News & Observer | newsobserver.com | Book to chronicle Dix's 150-year history

Published: Dec 27, 2006 12:00 AM
Modified: Dec 27, 2006 03:11 AM

Book to chronicle Dix's 150-year history

A hospital volunteer tells the story of the psychiatric facility, which will close in '08

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KEY DATES FOR DOROTHEA DIX HOSPITAL

Dec. 22, 1848: The state House passes a bill establishing the hospital. Rep. James Dobbin of Cumberland County makes an impassioned speech at the request of his wife, Louisa, who was nursed by Dorothea Dix on her deathbed.

Feb. 22, 1856: The first patient, a veteran of the Mexican War, is admitted for "mania."

April 13, 1865: The first black patient is admitted, a Union soldier, on military orders. After the state builds Cherry Hospital for black patients, the psychiatric system is segregated.

April 10, 1926: A fire burns the hospital's west wing. Nearby N.C. State University students form a human chain to allow 1,000 patients to evacuate the burning building without escaping.

July 1, 1965: Under the federal Civil Rights Act of 1964, the hospital desegregates.

Sept. 24, 2002: State Department of Health and Human Services officials announce that the hospital will close within six years and a new hospital will be built in Butner.

MARJORIE O'RORKE'S UNPUBLISHED HISTORY

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Marjorie O'Rorke doesn't just know the history of the Dorothea Dix hospital, she has lived it.

Now she has written it, too.

O'Rorke, a longtime volunteer at the state psychiatric hospital, is putting the finishing touches on a book that will cover everything from the hospital's opening in 1856 through its closing in 2008.

The only chapter that is missing is what will happen afterward.

O'Rorke is a member of the Friends of Dorothea Dix Park, a coalition of local groups pushing for all of the 300-acre site to be turned into an urban park. But she has written an epilogue that leaves the property's fate up in the air.

That way, she is covered if parts of the land are developed. "It would be nice if they decide this spring, so I can say one way or the other," she said.

The state Department of Cultural Resources plans to publish the book in late spring or early summer. Lang Baradell, O'Rorke's editor, estimated it will be about 250 to 300 pages, including historic photographs and drawings.

For the past three years, state and local officials have wrestled with what to do with the site.

In October, the state hired the nonprofit Urban Land Institute, which recommended the state sell the hospital campus for an estimated $40 million to Raleigh. The city would then create a nonprofit group to operate the site, preserving much of it as parkland and developing other portions.

A revealing past

Baradell said that O'Rorke, a retired nurse with an undergraduate degree in history, was the perfect person to write the book.

She first began volunteering at Dix in 1964, talking with patients, serving food, distributing medicine and helping run physical therapy programs.

When the volunteer guild moved into a historic building on Dix Hill in the early 1980s, O'Rorke signed up to write a short essay about it. She soon realized that the state hospital had no official history.

Over the years, she dug up newspaper clippings and photographs, read old minutes from directors' meetings and interviewed aging doctors.

What she found was a history in miniature of mental illness over the past 150 years.

In the mid 19th century, the popular theory was that the mentally ill had been stressed by city living and needed to be removed to more rural surroundings. That led to the creation of Dix on a wooded hill, then several miles from Raleigh.

By the 20th century, doctors had realized that there were physical causes for mental illness and developed rudimentary treatments. The hospital became more of an institution, with debate about how much to restrain patients.

O'Rorke, 83, said it was often hard to read about the treatments used in those days.

"[Doctors and nurses] didn't know any better," she said. "I'm sure they were at their wits' end sometimes trying to figure out how to treat people, but it often seems very cruel."

Spirit of the hospital

These days, the hospital is mostly used for patients with illnesses that are hardest to treat.

Dix, which had 2,500 patients at its peak in the 1960s, now has just a few hundred.

In 2002, the state announced it would close the hospital and build a new one in Butner, about a 45-minute drive from Raleigh.

The hospital's history has played a small role in the debate over its future. O'Rorke had to dispel a rumor among hospital employees that the original deed included a provision that the site had to be used as a mental hospital forever.

She is not entirely willing to rule out another rumor -- that the ghost of Dorothea Dix still roams the hallways. She has heard several times that the crusading mental health reformer, who died in 1887, can be seen at night.

"I think it's just the spirit of the hospital," she said.

It is a spirit she hopes will live on when the hospital closes. She said she thinks a park would help harried urban residents relieve stress, in much the same way that the founders hoped it would cure depression and other ailments.

"People need recreation for their own mental health," she said.

Staff writer Ryan Teague Beckwith can be reached at 836-4944 or rbeckwit@newsobserver.com.
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