The History Of Oakdale
The names of Oakdale
• Michigan Home for the Feebleminded and Epileptic
• Michigan Home and Training School
• Lapeer State Home and Training School
• Oakdale Center for Developmental Disabilities
Opened:
August 1825
Closed:
October 1991
Center closed because:
The number of residents declined due to the shift of housing patients in group’s homes.
Effect of closing on Community:
• More than six hundred lay off.
• All buildings torn down except 45 (Mott College), 71 (Chatfield), and Woodside, or now Rolland-Warner.
Changes to the Facility:
• September 11, 1895: School Opened
• March 1904: Administration building added
• 1910: Small Pox epidemic
• 1973: Castle torn down after a fire, 71 yr. old
Purpose of facility:
• To house the mentally handicapped, disabled, and orphaned children.
• They often picked children off the streets.
Effect on the Community:
• It brought thousands of residents to Lapeer to be a patient, or an employee.
• It gave work, and help to those who needed it.
Number of people who worked there:
• The facility had 1,100 employees at its highest point in 1950.
Jobs were:
• farming,
• housekeeping,
• cooking
• Nurses, doctors, medical
• Maintenance
• Teachers
• Administration
Amount of people housed there:
• 1895-200
• 1938-3,804
• 1953-4,400
• 1964-4,448
The End of Oakdale:
• 191 acres for a dollar
• Bought by Lapeer
• Left Mott, Chatfield, Cemetery,
old play ground equipment, Dolphin statue, Woodside.
Purchase of the facility
What life was like for residents?
• Dances
• Movies
• Skating
• Baseball
• Picnics
• Parties
• Off-Site work
• School
Number of buildings:
• 115 buildings
• 2 schools
• 2 hospitals
• Laundry Building
• Bakery
• Kitchen
• Cathedral
• Residences
• Nursery
• 38 farm building
• Administration building
Dairy farm
• 225 milking cows
• 1500 chickens that laid eggs
• 100 acre garden
• 600 hogs
• 450 registered Holsteins-most registered in Michigan at the time
• All meat was slaughtered at the Facility’s slaughterhouse
Purchase of the Facility
• The city bought the facility from the state for a dollar (191 acres)
• a non-for-profit restriction to be lifted cost the city $800,000 to the state
• city had to pay $200,000 to $300,000 to clean up asbestos and other contaminants
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