The Public Hospital for Persons of Insane and Disordered Minds was the first public building in America devoted solely to the treatment of the mentally ill.
All About America: America's First Public Mental Hospital
- By Dora Mekouar
![An eletrocution machine used at the Public Hospital in Williamsburg, Virginia.](https://gdb.voanews.com/56b78663-9d2d-45ef-981e-5010f0009f2a_w1024_q10_s.jpg)
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An eletrocution machine used at the Public Hospital in Williamsburg, Virginia.
![The lancers (left) were used to bleed the patient to "remove harmful fluids". Scarificators (center) were bloodletting tools with a spring-loaded mechanism that snapped the blades out through slits to pierce the skin. With cupping (right), doctors warmed](https://gdb.voanews.com/eba3a111-d66f-4c5b-a0d8-9aa836361bb4_w1024_q10_s.jpg)
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The lancers (left) were used to bleed the patient to "remove harmful fluids". Scarificators (center) were bloodletting tools with a spring-loaded mechanism that snapped the blades out through slits to pierce the skin. With cupping (right), doctors warmed
![The mortar and pestle (left) were used to mix and refine drugs, the syringe (center) was used to administer laxatives to rid the body of harmful or excessive fluids. Doctors carried the scales (right) as they made rounds so that they could weigh the correct dosage of medicine. ](https://gdb.voanews.com/be42be77-74a7-48f3-a9ed-53a96091a440_w1024_q10_s.jpg)
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The mortar and pestle (left) were used to mix and refine drugs, the syringe (center) was used to administer laxatives to rid the body of harmful or excessive fluids. Doctors carried the scales (right) as they made rounds so that they could weigh the correct dosage of medicine.
![During the "moral management"era of treatment, the hospital purchased games and musical instruments to divert patients' attention from "excessive self-preoccupation".](https://gdb.voanews.com/d8d3e8b9-8c26-4f23-873e-bbb2a7854fc2_w1024_q10_s.jpg)
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During the "moral management"era of treatment, the hospital purchased games and musical instruments to divert patients' attention from "excessive self-preoccupation".