In 1762 the town of Mont
Alto was founded, the
town was supported
mainly by a large blast
furnace until it closed
in 1893. In 1901 the
first state sanatorium
was built, White Haven,
with Elwell Stockdale as
the director. The
facilities only
consisted of an unheated
barn and tents until
1902 when several shacks
were built using private
donations. Each shack
was only 8ft by 10ft and
held 5 men each.
In 1903 the state
legislature donated
$8,000 and the first
real buildings were
erected on the grounds.
The state money was used
to build an assembly
building, office
building, spring house,
and 6 cottages that
consisted of 3 rooms, 2
porches, and furniture
for each. The sanatorium
housed about 30 patients
during this time, who
paid $1 per week which
covered all expenses
except laundry. However,
there was still no
in-house doctor, only a
local doctor that made
visits to the
sanatorium. The state
provided another $15,000
in 1905 to build a
dining room and kitchen.
By 1907 the sanatorium
was transferred to the
PA Dept of Health and
$600,000 was spent on
the facility.
An infirmity was built
in 1910. The infirmary
housed patients that
were too sick to live in
the camp. The patient
population
grew quickly to 960
in 1912. At this time,
most of the patients
lived in Dixon Cottages.
The Dixon Cottages were
26 square feet and could
hold up to 8 patients,
56 cottages were built.
In 1920 a second
infirmary was built and
by 1924 the first
infirmary building was
converted to a
children's hospital.
Over the next few years
the campus grew
dramatically and began to
resemble more
of what it looks like today.
Many more buildings were
built, including a two
story nurses home, power
plant, and water
treatment plant in 1928.
From 1931 to 1933 units
4, 8, 11, and 15 were
built. Also during that
time period another
nurse’s home, new
infirmary, new dining
hall were built and
additions were built
onto the preventorium.
As part of the building
boom of the 1930s fueled
by the Public Works
Administration
the state made available
$4,765,000.00 to build
Unit 1, Unit 2, Unit 3,
another nurse’s home,
and a dining hall in
1938.
Unit 1:
Unit 1 was built at a
cost of 1.2 million
dollars and is still in
existence today (2016).
The building is 7
stories tall and
constructed primarily
out of brick, concrete,
terrqzine, rubberized
tile, and slate. The
walls of Unit 1 are 18”
thick, and it was the
first building on campus
to be constructed with
concrete floors. The
general contractor was
John McShain
Inc. Unit 1 featured
operating suites,
medical & administration
offices, kitchen,
dinning room, research
labs, morgue, autopsy
room, two movie
theaters, an auditorium,
recreation facility, and
head sets for each bed
that played two radio
stations.
Unit 2:
Unit 2 was built at a
cost of $600,000 dollars
and is still in
existence today (2016).
The building is 4
stories tall and was
designed as a
preventorium hospital
for children. The
building was designed by
Morgan Keast and
features two wings
jutting from a central
pavilion. Unit 2 also
features 2 indoor pools,
library, 4 classrooms,
an exercise room, single
patient rooms, an
auditorium, a movie
theater, lounges, and a
complete single family
home for rehabilitation.
The first floor of Unit
1 was for boys and
nurses and the second
floor was for girls.
In the 1950s Unit 1 was
used to house the most
critical patients. Men
were located in the
north wing and women
were in the south wing.
The worse the patients
condition the higher the
floor they were on. Unit
2 was for the least ill
patients and was less
constrictive than Unit
1. Patients in Unit 2
were required to get at
least 4 ½ hours of sleep
and were allowed to sit
on the lawn behind the
building and could visit
the movie theater in
Unit 1. During the 1950’s
patients at the hospital
wore pajamas and
bathrobes that fell
below the knees, men
were required to shave
once every 2 days, and
smoking was discouraged,
but allowed if permitted
by a doctor. Patients in
Unit 1 were allowed 1
week leave every 6
months and Patients in
Unit 2 were allowed 2
weeks. Educational
classes were required
for children ages 6-18
and were voluntary for
the adults. At the
information desk in Unit
1 patients could buy bus
tickets to anywhere in
the United States and
Mexico. In 1956 Unit 2
was acquired by the
Pennsylvania Department
of Public Welfare to
house mentally retarded
women. Unit 2 was
returned to the
Department of Health in
1960.
In the 1950’s, patients
could leave the hospital
within months as opposed
to years. In 1956 until
1968, the hospital was
renamed Dr. Samuel G.
Dixon. The Samuel G.
Dixon State Hospital
retained many of the
same rules and
regulations of previous
years with more critical
patients being housed in
Unit 1. Despite the
amount of daily activity
at the sanatorium, signs
were visible that it’s
time as a tuberculosis
facility had passed and
in 1963, the sanatorium
newsletter ‘Spunk’
produced its final
edition. In 1965, the
sanatorium became the
South Mountain Geriatric
Center and in February
1966, the Department of
Health announced its
intent to phase out
tuberculosis treatment
at the sanitarium to
focus more on geriatric
patients being housed in
mental hospitals. The
sanatorium’s name was
changed one final time
in 1968 to its current
name of South Mountain
Restoration Center.
After a high patient
count of about 1,100 in
1970, the center
stabilized to
approximately 800 and by
the early 1990’s, the
patient census dropped
to 400. In 1992, a
company by the name of
Vision Quest opened a
camp for troubled youths
on the grounds and in
October 1994, the
Cornell Abraxas
Leadership Development
Program opened a
residential training at
the center similar to a
military school. This
group expanded to Unit 3
once all remaining
residents were moved to
Unit 1 and in 1997, the
Secure Treatment Unit,
which houses repeat
offender youths, opened
behind the Nurse’s Home. |