Dorothea Dix

489 Words1 Page

Dorothea Dix

It was not a good idea to be mentally insane in New Jersey 150 years ago. The state had no mental hospitals. People who went mad were just locked

up in poor houses and jails, or farmed out to who ever would care for them cheapest. But in 1844 the Yankee reformer Dorothea Dix came to New Jersey to agitate for the construction of a modern state asylum. Her life, including her genuine care for the mentally ill and other issues, reflects the theme of Rachel Baker's biography which is that sick people must never become "cases" receiving only efficient treatment; they need love.

Dorothea Dix was fourteen when she opened her first school for young children in 1816. For the next twenty years, she combined teaching with writing

textbooks, poetry, and religious tracts for young readers. At the age of forty, she began teaching Sunday school classes for women in the East Cambridge jail. As a noted social reformer, Dorothea Dix became the Union's Superintendent of Female Nurses during the Civil War. A week after the attack on Fort Sumter, at

the age of fifty-nine, ...

More about Dorothea Dix

Open Document