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In
1829, the government established a colony on 300 acres of woodland on
Staten Island in New York. The poor, the disabled, and the mentally ill
were taken there to raise crops and earn their keep -which they did,
until the population aged and it became an old folks home. It was only
closed in 1975. That's where the history of the site takes a more
sinister turn.
Crime had been present on and around
the grounds since the 1920s, when a seven-year-old boy disappeared from
the woods after being seen walking with an elderly man. The nearby
Willowbrook State School had a troubled history for much of its life as
an institution for the developmentally disabled. A famous 1972 exposé
revealed the children at Willowbrook lying naked on the floor, smeared
in their own feces, with one attendant for every 50 kids. And then, in
the 70s and 80s, children started disappearing.
Many of them
disabled, local kids would disappear from family homes, most never to be
found again. Jennifer Schweiger, a 12-year-old with Down’s syndrome,
disappeared on July 9, 1987, during what was intended as a short walk,
to be found 35 days later in a shallow grave on the grounds of the Farm
Colony. Andre Rand, once an orderly of the colony, was blamed for the
series of murders. It was rumored he lived in the tunnels under the
decaying hospital, and his campsites were found on the grounds of the
property.
But that's not all. The buildings and
grounds are the site of urban legends of ghosts, criminals, and satan
worshipers. It's also a party place. Legally off-limits, the site is
accessible and popular for drug users, graffiti artists, urban
explorers, and paintball enthusiasts. Add to that the disintegration of
the neglected structures and the encroaching forest, and the New York
City Farm Colony is now a site to see, which you can at
Atlas Obscura.
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