Anna Varney

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By the late 1940s, stories about violent escapes, aggressive Black men, and the anxieties of white residents were becoming routine. The press started advancing a narrative: Black patients at Crownsville, often painted as uniquely violent and disgusting, were to remain under increased supervision. Even as white patients deserved sympathy and the benefits of rehabilitation.
Madness: Race and Insanity in a Jim Crow Asylum
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