St. Louis State Hospital 7R2_DSC1035_16-09-06
by Greg Kluempers
Title
St. Louis State Hospital 7R2_DSC1035_16-09-06
Artist
Greg Kluempers
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
On April 23, 1869, St. Louis County Lunatic Asylum opened its doors to 150 mentally ill people. Work began in August 1864. Designed and built by architect William Rumbold, it is the second governmental facility in the state to serve this population. Rumbold's vision was to recall Imperial Rome, resulting in the cast-iron-dome and plans that called for fine imported marble pillars for the front portico.
Photo of Backside of Dome BuildingRumbold's cast-iron-structured dome on the old St. Louis County Lunatic Asylum, now called St. Louis Psychiatric Rehabilitation Center has dominated the landscape of south St. Louis for over a century. In the beginning, it was generally held to be magnificent after which the fashion for ornamental extravagance faded and it came to be considered everything from monstrous to quaint. Now, however, it has regained a place of architectural importance, not so much by being beautiful, as by being old. It is also one of a unique matched pair in St. Louis; the other being Rumbold's dome over the old Court House at Fourth and Market Streets. The dome is even a sort of skeleton cousin to what is probably the most widely recognized dome in the world; the one surmounting the Capitol in Washington, D.C. Rumbold may not have been the prime architect for the great dome in Washington, but he was an honored consultant at least.
Due to his failing health, Rumbold had been buried fifteen months in Bellefontaine Cemetery before the St. Louis County Insane Asylum formally accepted its first patients.
http://dmh.mo.gov/slprc/history.html
Uploaded
September 19th, 2016
Statistics
Viewed 476 Times - Last Visitor from New York, NY on 04/25/2024 at 11:30 AM
Embed
Share
Sales Sheet
Comments
There are no comments for St. Louis State Hospital 7R2_DSC1035_16-09-06. Click here to post the first comment.