black to the juniper seros to the roman catholics the missions that were here in the seventeen seventies we have so many questions we need to delve into all you sluice get in there let's just dig up all these the silo's there's a ton more across the united states let's get it all out let's find out what's really going on and i'm gonna keep doing that so do that in probably the next video anyway thanks for listening hope this was very informative i just uh... want to thank lea steward she sent me a letter talking about the insane asylum and uh... that spark the spark the evidence that i had about the mission where i grew up having uh... asylum for the boys in the school where i played baseball at uh... as well so that's what got me started thank you the steward for uh... prodding me and and sparking the fire to get this out right playing truth out with kick catch a next video piece and let's find out let's find out about what happened to the children please thank you