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The state of Maine was in the 1820s the most besotted territory of America.
Its residents, by one estimate, spent on drink in every generation a sum
equivalent in value to all the property in the state. Lawlessness, chaos,
misery and demoralization stamped every town and village. Out of this
stinking swamp arose a man possessed from his early adulthood with a healing
vision: to build a refuge where the inebriates of the whole nation would be
treated on medical principles. Joseph Edward Turner, M.D., brought to this
vision a zeal commensurate to the challenge. To raise funds, he had more
than 120,000 doors shut in his face, was turned down by more than 1,100
wealthy men, and was bitten six times by their dogs. But in June, 1864, with
a grant from the New York State legislature, financed by a portion of the
excise tax on liquor, the nation's first "Inebriate Asylum" opened its doors
at Binghamton, New York.
Drunkard's Refuge is the story of this pioneering institution, based on
recently unearthed documents.
Those who seek here for a story of medical or moral uplift on an
institutional scale will come away disappointed. Turner, his board, his
staff, his patients, and the nearby town were in almost constant friction
before the doors opened. Two arson fires, cynical maneuvering, power
struggles, schisms, corruption, and numerous instances of abuse marked this
institution's relatively brief life before it closed its doors in 1879. Few
are the testimonials of men who achieved lasting remission of their
addiction within its walls.
Much of the book attempts to draw the lessons of the asylum's demise for
today's treatment institutions and for the larger recovery culture within
which they operate. The authors are eminently qualified for such a task.
John W. Crowley is the author of The White Logic: Alcoholism and Gender
in American Modernist Fiction
and William White wrote Slaying the
Dragon: The History of Addiction Treatment and Recovery in America.
Many themes of the latter book are recapitulated and interwoven with the
story of Turner's asylum.
It would be interesting one day to compare and contrast this high-profile
institutional Titanic with the much longer and more successful story of the
Washingtonian Home, which opened its doors in Boston seven years before the
Inebriate's Asylum and survived in various forms until modern times.
For those who seek to understand treatment institutions and their conceptual
underpinnings, Drunkard's Refuge is an illuminating microcosm, a
universe seen in a grain of sand. It's also a good read, without a dull
chapter. Recommended. |