Comments
Hallway

John

someone forgot to take out the trash

Location: Foxboro State Hospital  Gallery: Endless Halls

Personal Effects

John

What's that near the word "blouse?"

Location: Foxboro State Hospital  Gallery: Endless Halls

Social Skills Book

John

you said it, brother! Bush is an idiot!

Location: Foxboro State Hospital  Gallery: Endless Halls

Inside Tub

John

what's that in the middle of the tub? it looks like a 50 year old shampoo bottle

Location: Foxboro State Hospital  Gallery: Endless Halls

Stairwell Up

John

This gives me an optical illusion, but the picture is awesome!

Location: Foxboro State Hospital  Gallery: Endless Halls

The New Ward

John

The black and white and the light spot on the door makes me feel like I'm watching a scary movie.

Location: Foxboro State Hospital  Gallery: Transitions

More Tunnels

John

Iused to live in taunton and me and my friends used to go here to drink and get high. bealive it or not there is still one functioning building there. and if you ever go in any of them tunnels there about 100 degrees because they still use steam to heat a few of the buildings..

Location: Dever State School  Gallery: Institutional

Dreamscape

John

Very disturbing trip down memory lane for me. I worked there from 1972-1974 but never went back once I left the place. Stil remember patients names and faces even now after all these years.
Thanks for bringing back memories and pictures are fantastic I remember many of the rooms!

Location: Cherry Knowle Hospital  Gallery: Overnight

A Brisk Morning

john

this reminds me of the old group one that use to be at kings park

Location: Cherry Knowle Hospital  Gallery: Overnight

Dark Skies

john

whats the deal behind pilgrim? Did some of the parts close down because of labodemies going on or just ended up getting abandoned?

Location: Pilgrim State Hospital  Gallery: Emptiness

Ugly

John

I walk grounds almost every day. Just last week I came across a lunchtime soccer match there. It is a great peaceful place for a lunchtime walk.

Location: Dever State School  Gallery: Institutional

Door Number

John

The reason they took "ALL" the hinges is because they were brass hinges. Brass, like copper has a decent resale value. I was looking at another site where they smashed walls to get at the copper and noticed they smashed through marble sheets to get the copper. they probably got $5 worth of copper but the sheet of marble would have brought them $500

Location: Cynthia Lee Memorial Hospital  Gallery: Debris

Wash Room

John

Lynne, I am in awe of you. I have a second-hand knowledge of the medical profession through my now deceased mother. She spent her life as an RN helping those who needed it. The most part of her career was at a VA hospital tending to people who served our country. Upon my many visits to her job I saw things that were (from my perspective) disturbing. Restraints come to mind immediately. People who have mental disabilities (as was explained to me by my mother) are far more likely to hurt themselves or other patients/ staff than be hurt intentionally by the staff.
We cannot assume that all human beings are inherently evil or harbor ill-intent by glancing at a photo. As for myself, I find it absurd that a window would be installed just for the sole purpose of voyeurism.
Lynne, I would consider it an honor to hear from you. (goldenj@bossiercity.org)

Location: Fuller State School and Hospital  Gallery: Disturbed

Strap In

john

i wonder how much they go for?.....thats if found!

Location: Pilgrim State Hospital  Gallery: Emptiness

Control Room

John

This is the second time I've seen light's on in a "abandoned" power plant. Creepy!!

Location: Eagle River Power Station  Gallery: Corrosive Industry

Pepsi-Cola

John

Nice shot.

Location: Buffalo Central Terminal  Gallery: Baggage

Lined Up

John

Tug boats seem to have a personality of their own. Those have to be pretty old. I can't see them making wood tugboats after the turn of the century.
It would be neat to have a registry of the boats that have been "checked in" over the years. It's out there somewhere.

Location: Staten Island Boat Graveyard  Gallery: Wrecks

Front Entrance

John

Dave, most "ghosts" are in our heads. I've found that when you are in a creepy place, your senses are dialed in to every sound, movement, smell etc. I'm not saying that it's NOT haunted. If you go there in the dead of night by yourself without a flashlight, it might as well be.

Location: Glenn Dale Hospital  Gallery: Vines

Adult Building

John

My grandmother cheated death there in the mid forties. She got T.B and was there for years. My dad and his father were not allowed near her. My grandmother would wave to them from the solarium on the roof; that was as close as they were allowed to get. My grandmother was released and lived to be eighty seven.

Location: Glenn Dale Hospital  Gallery: Vines

Above the Entrance

john

to bad its impossible to get in there now, all the windows on the first floor are welded shut and the tunnels are bricked shut.

Location: Kings Park Psychiatric Center  Gallery: Building 93 (Infirmary)

Hidden

john

This is a beautiful house, but its misleading. While me and 3 other friends were wondering at night we came across a room with a little girl sitting on one of the rotted chairs staring at us, i cant think of anyway to verify this but the little girl with the camoflauge pants was screaming something about the time and how it was too late fo rus to be there, i wont be caught dead there again.

Location: Pilgrim State Hospital  Gallery: The Mansions

Propped Up

John

A number of railroad-owned tugs years ago had short stacks, to enable them to travel up the Harlem River and under bridges that were not obliged to open for them as they pushed carfloats and covered barges to and from railroad-owned freight stations in the Bronx. One such railroad tug with a short stack was also one of the very last DL&W steam tugs, the HARLEM.

Location: Staten Island Boat Graveyard  Gallery: Wrecks

Twins

John

The old NYCRR tugs, based at Weehawken until the Penn-Central merger of 1968, were perhaps the most famous of all NY Harbor railroad tugs. One of them even had a brief "co-starring" role with Barbra Striesand in "Funny Girl" back around 1967. The NYCRR had one of the largest and most diverse marine fleets in the harbor right into the 1960s. Truly, this pic symbolizes an era long since departed down the echoing corridors of time.

Location: Staten Island Boat Graveyard  Gallery: Wrecks

Ferry Entrance

John

This is all that remains of the old Erie-Lackawanna RR ferryboat "LACKAWANNA". Originally built as the HAMBURG in 1891, she was renamed CHATHAM during the World War One. In 1949, she was dieselized and renamed LACKAWANNA. Her diesel engine gave off a high-pitched whining noise (I recall this growing up in the 60s) and was nicknamed "WHINING WILLIE" by the commuters riding her. She was one of the last active boats in the E-L fleet when all ferry service between Hoboken and Barclay St. was shut down in November of 1967. She also was the only Lackawanna boat to have radar installed on an experimental basis. As recently as the 1980s, this once-beautiful old ferry was still basically intact, albiet decaying and weatherbeaten.

Location: Staten Island Boat Graveyard  Gallery: Wrecks

Skeleton

John

Truly a sad and melancholy scene, one that truly saddens the heart of any enthusiast of classic harbor ferries. That ferry was one of the old diesel-electrics operated by the City Of New York from 1959 to 1966. The wreck in this picture is either the remains of the SEAWELLS POINT or her sister, JAMESTOWN. These two ferries were built in 1926 by the American Brown Boveri Electric Corporation of Camden, NJ. During the 60s, these two boats operated between E. 134th St in the Bronx, and Rikers Island, until a bridge was built in 1966. The ferries last ran on October 31, 1966, and were both sold for scrap to Wittes .

Location: Staten Island Boat Graveyard  Gallery: Wrecks