Two years and four months in a lunatic asylum : from August 20th, 1863 to December 20th, 1865

audiobook

Two years and four months in a lunatic asylum : from August 20th, 1863 to December 20th, 1865

by Hiram Chase

EN·~3 hours·10 chapters

Chapters

10 total
1

PREFACE.

10:27
2

CHAPTER I

14:36
3

CHAPTER II.

13:10
4

CHAPTER III.

20:39
5

CHAPTER IV.

41:24
6

CHAPTER V.

14:55
7

CHAPTER VI.

26:19
8

CHAPTER VII.

28:22
9

CHAPTER VIII.

15:23
10

TESTIMONIALS.

2:03

Description

A seasoned minister, who spent over two years confined in a state lunatic asylum during the mid‑1860s, has finally put his experience to paper. He writes not as a sensationalist, but as a sober witness determined to correct the public’s vague and often mocking ideas about such institutions. His account begins with a candid confession of the reluctance he felt to revisit those painful months, yet he feels compelled to share what he saw for the sake of truth.

In the opening pages he contrasts his own disciplined routine—no missed meals, no idle days—with the chaotic, often misunderstood world of asylum life. He also critiques earlier inmate memoirs that, in his view, sacrifice accuracy for profit or bitterness. By offering a measured, firsthand perspective, he hopes listeners will gain a clearer, more compassionate picture of the conditions and the people who lived within those walls.

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Details

Full title

Two years and four months in a lunatic asylum : from August 20th, 1863 to December 20th, 1865 from August 20th, 1863 to December 20th, 1865

Language

en

Duration

~3 hours (179K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Gonçalo Silva and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2014-07-02

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

HC

Hiram Chase

1801–1877

A Methodist minister turned memoirist, he is best remembered for a stark firsthand account of life inside the Utica asylum in the 1860s. His writing offers both a personal story and an unusually direct look at mental health care in nineteenth-century America.

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