Orange County NC Website
sd <br />ORANGE COUNTY BOARD OF COMIVIISSIONERS <br />A RESOLUTIONREGARDING <br />THE FUTURE OF THE DIX HOSPITAL CAMPUS <br />WHEREAS, Dorothea Lynde Dix was a social reformer, journalist, and skilled lobbyist who as a young woman <br />wrote, "In a world where there is so much to be done, I felt strongly impressed that there must be something for <br />me to do", and who during the middle 1800s woke America's conscience to the plight of the mentally ill; and <br />WHEREAS, in the autumn of 1848 Dorothea Lynde Dix came to North Carolina and toured 36 counties to <br />conduct a census of the mentally ill in jails, poorhouses, and private homes; and <br />WHEREAS, in a "memorial" submitted to the North Carolina legislature, she emphasized the need to remove the <br />insane from jails and recommended modem approaches to the treatment of the mentally ill along with specifics of <br />needed buildings .and equipment; and <br />WHEREAS, through the persistent effort of Dorothea Lynde Dix and the personal appeal of James C. Dobbin, an <br />influential legislator from Fayetteville, the legislature was persuaded to adopt in December of 1848 an act that <br />provided for an appropriation and the appointment of six commissioners to select a site and oversee the erection <br />of a hospital that would eventually be named in Dix's honor; and <br />WHEREAS, on February 22, 1856, the first person was admitted, suffering from "suicidal mania" and in the first <br />nine months was joined by 51 males and 39 females; and <br />WHEREAS, over the intervening century and a half, thousands of North Carolinians and their families have been <br />served by Dorothea Dix Hospital; and <br />WHEREAS, today the Dorothea Dix Hospital is situated on a beautifu1425 acre tract of land, accentuated by oak <br />and pecan trees, on the south side of Raleigh with a commanding view of the city skyline, making it the largest <br />tract of undeveloped land near downtown Raleigh with an estimated worth in the millions; and <br />WHEREAS, the disposition of this historic property -perhaps the only tangible collective asset of persons with <br />mental health, substance abuse, and developmental disabilities in North Carolina - is the current subject of much <br />debate and discussion as the State moves to close the facility in 2007; and <br />WHEREAS, a special commission has been established to make recommendations to the legislature, drawing <br />upon views and opinions from individuals and organizations as diverse as mental health advocates and <br />professionals, neighborhood activists, government administrators, park designers, and state historians; <br />NOW THEREFORE THE ORANGE COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS calls upon the Dix property <br />special commission to be as visionary as Dorothea Lynde Dix and consider supporting an approach that honors <br />the past and inspires the future by reserving an appreciable amount of acreage on the Dix campus for public open <br />space, with the remaining portion of the property to be leased or sold for complementary urban development, with <br />all monies received dedicated to and reinvested in innovative programs and projects that benefit the mentally ill <br />throughout North Carolina. <br />Adopted this the 16~' day of March, 2004. <br />Barry Jacobs; Chair <br />Orange County Board of Commissioners <br />