Agnews Insane Asylum

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By crazyhorsesghost

The Ghosts of Agnews Insane Asylum

Built around 1918 after the original structure was destroyed in 1912. Workers have witnessed apparitions, strange laughter, screaming, cold spots and freezer doors flying open violently along with the ejection of the contents. Agnews developmental center was torn down and became the new site of the SUN Microsystems Santa Clara Campus.

But The Ghosts Decided To Stay On. Still Haunting The Area Today

But even today after the buildings have been torn down and new ones built people report screams on foggy nights and strange things happening in the new dorm rooms just built there. Doors open , lights are turned on and off and horrible smells just seem to come up out of the floors of the new buildings. The smell has been described as smelling like horrible rotting meat and rooms will fill with smoke for no reason. A old lady known as the lady in yellow because of the yellow dress she is wearing begs people to help her find her children. When you look close or start to question her she simply vanishes. So it seems that even though the old buildings were torn down to make room for new ones the ghosts are refusing to move and may even be angry because of the destruction of their former home.

Agnews Insane Asylum

This is the Insane Asylum after the 1906 Earthquake. Notice all the damage there top left of building. It was in this area where over 100 patients were killed and where even today after the buildings have been torn down you can still hear their screa
This is the Insane Asylum after the 1906 Earthquake. Notice all the damage there top left of building. It was in this area where over 100 patients were killed and where even today after the buildings have been torn down you can still hear their screa

1906 Earth Quake , This footage is some of the earliest known from a natural disaster. Edison newsreels of San Francisco earthquake / falling buildings / taking

Aerial photograph of the Sun campus at Agnews

Aerial photograph of the Sun campus at Agnews. Above is what the area looks like today. Under the ground there are hundreds of graves they simply built over with no respect for the dead. And now it seems the ghosts are getting their revenge haunting
Aerial photograph of the Sun campus at Agnews. Above is what the area looks like today. Under the ground there are hundreds of graves they simply built over with no respect for the dead. And now it seems the ghosts are getting their revenge haunting

Agnews Developmental Center is a psychiatric and medical care facility, now located in San Jose, California.

In 1885, the center, originally known as "The Great Asylum for the Insane" was established as a facility for the care of the mentally ill. The main structure, a red brick edifice, was located on land near the village of Agnew, which later became part of Santa Clara.

During the 1906 San Francisco earthquake the center became infamous as the site of the Santa Clara Valley's greatest loss of life resulting from the quake. 117 patients and staff were killed and buried in mass graves on the site. The main building and some others were irreparably damaged. Those graves are still there to day beneth the buildings of the new SUN Microsystems Santa Clara Campus. And it appears the ghosts of those people are haunting the new buildings the same as they did the old ones.

Following this disaster, Agnews was reconstructed in the so-called Mediterranean Revival style, resembling a college campus of two-story buildings; it re-opened circa 1911 as Agnews State Mental Hospital. The facility was a small self-contained town, including a multitude of construction trade "shops", a farm which raised pigs and vegetable crops, a steam generating power plant for heating the buildings by steam, and even a fire department.

At the time, it boasted the largest population in the South San Francisco Bay area, and was served by its own train station which stood at the west end of Palm Drive across Lafayette Street; the station building remained until vandalism and fire precipitated its demolition in the 1990s.

In 1926, Agnews was expanded to include a second campus a couple of miles to the east in San Jose.

During its heyday the center was renowned for progressive and compassionate treatment techniques for the mentally ill.

Individuals with developmental disabilities were first admitted to a special rehabilitation program in 1965. Many programs for the mentally ill were discontinued statewide in 1972, as a result of controversial legislation promoted by then California Governor Ronald Reagan. Since then, the center has been utilized exclusively for the care and treatment of "clients" with developmental disabilities.

The original west campus was closed in 1998 as part of a plan to reduce and eventually close the center.

Post Your Comments Now

biggbbeAR 2 years ago

I usually dont bothering commenting on the web but I workeed at Agnews in the "80'S" and saw a the door in the cock tower shuting opening load enough that people on the first floor heard it The building was vacant except for a few janitor and supply room. it was one of the scarist things I have ever witnessed. I and my girlfriend ran out of the building and I didnt go back in till 3 years later.My theroy is ghost are left over from the earthquake of 1907 and tortured souls from all the labatomy

Blogging Erika profile image

Blogging Erika 2 years ago

Awesome article! It looks creepy as all get-out, I'm sure I'd be scared there in the middle of the day, much less the middle of the night!

nessame 2 years ago

I too worked at agnews for 27 yrs, When I first started working there they had employee houseing, So after I recieved notice that I had been assigned a room in the clock tower wing I went over there after I got off work at 11 pm. I mistakingly thought that the rooms were in the main clocktower building , but ohh was I wrong. I opened the front door with my #1 key and went inside, turning on the light as I went in. I could hear people talking so I yelled out an Hello, no one responded but I could still hear them talking.

I began walking up the staircase thinking that maybe evryone was on the second floor. when I reached the middle of the first staircase the hairs on my arms and the back of my neck stood up a chill and feeling of dread came over me. I wanted to run out of the building but I was afraid to turn around. I had a feeling that someone was watching me.

I slowly backed down the stairs and out of the building, never turning around.

making myself turn out the lights and lock the door.It was only after I reach my car that I realized that I hadnt taken a breath. I never went in that building again, I turned down the room and waited for an apartment on the east side of the campus. The voices that I heard in that building and the chill that came over me that night convinced me that the clocktower is one of the most haunted places at the facility.

Huntgoddess profile image

Huntgoddess 7 months ago

Wow, this is amazing. I would like to know more about this. Thanks for this Hub.

Also, thanks to the commenters. Also amazing!! I'm definitely a believer. Has anyone ever called in an exorcist?

Also --- of course --- we must pray for these poor, lost souls.

I guess if they're demonic, that won't help, though. That's where the exorcist comes in.

squidaudio 6 months ago

@huntgoddess- the spirits at Agnew are mostly the friendly type. I worked there 30 years and never saw a spirit that was not friendly and in a good mood. It was a great place to work and socialize with those friendly and helpful spirits.

xsickiatric tech 6 months ago

I'm not a believer in ghosts and most of the bumps in the night and sightings at Agnews can be explained. I worked at Agnews 66-71 (Pm shift) and again 81-89 (Noc shift) and had quite a few "experiences". A walk out on the grounds at night (and a full moon) back in the 60's, there was quite a bit of screams, moans and sobbing coming from those buildings.

squidaudio 4 months ago

@nessame- Your fears are not unfounded. I completely understand. These spirits do exist. We should have set up cameras like they do now on some of these reality shows. A movie called "The Dead Pit" avail. on Amazon.com was made in and near the Clocktower.

Earl Schmitter 4 months ago

I worked at Agnews from 1967 to 1987, with both mentally

ill and developmentally disabled from '67 to '72 and with DDs only from March '72 through June of '87. I started 9/1/1953 at Porterville and worked continuously with various Cal State programs, including a few years of out patient work with Cal State parolees before I came to Agnews.

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