
Left behind luggage at abandoned Forest Haven asylum. Like this luggage, patient records and sensitive information were all left behind. This place seems like the saddest version of Hotel California because mentally disabled children and adults were checked in, but could only check out by dying. Forest Haven history is dark and demented, full of epic abuses, criminal neglect and atrocities like rape. As we look at the abandoned asylum, let’s listen as if the walls could to talk about some the horrors of Forest Haven. Photo #1 by © Darryl Moran Photography

Forest Haven in October 2013. “This is the building with the epic luggage shot in it,” explained the photographer. Located in Laurel, Maryland, Forest Haven – aka D.C. Training School – opened its doors in 1925 as a state-of-the-art institution where children with mental and developmental disabilities could receive care and training in the 22 buildings scattered over 250 acres. Betty Evans, one parent and plaintiff in a lawsuit (pdf), said, “Forest Haven is nothing but a warehouse for the retarded.” The residents were here because schools failed them, educational institutions simply refused to teach them. Parents either couldn’t, or didn’t want to, take care of these kids. As time wore on, the complex became almost a dumping ground where unwanted children and adults were dropped. Many residents should never have lived here, such as those who were deaf, epileptic, or dyslexic. In 1974 a nearby orphanage closed and 20 children were moved to Forest Haven and reclassified from “orphans” to “retarded;” that was the end of the search for another orphanage. A 1994 article said, “As patients died one by one, a Washington D.C. home for the mentally retarded became one of the nation’s most deadly institutions.” Photo #2 by Forsaken Fotos

Zoom out. You are here. Aerial of abandoned Forest Haven Asylum, at 39.098765, -76.786328, 2nd St. Laurel, MD 20724. The administrative building on the left has a half-circle driveway; inside there were doctor offices, dental examination rooms, and x-ray rooms with a chapel that could seat 200 built directly behind it. Electroshock and hydrotherapy happened in other buildings, but some of the 22 buildings included five dormitories with happy-sounding names like Beech, Dogwood, Elm, and Poplar cottages. The complex had a cafeteria and recreation center, a theater, a gym, basketball courts, a baseball field, a playground, and classrooms to learn hands-on skills aimed at gainful employment. Others learned how to help out by milking cows or planting crops on the farm colony. Photo #3 by Pictometry Bird’s Eye / Microsoft Corporation

Morgue at Forest Haven. The extent of Forest Haven’s problems “has never even been exposed,” explained Justice Department expert witness Karen McGowan in a 1994 article. “Someone dies of aspiration pneumonia and they (state authorities) will say they died of heart failure or respiratory arrest or that they stopped breathing. Everybody who dies has stopped breathing or their heart has stopped. And so the real cause of death is often not identified. What we have here are quiet little murders. They’re killed one day at a time because people don’t pay attention and then no one finds out the real cause of death.” Photo #4 by © Jamie Betts

Downward spiral and into the belly of the beast that was Forest Haven. Funding dwindled in the 1960s and by 1972 there were two social workers for 1,300 residents. During the first abuse case taken to court in 1972, Forest Haven director R. Atkinson, testified that at least 50 school-age kids could have lived at home with their lesser learning disability. By 1975, the asylum director admitted 400 Forest Haven residents “don’t belong here. One-third of the residents could benefit from training activities rather than the babysitting we give them now.” Photo #5 by © Rose (FroseN in Time)

Forest Haven hallway. Some of the most vulnerable people in our society were discarded and forgotten before being beaten, raped and tortured by their caregivers and other patients. In a 1994 article about Forest Haven being one the “most deadly institutions” in America, Mary Bray, an occupational therapist and expert for the Justice Department, stated, “Over 200,000 people in institutions who are immobile and rely on others for eating are at risk. Others such as the mentally retarded, high-risk infants, children and adults with developmental disabilities are also at risk. Part of the problem is that the parents and relatives of a good number of these people have long since forgotten them. So there is no one to make sure they are not neglected or abused.” Photo #6 by © Darryl Moran Photography

The photographer wrote, “Forest Haven was a children’s developmental center and mental institution in Laurel, Maryland. It was notorious for its poor conditions and abuse of patients. It opened its doors in 1925, and was shut down in 1991 by a federal court. There have since been numerous civil and class-action lawsuits involving patients and employees. During the early years, it was considered a state of the art facility. With a good reputation, this hospital set the standard for other states to follow. With declining conditions decades later, many patients filed lawsuits against the hospital for reasons of abuse, neglect, poor living conditions — even medical testing. A small morgue was all that stood between the patients and a cemetery on site where graves had been repeatedly uncovered by erosion.” Photo #7 by Jack Says Relax

Lonely bed. According to a 1994 Los Angeles Times article, “During the early morning hours of Aug. 8, 1989, two detectives were summoned to the grounds of Forest Haven, Washington, D.C.’s institution for the mentally retarded ‘to investigate the report of a dead body.’ At the scene, they discovered the ‘body of a B/M (black male) . . . lying on his right side in his bed in a fetal position . . . .’ Their report further related: ‘He was wearing a hospital gown and white socks with red stripes. . . . There was what appeared to be dried blood on his mouth.’ The body was identified as that of Arthur Harris, a severely retarded young man known to his family and friends as Arkie, who had spent more than 17 years institutionalized at Forest Haven.” Arkie was 5 when he was committed and only 22 when he died. Photo #8 by Forsaken Fotos

A 1998 Baltimore Sun article about neglected Forest Haven being a magnet for vandals, arsonists and ghost hunters states: “Kevin Feeheley and some old high school buddies were driving to a party not long ago when they decided to take a detour to explore a haunted village they’d heard about near the headquarters of the National Security Agency. The rumor was that government agents accidentally killed everyone in a town east of Laurel with radiation, buried their bodies in unmarked graves and left without even cleaning up. As his car’s headlights swung around a bend, Feeheley saw evidence to suggest the ghost story was true. A cluster of buildings stood in a forest clearing with their doors gaping open and curtains lolling out of shattered windows. A stone slab announced that 389 people were buried in an adjacent field.” Photo #9 by © Darryl Moran Photography

Old school slide. Forest Haven was the site of one of the top 10 worst cases of institutional abuse in U.S. history, said Tony Records, a Bethesda-based expert on mental retardation in the Sun article. Betty Evans, a plaintiff in the 1976 lawsuit, testified, “Forest Haven is nothing but a warehouse for people. Persons are sentenced to Forest Haven without ever committing a crime. And once committed, the only way to get out is to die.” And when those residents did die, “the staff dumped them into unmarked graves in a field near the administration building. Nothing told passers-by that there were bodies beneath the grass from the first burial in 1928 until 1987, when families raised a single gray monument as a memorial to the 389 dead.” Photo #10 by Forsaken Fotos

“My Little Pony,” wrote the photographer. “Among all of the buildings and decay there was a small playground, which only made things feel more creepy.” Photo #11 by StudioTempura

Forsaken playground. In 1991, 66 years after it opened and 15 years after demented details were disclosed in lawsuits, the federal government finally closed Forest Haven. By then there were hundreds of reported incidents of abuse, rape, molestation, neglect and extortion. About 1,100 residents were transferred to smaller and better-supervised group homes. Photo #12 by Lost Film / Jack Says Relax

Holiday Inn Express, an old abandoned bus. In 1999, the Washington Post told the story of Elroy, “a tiny, half-blind, mentally retarded, 39-year-old” who survived Forest Haven and was living in one of those allegedly smaller, better-supervised group homes. One room over from Elroy was sexual predator “the piranha: a heavyset Forest Haven graduate who, after being sexually abused as a youth, developed a history of sexually predatory behavior.” Photo #13 by StudioTempura

The photographer wrote, “A friend found a roll of film in one of the random rooms at Forest Haven and strung it up across a window to get some light behind it. It would be a massive understatement to say that I am more than a little curious to know the story behind this movie.” Photo #14 by StudioTempura

Nature trying to reclaim forgotten children asylum ruins. By 1972, there were over 100 job vacancies at Forest Haven; it was so understaffed that residents could not have training and medical attention. A Developmental Disabilities expert testified, “Congress only built Forest Haven in order to exile people with mental retardation from the nation’s capital and hide them in a rural area.” Photo #15 by © Darryl Moran Photography

Empty pews with “noise noise” spray-painted on the side. One of the mothers testified, “Once committed to Forest Haven, the only way out is to die.” Photo #16 by © Darryl Moran Photography

Therapy. In a 1976 lawsuit, a parent claimed her child was admitted to Forest Haven by court order in 1959. At home she “could eat with a fork and spoon; now she eats with her hands. She “regressed mentally and physically at Forest Haven.” A boy, age 13, “could read at the third grade level, hang up his own clothing, and cook simple meals.” He too regressed. Another 21-year-old plaintiff could bathe himself, but lost that skill at Forest Haven. Case after case detail the abuses and neglect. Photo #17 by © Darryl Moran Photography

Lost Souls at Forest Haven. One legal complaint alleged, “Doors are often locked without reason so that the residents’ movements are unduly restricted. Residents are forced thereby to regard themselves as prisoners rather than as people in need of special care and treatment.” Photo #18 by © Darryl Moran Photography

Nothing on TV. Another mother told how her mentally disabled 8-year-old girl died while strapped to a bed; another female suffered burns, bruises and lacerations before she died in a urine-soaked bed; yet another died due to complications after caretakers left her strapped to a toilet. The atrocities rolled on and on. “Staff members locked dozens of residents, naked except for adult-sized diapers, in rooms stripped of furniture other than wooden benches.” Photo #19 by © Darryl Moran Photography

Overgrown. Google Map directions show this asylum was only 4.1 miles, about 7 minutes, away from the NSA and about 20 miles from downtown DC. It’s one of the city’s dirty little secrets but the decaying buildings still stand in part due to experts suggesting it should remain as a reminder to stop such heartbreaking horrors from happening again. Photo #20 by Jack Says Relax

We only know small pieces of the horrific history of Forest Haven. By 1994, the LA Times reported, “The ultimate death toll at Forest Haven may never be known. The problem dates back at least 20 years, according to city records and interviews, when the population of the facility averaged more than 1,300. Yet the Justice Department and city only began to monitor deaths there between May, 1989, and March, 1991, while the institution was in the process of closing and roughly 200 residents remained.” Photo #21 by © Darryl Moran Photography

“No answer. The first of many random phones we came across while exploring Forest Haven today,” wrote the photographer. As funding dried up, children and adults were strapped down or locked in rooms. With no activity, their physical abilities and their bodies withered away; many became bedridden. Photo #22 by StudioTempura

Asbestos hell. A class-action lawsuit in 1976 alleged, “Forest Haven – intended as a facility for treatment, education and training, subjects residents to physical or sexual abuse, provides virtually no treatment, has no training program and neglects basic medical care. Its old, deteriorated buildings are filthy, dimly lighted, uncomfortably hot or cold and pose safety and fire hazards.” Photo #23 by StudioTempura

Patient records. Everything was left as if administrators just ran out of the building, medical files and medical equipment, social security numbers and other sensitive records. It’s the perfect storm for identity thieves. If patients are locked away, then it’s unlikely they would discover their names, SSNs and identities were stolen and sold. The finger of blame for who disregarded the patients’ privacy rights shifted back and forth yet no one took possession of the historical records. Photo #24 by Forsaken Fotos

“Forest Haven Children’s Center 1976.” The photographer wrote, “Scattered throughout the rooms were old records dating back to the 60s and 70s including visitor logs, dental xrays, and deceased records.” Photo #25 by © Rose (FroseN in Time)

Please Rush, medical specimen left behind. The photographer noted, “In this room there were countless medical tools scattered and broken among the dusting rot of the building including sealed packs of specimen cases and old glass vials with swollen corks capping them closed.” Photo #26 by © Rose (FroseN in Time)

Boys lived in the Curley Building if they could not take care of themselves. If and when they could dress and feed themselves and were toilet-trained, the male patients moved up to the dormitory dubbed “Poplar Cottage.” Residents awarded with these graduations were supposed to gain more freedom and less supervision. In the 1970s, the asylum director told the Washington Post a consequence of being so horribly understaffed, “Workers here – because of frustration and lack of help – tend to abuse residents.” Photo #27 by Jack Says Relax

Computers, “government waste,” noted the photographer. Photo #28 by Forsaken Fotos

Wisdom on the wall. “Most of the time we don’t communicate, we just take turns talking.” A Pulitzer 1999 article mentions Frederick Emory Brandenburg, one of the male patients “rescued” from Forest Haven and sent into “better” and more supervised care. “The corpse measured 66 inches from blue toes to jutting ears. In a beige house on Tenley Circle, a dentist-entrepreneur lugged this cargo down the stairs into the basement and laid it to rest by the washer. The body in plaid pajamas was that of a 57-year-old retarded ward of the District of Columbia.” There are dozens of heartbreaking cases of what happened to poor souls who were moved — thanks to institutional reform — into better “care.” Did some of them have anything but horrible lives until they died? Brandenburg’s child-size wheelchair is still at Forest Haven. Photo #29 by © Rose (FroseN in Time)

School’s out. A 9-year-old boy was committed to Forest Haven because he was “impossible to control, mentally slow, and suffered from seizures.” His mother claimed “all of his teeth were knocked out” when she first visited him. On her second visit, she found him naked and lined up against the wall like other patients. The caretaker was hosing all of them down for “unruly behavior.” Photo #30 by Jack Says Relax

Class dismissed at Forest Haven where some children were committed because of depression, homosexuality, or had a habit of running away. The latter was determined by patient records found by urban explorers. Photo #31 by © Rose (FroseN in Time)

Explore. Urban explorers say it would take many, many visits to see all the buildings and the rooms within this compound. Photo #32 by StudioTempura

Red chair at the dilapidated institute aka DC Training School. By 1978, the DOJ joined the lawsuit. The “District agreed to relocate Forest Haven’s residents and began its most ambitious overhaul, ever, of its mental health system.” DCist added, “Over the next decade and a half, patients were moved to a network of group homes, facilities where they could receive the care they’d lacked for decades and be closely monitored by local and federal authorities. The horror of Forest Haven survived until the very end: in the last three years of its existence, the death toll continued to climb. Dozens of residents died of aspiration pneumonia – a condition the occurs when food enters the respiratory system – after having been fed while laying in their beds. Court orders were filed against the District, demanding that they improve conditions for the asylum’s dwindling population, but they were never enforced.” Photo #33 by © Darryl Moran Photography

“Television Rules the Nation.” The photographer added, “An old busted TV in one of the many rooms.” DCist continued, “After each death, the U.S. Park Police – who had jurisdiction, because Forest Haven is located on federal park land – were called in to investigate. Geared more toward policing D.C.’s monuments and government buildings, the Park Police had no experience investigating medical malpractice or neglect. Finally, on September 29th, 1991, the last of the asylum’s 15 residents were relocated.” Photo #34 by StudioTempura

DC “Mayor Vincent Gray – the director of the DC Department of Human Services at the time – shared one final memory upon Forest Haven’s closure. ‘The place was inhumane. It was a very negative experience,’ Gray told the Washington Examiner, adding that his most ‘vivid memory’ of Forest Haven was seeing nude residents paraded outdoors to be hosed down by staff members.” Photo #35 by © Darryl Moran Photography

Betty Evans, mother of Joy, told Judge Pratt about the “constant physical abuse her daughter had been subjected to” like chipped teeth, bruises, scratches and a raw back to name a few. “Dogwood, the cottage where Joy lived, was a veritable snake pit. I once witnessed a nurse open the cottage door only to find 80 half-clad screaming women come running to the door; the nurse quickly closed it shut.” Photo #36 by © Darryl Moran Photography

“Purgatory. A chair sitting amidst the chaos of Forest Haven.” Sometimes both children and adults were kept in cribs. Not all the workers were “monsters” and they were not told about the dangers of feeding people while they were lying flat in bed. A social worker testified, “it would take me 20 to 30 minutes to properly feed one (resident). A lot of workers were required to feed eight or 10 residents in that time. And it’s made quite clear to them that they’ll lose their job if they don’t get all their people fed.” Photo #37 by StudioTempura

Finger eating fans and reserved for chief parking. The Times investigative report claimed the judge blew off the negligent medical care given to Forest Have residents, even after the DOJ entered testimony from a registered nurse that stated, “Meal times remain a nightmare in terms of aspiration risk . . . . I continue to be horrified at the feeding techniques . . . used by staff. The sound of coughing and choking permeates the area at mealtime.” Many deaths later, the judge denied there was a “nexus between Forest Haven and dying.” Instead, the judge believed people with mental retardation “are going to die quicker and die more often than other people.” Photo #38 by © Darryl Moran Photography

Shop class or maintenance. Attorney Joe Tulman challenged the judge: “‘All I’m saying, your honor, is if they put me in that bed and didn’t move me every two hours, or if they put you in that bed and didn’t move you every two hours, we would end up with a high chance of dying of aspiration pneumonia. It has nothing to do with mental retardation.’ But Pratt remained unconvinced: ‘You will agree that the reason they are there in the first place is because of mental retardation?’ he asked.” Photo #39 by © Darryl Moran Photography

Surreal setting. “Tulman was now beside himself: ‘There was a case of a twisted intestine in one of the deaths. . . . If you go out and look at these folks, Your Honor, many of them have teeth that are gone. Why do they have teeth that are gone? . . . The reason these people’s teeth are rotting out is that they’re regurgitating their food constantly.'” Photo #40 by © Darryl Moran Photography

The judge was also told, “People are getting sicker and sicker out there. . . . They’ve got somebody out there now who is bleeding internally. The best they can do about it is say, ‘Golly, gee. She’s bleeding internally.’ . . . This court now has the power to do the things that need to be done. You have the power to keep people from choking; you have the power to make sure people get their medical care.” Instead, the judge “closed the hearing.” Photo #41 by Forsaken Fotos

More people died. “On May 15, 1991, Judge Pratt finally responded to the request made almost two years earlier by the Justice Department. He refused to impose sanctions. On Oct. 14, 1991, Forest Haven closed its doors forever.” Photo #42 by Forsaken Fotos

The photographer wrote, “Say AAHHH!!! Shadows casting long illusions of old dental equipment and cracked brick walls gave no comfort to what form of torture must have happened here. But then again, I’ve never liked dentists…” Patients’ records show that many residents lost teeth, but few saw a dentist. In fact, most were “inappropriately drugged, physically restrained and were not receiving proper medical care.” Photo #43 by © Rose (FroseN in Time)

Misspelled directions for Psycho Rooms. So ends this sad tale. Photo #44 by © Rose (FroseN in Time)
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OMG! This is sickening!!
They should bulldoze every last building to the ground, clean up the rubble, and use that land for something GOOD. This is a nightmare!
But then it could be haunted ground, and if I knew what happened on that territory, I certainly wouldn’t want to live there.
no.
It’s difficult to imagine the horrors that have taken place here, this is the worst example of abuse, neglect, and misappropriation of funding i have ever encountered. The judge who just turned a blind eye to the horrific proof the attorney’s displayed should have been brought up on charges the same as the perpetrators, he had to have been paid-off by higher ups or threatened. How is it the parents and the families of the residents in this house of horrors never tried to bring it to the attention of the justice department? These and many more questions will go unanswered. My prayers for the victims of this hell hole. Let’s all just hope this serves as testimony to just how cruel mankind can be to one another and bring something good out of it. Heaven help us all.
Bobby, it could very well be that you are correct about the attorneys and judges involved with this case were indeed more interested in not “making waves” when they saw this kind of injustice and abuse. There really is cruelty here, and if we don’t have the big money to fight it, all we can do is spread the word to ELIMINATE them from their position of authority and influence. The same with our government. Waking people up to see the ugliness of what’s going on… “wake up and smell the coffee!”… is about the only way we can fight back. Sad but true.
Looks like the asylum from “American Horror Story” or the place the story was based from.
i want to puke, This is horrific!
There are many places in Italy with ghosts, apparitions, many castles of the 400 “Pomeglia the island in Venice and ‘disturbing even American television came to investigate even the ghosts adventures they did it with bad experiences
your sick for watching all of it
Who are you calling sick? Did you look at all of the pictures?
[…] (44 PHOTOS) Abandoned Asylum: The Horrors of Forest Haven – What the government does with the unwanted in America. This is only one of the many warehouses for inconvenient human beings. […]
“…it should remain as a reminder to stop such heartbreaking horrors from happening again. Photo #20 by Jack Says Relax”
Lest we forget.
creepy pictures, good for horror movie
I do not understand about the pictures of the computers. Those looked like computers from the early 1990s not the 1970s.
Did you not read the part where they close in 1991?
My Mother Worked There .She Told she was Attacked Overpowered by two of the Inmates. they Threw her down the steps. Knocked her over the head and stole her purse, Then they drove her Car Away off the complex. The two ended up Raping a Girl that lived Across the Street on 198 living in the Trailer Park the Police eventually caught them .They tried to blame her because they got away. She had to Quit she couldn’t Take it anymore the Mismanagement of the whole place.
I came to live in Laurel at the age of 2 and stayed there for 40 years. I know a lot about Laurel so imagine my surprise when you called them “inmates”. I think you may have gotten Forest Haven mixed up with Oak Hill Detention Center right next door because your story sounds real sketchy to be Forest Haven, especially considering the patients who were there. They were not “inmates”, they were people (most came as a child ~5 years old) with severe mental challenges, people who had physical disabilities, couldn’t talk, walk, or could barely move. The Oak Hill Detention Center housed the district’s juvenile delinquents.
I imagine you may be young considering your grammar and using capital letters for almost every word you typed. The kids that lived in the trailer park went to school with me and were good friends. I’ve never heard that story at all. If someone was raped at that trailer park, there would be some news about it or least it would have been published in the Laurel Leader. Kids at the school would have been warned to be careful.
As a Laurel resident, I guess I was a little offended when you called them inmates. These were mentally retarded district citizens. For all the horror and mistreatment they endured, your story is just inappropriate. They could barely feed themselves, let alone escape, steal a car and purse and then rape someone.
Pratt should have been locked up at Forest Haven He knew what was going on he probably was getting paid off.
I tought this happens just in poor countries, but the reality is no being poor, is lack of
considerarion for people helpless and blindness of the corresponding authority.
The sad part is what occurred there, not the property. If you look past the years of vandalisn and neglect, you will see that it was a very well constructed building, on beautiful grounds. Properly run, this could have been something to be proud of. What a waste!
I grew up in Laurel. As kids we ventured into this place often and always at night. Very creepy things took place and most was probably in our heads…but then again…
i’d like to hear your stories if you wouldn’t mind sharing them
I commend you for sharing this post. My father was admitted to what appeared to be a nice and friendly nursing home located in Glen Burnie Maryland called ManorCare. When my father went in he could walk he could talk he could socialize and communicate, after less than 6 months we brought him home he could no longer do any of these things. Practically catatonic and suffering from severe bed sores from being strapped in his bed and adult feeding chair,left lying in his own urine and fecal matter the bed sores became infected. It broke my heart to see my father’s will and spirit to live had been broken.we brought him home he died within two months, at home with his family and people that loved him.I was 17 at the time. Thank you, keep searching and posting these horrible atrocities in hopes of waking people and the government. One day it could be your family members.
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i’m so sorry your family has had to endure something as awful as this. i’m also very sorry about your father. may he rest in peace
I volunteered at Forest Haven in the early 70’s with a group from Pallotti High School and even earlier with the Girl Scouts. It was a terrible place then – very under staffed, very neglectful of patients.
I have a problem with a mom who goes to visit her son and sees him being hosed down – did she remove him – most did not – they did not want to put forth the effort to help these people.
Yes, certainly the government could have stepped in and hired more staff and taught them proper care of these individuals. However, these people were basically thrown away by families that did not want to be bothered with them. That is the most shameful of all that happened at Forest Haven.
I also visited a small blind black boy approximately three years old, we rolled out mats and he was so happy that he could roll around and not be stuck in a very small metal crib. When you walked in the nursery there were approximately 200 beds and maybe 5 staff members. These children were basically changed and given a bottle. I never saw any other interaction. There just wasn’t any time for the staff. This was the government’s neglect.
The wards in the building I visited with separate nursery, young girls, young boys, elderly men and elderly women.
I visited another elderly lady that sat in a rocking chair everyday gazing out the window holding her baby doll and calling for her mom. She was the sweetest lady ever and if you engaged her in conversation she was able to communicate.
I think at that time our society let these type of people down, their loved ones mainly, the limited staff and of course the D.C Government and then the Federal Government.
It was sad but somehow rewarding to see the smiles of the people that we were able to communicate. It is a time in my life that I will never forget. It was actually the reason my studies were Special Education, I wanted to make a difference in these Special Needs people’s life but they do have worth and deserving of our love and attention. Instead of showing terrible pictures of these buildings that did not look like in the 70’s tear down the disgusting buildings and make a beautiful memorial park for the unfortunate souls that lost their lives there.
I want to go see this place. Are people allowed to go on the grounds and inside?
i cant believe that the emotional,mental,and physical abuse and inhumane treatment of mentally ill,developmentally delayed and some others with seizure related illness weren’t either reported by workers or if they were reported to authorities such as the justice department it was dismissed and dismissed time and time again and when it was recognized as a problem,thirty years later residents had already died of radiation burning.aspirations of food they ate due to being fed lying down and being treated inhumanely such as not having any clothing on except diaper and hosing them down which was supposed to be a bath.and last but not least workers understaffed 1:10 ration.even when i hear of this i think of a facility that i worked for there had been isolated cases in which residents were abused and if the person or persons accused of this were brought under investigation and tried by an outside investigator and was eventually convicted. that’s why its beyond me that the facility continued for years without investigation by the human rights committee i am devastated that this kind of treatment continued especially with licensed personnel involved i had never heard of this facility until i just now saw it on facebook.i don’t know if theses people involved were charged but i do know who has the vengeance and that is our heavenly lord
OMG!!! My friends and I used to drive through Forest Haven at night and freak ourselves out. This was in the late 80’s. I didn’t know all the stories that we’d heard and make up as we were driving were true. It was most definitely creepy then, while it was still in operation. It really saddens me to find out what was really going on. Wow, I have so many crazy memories of things we did in that area. Bless those souls.
Me too!
Horrific, and creepy photos..If these walls could talk indeed..I’m surprised to just now hear of this place, and I lived very close to it in 1976..
how did you get in there is security there would love to take some pictures my self but don’t like to go in and get arrested for being there its a sad thing those people had to go through those horrors is there any reported paranormal activity there I know sounds like a dumb thing to ask but I also do paranormal evp stuff to maybe try to get some of them to cross over but probably be hard to do because of the stuff they been through so sad they where treated that way nobody deserves that let me know what safe way there is to check this place out thanks and take care all john
@john. I would like to know the answer to that as well. There is security there and it is apparently the current place for a children’s academy/ education center. The asylum buildings are not used apparently.
I would like to do some kind of documentary about this place.
@gregory it’s easily accessible. many people have begun to explore the grounds regularly. my question is, has anyone seen a single photo from when the place was still in operation? seems like one hell of a cover up. no gov documentation online, no pictures of any patients or buildings from back then? seems awfully strange that not a shred of evidence exists other than testimonials and the court case
As a former medical records technician, of course the situation with the records is horrifying at best. But beyond that, in this and many other asylums across the country the complete waste of re-usable resources and equipment horrifies me as well.
My brother his friend and I went there today. it was defiantly scary going at night as we could not see that much. we went into two small rooms and it was very interesting to see the history in them. As we were walking down one of the roads me and my friend heard a little girls voice behind us and we knew it was time to go. we will defiantly go back in the future to explore more.
Were any of the documents saved? My mother said long ago that her brother was committed there when he was a few years old. He died of “pneumonia” when he was about seven. I can find nothing about him. I am the only remaining family member.
why is this sickening place not demolished yet?
I went there in Oct 2015 in the morning on a weekday. There is security, a car parked at the end of Forest Haven Avenue and River Road. You have to park off of 198 3/4 a mile away and walk up the road, then through the woods as there is security at the end of Old Portland Road also. In the woods were a bunch of surgical face masks laying on the ground which told me the buildings were probably full of asbestos. I can’t believe all he stuff in the buildings. I’ve read that in 1998 they had crews get rid off all the medical records for legal reasons. I still found medical records in one of the buildings. The place looks just like the pictures above. It was creepy even on a nice sunny day. My friend and I spent about 3 hours there. A solid hour was in the administration building which was the 2nd building we went into. It was hard to walk up and down the stairways with all the silt on the steps. We went to cross Forest Haven Avenue when we saw a security guard at the end of the road and quickly turned back so there were a few buildings we didn’t go to. I have about 40 minutes of video split up between all the buildings we went in. The church was the nicest of them and I’m sure some homeless people live there off and on I thought to myself. As we were leaving we saw a young woman who was trying to hide from us. We reassured her we were just there to look around and would not harm her. She didn’t admit to being homeless and said she was meeting her “boyfriend” who should be there any minute. She told us where the morgue was but it was too close to the two security cars for me to venture there. Also the “cemetery” which is a little field next to a swamp and the little Patuxent river is just too hard to get to b/c of the river, swamp and the road which the two security guards sit at so we didn’t go there either. I’m sure the graves are exposed as written about as the river floods several times a year. As we made our way back to the woods we startled an older gentleman coming out of the woods with a tri-pod and camera bag. We waved to him and he asked if there was security there. We told him where they sit in the car and that a homeless woman was the only person we saw and to look out for. I’d like to go back at night but think it’d be more of a risk of getting into legal trouble. Nobody needs that.
Was assigned (by the US Public Health Service) there as a clinical pharmacist during 1981 and 1982 – for me, the photo’s show no balance to what went on there and I will admit my time there was during one of FH’s better times. The 1980’s were a complex time for FH with the court ordered no admissions (a good thing), the facility was in transition from a Federal to a DC facility (which was not a good time for many employees), it was burdened by the DC Govt residency rule for employees (a DC Facility in Maryland that you had to be a DC resident to get a job at), the DC purchasing system (a real mess).
Maybe a surprise to some who see these pics but there really were MANY employees there who treated these “children” (they really were not in later years) as they would their own. Someone makes a remark about “torture” in the dental chair – during my time we had three good dentists who tries their best – despite long term effects of psych drugs, Dilantin etc. Imagine treating a patient with functional level of three months in a man-size body – not an easy situation for anyone. But our dentists were caring and tried to use minimal sedation (usually Chloral Hydrate at that time)to avoid general anesthesia and having to be hospitalized for the simplest of procedures.
Interesting to see some wbo had abandoned their children the Federal and DC government come back later and lead the complaints – but that is understandable I guess.
I wish I could say that deploying these “children” to a series of smaller institutions was a perfect answer – it was and is not perfect either as cases of neglect, abuse, mismanagement have occurred within that system.
I would never contest what is said negatively about FH but just think a bit of balance is needed for the many Federal and DC Govt employees who gave so much there over the years.