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HomeTravelRaising a Ghost Town From the Dead

Raising a Ghost Town From the Dead

Exploring the remnants of the former Brownsville General Hospital was a terrifying experience, even for me. It wasn’t just that the building was creepy, although it certainly was: full of long rooms lined with rusting hospital beds covered with chunks of paint and plaster, it felt like the real-world embodiment of every haunted place in a horror movie. Though I don’t put much stock in the supernatural, that doesn’t mean I’m immune to my imagination or the nagging suspicions that if ghosts did exist, places like this would be where they would find me.

The more pressing concern was the structural condition of the building. Entire rooms had collapsed into the basement, shards of wood and jagged metal protruding from the wreckage like a punji pit. A bathroom clung to one wall of a hallway, dangling over the chaos below by the pipes in its plumbing. The floors that did remain were warped and uneven, and the stairs had gaping holes in them. It felt like the old hospital was just waiting for an excuse to entirely cave in, and my weight in the wrong spot might be the catalyst.

Inside the ruins of the former Brownsville General Hospital, which has since been demolished.
Inside the ruins of the former Brownsville General Hospital, which has since been demolished. Matthew Christopher, Abandoned America

The Brownsville General Hospital, which operated in its final years as the Golden Age Retirement Home, was not an anomaly in the small Western Pennsylvania town of Brownsville. Barely a mile away on Market Street, the downtown core presented visitors with a panoply of devastation. There, you’d find the remains of the First Baptist Church choked in ivy; the majestic, neoclassical facades of the Monongahela National Bank and the Second National Bank boarded and stained; the gorgeous five-story Union Station with ragged awnings serving as funeral shrouds over the windows of long-forgotten businesses.

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