Toledo State Hospital Cemeteries

Toledo State Hospital Cemeteries 1,994 persons are buried under numbered bricks in the historic Toledo State Hospital Cemeteries.

We honor these past patients by sharing their stories & hospital history. For hundreds of years, people with psychiatric, neurological, and medical conditions were often removed from society, sometimes for a lifetime. In Toledo, many were sent to the state hospital to live out their days. 1,994 people who had been forgotten in life were also forgotten in death, buried in graves identified by small

concrete blocks marked only with the number of their burial. Even these anonymous grave markers were eventually lost underground after decades of neglect. The city grew up around the cemeteries, and the people buried there were forgotten. The Toledo State Hospital Cemeteries became a visible reminder of how society shunned people with disabilities until the late 20th century. This page tells the stories of the hospital, of those hospitalized, and of those buried and forgotten in the cemeteries. It is also a method to encourage participation in restoration efforts and in the fight against stigma.

05/20/2026

Interesting stats dating back to 1882 found in the justification for building Toledo Asylum for the Insane, identifying 1,166 persons in county infirmaries (not sure if this refers to NW Ohio or the entire state) “entitled to state care.” Of these….

Number of violent and dangerous 166
Number filthy and requiring constant care 217
Number locked and cells 147
Number handcuffed 10
Number hobbled 9
Number restrained by straitjackets or otherwise 84

This Friday is our Memorial Day flag ceremony, supported by the Toledo Lucas County Memorial Day Association. Veteran’s ...
05/14/2026

This Friday is our Memorial Day flag ceremony, supported by the Toledo Lucas County Memorial Day Association. Veteran’s graves will be marked with American flags by members of Korean War Veterans Post #131, VFW Post #3338, and representatives of the Lucas County Veterans Commission. A brief ceremony will follow. Program begins at 2pm, and is open to the public. We start at the Old TSH Cemetery off Arlington Ave just west of South Detroit, and will then move west down Arlington, turning left onto UTMC Campus just after the railroad tracks, and stop at parking lot #43 to place flags at the TSH New Cemetery. All are welcome!

We had a successful work day in both cemeteries today, May 2nd with the help of Boy Scout Troop 66 (Bethel Lutheran Chur...
05/03/2026

We had a successful work day in both cemeteries today, May 2nd with the help of Boy Scout Troop 66 (Bethel Lutheran Church). We relocated and flagged all known and previously found veterans burial markers, including those representing Civil War, WWI and II, Philippine Insurrection, and peacetime service. This wasn’t an easy task, as numbered markers aren’t consistently in a sequential order, plus many previously “found” markers have begun sinking again and were hidden under dirt and grass. Due to the hard work of about 10 scouts and family members present, along with 3 members of the TSH Memory Project Committee, we not only were able to mark their graves, but also found several additional vets markers for the first time! This was done in preparation for a visit on May 22nd by reps of The Lucas County Veteran’s Service Commission, VFW Post 3338, and the Korean War Vets, when we will place American flags on veteran’s graves and hold a memorial ceremony a few days before Memorial Day. Thank you Troop 66 for sharing your energy and enthusiasm for this important work!

Interesting article published in History Today Volume 71 Issue 10 October 2021Edith Lanchester, c.1895. Although this oc...
04/25/2026

Interesting article published in History Today Volume 71 Issue 10 October 2021
Edith Lanchester, c.1895. Although this occurred in England, a woman establishing boundaries of any type was a typical reason for admission during this time period.

In the autumn of 1895 Edith Lanchester was 24. Born into a middle-class family, she had studied at the Birkbeck Institute and worked as a City clerk. She was also already a seasoned socialist campaigner; her ringing voice, it was said, could command the attention of the most hostile of crowds.

It was through the Battersea branch of the Social Democratic Federation that she met a factory worker named James Sullivan. They opposed the institution of marriage and planned, in the phraseology of the day, to start housekeeping together.

On 25 October she was eating breakfast at her lodgings in Battersea when her father burst in, accompanied by three of her brothers and Dr Fielding Blandford, one of the country’s leading mental health experts.

Blandford asked her if she would agree to marry Sullivan. Lanchester refused. ‘I object on principle to becoming the chattel of any man’, she said. After half an hour’s argument, Blandford left the room. ‘Dear, dear, I can do nothing with her’, he told her father.

Suddenly Lanchester’s brothers seized her, tied her hands together and dragged her screaming out of the house and into a waiting carriage. Her destination was the Priory in Roehampton, then a private lunatic asylum. Blandford had arrived with committal papers completed and signed.

The abduction caused a national outcry. Most newspapers, under headlines such as ‘A Socialist Romance’, were sympathetic. Even those who thought Edith foolish were appalled at the abuse of the lunacy laws. The Marquess of Queensbury wrote to offer advice and financial support.

Blandford defended his actions. ‘If she had said that she contemplated su***de a certificate might have been signed without question’, he wrote. ‘I was equally justified in signing one when she expressed her determination to commit this social su***de.’

Lanchester was released after four days. What cause of insanity had Blandford given on the committal papers? ‘Over-education’, reportedly. Her father, writing to The Times to defend his actions, claimed she was ‘not of sound mind [due to] the effects of over-study’. She never spoke to him again.

With Memorial Day only 2 months away, here’s a repost of a paragraph from an early TSH annual report, describing a parad...
03/19/2026

With Memorial Day only 2 months away, here’s a repost of a paragraph from an early TSH annual report, describing a parade of Civil War veteran patients in 1896 celebrating Decoration Day on hospital grounds.

03/19/2026

Reposting this from several years ago, as a reminder that some medical treatments in the old days were highly addictive, or in this case were more dangerous than the condition they treated. The article below is about Claud Bissell, who died at TSH after a 25 year hospitalization.

Claud Bissell was born in Antwerp, Ohio April 18, 1881, and departed this life at the State Hospital in Toledo, Ohio, December 16, 1926, aged 45 years, 7 months and 28 days. He was the son of Charles A. and Rosetta Bissell. He leaves to mourn , his parents and one sister, Mrs. Hugh A. White, all of Antwerp, Ohio. When two years old he suffered a dangerous attack of membranous croup and as a last resort to save life the doctors gave indigo, which destroyed the membrane in the thorat and also destroyed certain brain cells so that while he grew into a man physically his mind remained as a little child. He had been an inmate of the Toledo State Hospital for twenty-five years.
”Not now, but in the coming years it may be in the better land, We’ll know the meaning of our tears, and then sometime we’ll understand”

CARD OF THANKS
We take this means of thanking our friends and neighbors who so kindly assisted in the burial of our son and brother.
Mr. and Mrs. C. A. Bissell
Mr. and Mrs. H. A. White

Update:  A local business dealing in memorial markers responded with an offer to clean the urns, and followup is now in ...
03/19/2026

Update: A local business dealing in memorial markers responded with an offer to clean the urns, and followup is now in the hands of Northwest Ohio Behavioral Healthcare. Will provide updates as they happen.

I’m calling on NW Ohio locals who might know of a contractor capable of doing restoration work on the historic urns at Northwest Ohio Psych Hospital (the old State Hospital’s current name). If anyone has a suggestion, please share! These date back to 1888. There are 3 that still exist.

Our appreciation goes to the volunteers representing the Black Swamp Libertarians and Rossford Amazon for their help at ...
03/19/2026

Our appreciation goes to the volunteers representing the Black Swamp Libertarians and Rossford Amazon for their help at Christmas in laying wreaths at the graves of our veterans. We also thank those who’s donations to Wreaths Across America allowed us to place 80 wreaths in their honor.

Silent Voices Speak:  I was reminded of another story while attending a presentation last week on the early history of l...
04/11/2024

Silent Voices Speak: I was reminded of another story while attending a presentation last week on the early history of land and Native American tribes that lived here. A book on Ottawa County Native American history was circulating, so I looked through until I found a section about Victoria Cadaract (Kataract) of the Chippewa tribe. She was the grandmother of Katie, who is buried in the TSH Old Cemetery, #1633. Her mother Rose, died shortly after Katie was born, and according to a newspaper article, "It is known that "Indians have severe tempers... and evidently, Kate's was uncontrollable." She was admitted to the Ottawa County infirmary at the age of 16, and lived there for the next 57 years. She was described as being a favorite of the visitors to the County Home, due to her "friendliness and kindness." At the age of 73 she was admitted to Toledo State Hospital, where she died two years later in 1945. I've seen multiple references to her Grandmother Victoria being the last of the Chippewas in Ottawa County, and I always argue that point, as Katie resided there long after her grandmother had passed. But it wasn't unusual at the time for those admitted to public, county or state care facilities to be dismissed and forgotten. But we remember you Katie!

Photos include Katie at TSH, her burial marker, and Victoria standing outside of her home in Ottawa County.

A friend reminded me recently of the Ceely Rose story (thanks Rebecca) which I share below from History in Stone site.  ...
04/11/2024

A friend reminded me recently of the Ceely Rose story (thanks Rebecca) which I share below from History in Stone site. Ceely spent years at then Toledo Asylum for the Insane before being transferred to Lima State Hospital, where she died and was buried.

In 1896, a case of love misunderstood in the seemingly misnamed Pleasant Valley area of Ohio led to the tragic murder of 3 innocent people. A young woman named Ceely Rose was the catalyst and culprit for these murders. By today's standards, she was severely learning disabled and could not do many tasks on her own. While she matured physically, she remained mentally immature. Nearly everyone made fun of her.

With the onset of physical maturity, she naturally fell in love with a local farmer named Guy Berry, who was one of the few people who treated her with any degree of respect. However, she did not understand that he was just being kind to her, and did not love her or want to marry her. Ceely began telling everyone that would listen that she and Guy were soon to be married! Guy did not want to hurt Ceely's feelings, so he told her that they could not be married because Ceely's family did not approve of him. This revelation sent Ceely into a rage that would prove to be deadly.

Accounts differ, but Ceely either soaked fly paper in water and poured it over cottage cheese, or she laced coffee with rat poison. Either way, she killer her father (David Rose), mother (Rebecca Rose), and brother (Walter Rose). Mr. Rose succumbed almost immediately, on June 30th. Walter lingered for a few weeks and later died on July 4th. Apparently, Mrs. Rose figured out what Ceely had done, and tried to protect her from authorities, but Ceely gave her another dose of arsenic and she died on July 19th.

Ceely eventually confessed to a neighbor, after being heartbroken when Guy Berry left town to avoid blame and scrutiny. She spent the rest of her life in a mental institution, and died at the age of 83. Ceely is buried on the grounds of the Lima State Mental Hospital (or so I have heard).

The Rose Home can be found on the grounds of Malabar Farm State Park, and the Rose family was laid to rest in a small cemetery just up the road, called Pleasant Valley Cemetery.

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Roscoe, IL

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