Lakeland Asylum
"Central Kentucky Asylum for the Insane"
From "The
Little Colonel's Knight Comes Riding," published 1907,
Chapter IV, Betty's Novel:
"It's some crazy man escaped from the Lakeland
asylum," began Kitty, but her words were cut short
by another shot, then another and another and
another, in such rapid succession that they lost
count. A series of piercing screams from Lucy,
up-stairs, made their blood run cold, but the
shrieks were not half as terrifying as the sight of
Gay staggering back out of the hall. As they sprang
towards her she leaned against them limply."
"Lakeland Asylum" was
actually the Central Kentucky Asylum for the Insane. Built
in 1869 in Anchorage, it initially housed juvenile
delinquents and was called the Home for Juvenile Delinquents
at Lakeland. In 1873, it became a lunatic asylum and was
renamed the Central Kentucky Lunatic Asylum. By the time
"The Little Colonel's Knight Comes Riding" was published,
the name had been changed to the Central Kentucky Asylum for
the Insane. The facility cared for patients with psychiatric
disorders, mental retardation and brain damage and was
located next to where Louisville's E. P. Tom Sawyer Park
stands today. The original building shown in the post card
above was bulldozed in 1996.
During the late 19th
and early 20th centuries, escaped lunatics were an every day
hazard of life in Pewee (Lloydsboro) Valley. The Central
Kentucky Lunatic Asylum was located only a few miles outside
the city limits and inmate escapes occurred with some
frequency. In her book, "Jennie Casseday of Louisville : her
intimate life as told by her sister,
Mrs. Fannie Casseday Duncan."
Mrs. Duncan offers
this humorous anecdote about an escape that occurred while
Jennie and she were staying alone at the
Rest Cottage in
Pewee Valley the week before it opened:
page by Donna Russell
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