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🕯️ Description — The Dark History of St. Brigid’s Psychiatric Hospital Hidden on the edge of Ballinasloe in County Galway stands the haunting shell of St. Brigid’s Psychiatric Hospital, once known as the Connaught District Lunatic Asylum. Opened in 1833, it was built with good intentions — a grand stone complex designed to treat the mentally ill — but over time, it became a place of fear, silence, and confinement. Originally created for just 150 patients, St. Brigid’s soon grew into a massive institution, holding over two thousand men, women, and even children at its peak. People were sent here for reasons that seem unthinkable today — sadness, jealousy, poverty, “religious excitement,” or simply being unwanted by family. Under harsh laws like the Dangerous Lunatics Act of 1838, anyone could be locked away with little more than a doctor’s note and two signatures. Inside its cold stone walls, patients faced decades of isolation. Treatments were experimental — cardiazol convulsive therapy, electroshock, and heavy sedation replaced compassion. Many residents never left; some died without ever being visited again. Overcrowding turned the hospital into a human warehouse where cries echoed down long, tiled corridors and the smell of disinfectant mixed with decay. By the 1950s, Ireland had one of the highest rates of psychiatric confinement in the world, and St. Brigid’s was at the heart of that dark chapter. Its halls became a mirror of a society that punished the vulnerable instead of healing them. As the decades passed and reform came, patients were slowly released, and in 2013, the doors finally closed. Today, the once-grand buildings stand abandoned and overgrown, medical records scattered across dusty floors — a chilling reminder of those who suffered in silence behind its barred windows.