Blackwell/Roosevelt Island
Blackwell Island was an infamous island in New York, especially in the late 1800’s to early 1900’s. On this island there was an insane asylum, New York City Lunatic Asylum, a smallpox hospital, poorhouses, a general hospital, and workhouses. The roots of this island are tied to the roots of discrimination against those of lower class, foreign people and people with mental illnesses. Blackwell Island is probably most known from Nellie Bly's book about the asylum she went undercover in. She exposed the horrible conditions of those who lived there and the lack of inhumanity they were treated with. The island is now called Roosevelt Island after President, Franklin Roosevelt, and is a symbol of honoring those with a disability. This changed the views of many as it turned an island that was known for forcing those against their will to an island with inhumane treatment into a place that helps treat people.
Articles:
Blackwell's Island (Roosevelt Island), New York City (U.S. National Park Service). www.nps.gov/places/blackwell-s-island-new-york-city.htm.
Associated Articles:
Bly, Nellie. Ten Days in a Mad-House. 2017.
Parent Map
Coordinates
Longitude: -73.950993400000