This post deals with very very sensitive information that may not be acceptable to all readers. Please do not continue reading if you are easily disturbed. There are outgoing links in this blog that lead to websites where we do not post or control the content. Thank you for your understanding.
Posting Member: Jenn
Trapped in life and in death seems just too much to understand.
All of us understand that today’s level of care and compassion is vastly different from the past, and choose to see it as an evolution in humanity that we can claim improvement. It is also our expressed opinion that no family is responsible for poor choice in placing anyone within the care provided by City or State. We’re not judges. This is our history, and all we can do is record it and hope to learn from it. There is no fault nor blame casting in regards to the patients and their families in these notes, and we hope to progress with the utmost respect for everything that each of these individuals has lived through.
(Updated FindAGrave Cemetery Posting http://www.findagrave.com/cgi-bin/fg.cgi?page=cr&CRid=108375&CScn=Kankakee+State&)
This cemetery has been removed from the public eye. If you take River Road east from the entrance of the Kankakee Community College, you will make a left at the second road. This road leads into the baseball diamonds and into River Road Park. Between the ball diamond and the park, on the west side of the road is a new 8′ SOLID wood fence, with store bought, plastic, NO TRESPASSING signs posted. There is a path around the fence, which is chained off. If you walk down either side, as you get to the rear of the lot, the fencing is older and only 6′. Many of the slats are warped or twisted. (Damaged areas are quickly repaired.) You can peek between boards and see the graves. There has to be almost 1000 there.
There is ONE gate in, on the south side. The gate is solid wood, 8′, and secured by 3 very large padlocks. It is obvious that someone(???) does not want the public snooping around. There are NO signs to indicate what is behind the fence, and nothing telling you where to go or who to talk to for information.
From what I could see, the stones (all the same, much like a Military Cemetery) had the deceased name, date of death, and hospital patient number. There are some flat ground stones on the west side. The Kankakee State Hospital no longer exists. It is now The Shapiro Developmental Center, and has been so since the mid 1970’s.”
One poster on a message board suggest there could be up to 6000 persons linked to this cemetery. Without the public being aware of this situation and making it their business to have the information made available, there is no hope for it to ever again see the light of day. Several people have suggested that the cemetery itself has been ‘protected’ by fencing and padlocks to discourage the public from seeing and therefore asking about the cemetery and who is buried there. Apparently it’s an area that’s becoming more developed, and the potential for it to just be built over is high. And if you do manage to get inside… Burials by patient number are apparently high. Without coordinating files, all that’s left is numbers and lost souls.More information….
Asylum Projects: Kankakee State Hospital
(No longer valid)
(No longer valid)
Genealogy Trails: Kankakee Abandoned Asylum almost makes an important note: Kankakee Hospital is now the Shapiro Developmental Center, meaning the grounds are still in use and patients are still being treated there. Researchers must keep this in mind.
Abandoned Asylum: Photographs
Link no longer valid.
Ultimately, after reading from these websites, and from the Illinois State department’s statement in regards to releasing any information on an non-direct relative… We know we can kiss ever seeing these records good bye. Barring mass intervention and them becoming public, James McKenna’s life story will likely be shrouded in mystery forever. We’ve still got some hopes of finding his death certificate… And of course, there’s the eternal optimist that suggests maybe he escaped Kankakee and went and built a lovely life in Florida where he died a prosperous old man of 101 with a hundred grand children who saw him aged and content.
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