Migration happened after the Mud Floods in Great Tartaria

After the Mud Floods and the destruction of Great Tartaria, vast populations travelled across Europe and eventually reached the Eastern United States. This is when the Orphan Train Movement began in the United States of America from the 15th January 1864 to the 20th December 1889, this meant that numerous individuals from Great Tartaria would experience severe mental health issues as they were so traumatised. It was important for the controllers to ensure that adults from Great Tartaria would need to gradually forget about the customs of their own civilisation, it meant the adults would have to be sent off to reside inside the Insane Asylums, so they could be programmed to forget about the Old-World Order and the civilisation of Great Tartaria.

Migration from Eastern Europe and Great Tartaria

Because the migration of so many Tartarians, Slavs, Turkic Peoples, Eastern Europeans and Western Europeans became so extensive, massive overcrowding then occurred in the urban settlements of Maine, New Hampshire, Vermont, Massachusetts, Rhode Island and Connecticut in the New England Region, and Delaware, Maryland, New Jersey, Pennsylvania, New York State, the Commonwealth of Virginia and West Virginia, in the Eastern United States. Hence, the parentless infants on the Orphan Trains were taken to foster homes across the mainly rural areas of Indiana, Michigan, Ohio and Wisconsin, in the Midwest United States.

Orphan Train Movement

The entirety of the Orphan Train Movement was facilitated and managed from the 15th January 1864 to the 20th December 1889, although some Orphan Trains continued to be organised until the 17th April 1929. During these dates, around 250,000 to 320,000 parentless infants were relocated, although many Americans believed at more than 540,000 children were actually relocated during the Victorian Period.

Over many generations, entire communities of Eastern Europeans migrated into the Eastern United States. Most of them were actually  Tartarians, who had previously resided in towns and cities across Siberia and Northern Asia. The infants and families of Turkic People also left Great Tartaria and sailed on vessels across the North Atlantic Ocean, to reach the Eastern United States. This is why groupings of immigrants from Great Tartaria then settled in the Eastern United States, from the 17th April 1820 and onward unto the 15th October 1920.

The Different Mental Ayslums and Psychiatric Hospitals in the 1800’s

The magnificent looking Public Hospital of Williamsburg, that was also called the Eastern State Hospital or Eastern Lunatic Asylum, was initially proposed to the Virginia House of Burgesses by the British Colonialist and Lieutenant Governor known as Francis Fauquier, on the 14th March 1766. Then on the 12th October 1773, the initial patient was admitted into the Public Hospital of Williamsburg, that was also called the Eastern State Hospital or Eastern Lunatic Asylum, that was located in the cityscape of Williamsburg in Eastern Virginia.

The prestigious McLean Asylum was apparently founded on the 14th April 1811 in the Charlestown District of Boston, in Suffolk County, Eastern Massachusetts. The Charlestown District is now a part of Somerville, in Eastern Massachusetts.

The building called ‘The Asylum For The Relief Of Persons Deprived Of The Use Of Their Reason’, was then renamed the ‘Frankford Asylum For The Insane’, and was then called the Friends Hospital, which is still located in Philadelphia, South Eastern Pennsylvania. The Friends Hospital was established by the Protestant Christians known as the Quakers opened during the 22nd February 1813.

The vast Bloomingdale Insane Asylum, founded in Morningside Heights, on West Side of Upper Manhattan, in New York City on the 9th September 1816.

The ornate looking Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum, that was then called the Weston State Hospital, was a Kirkbride Psychiatric Hospital in the city of Weston, midst Lewis County, Northern West Virginia, on the 18th January 1864.

The large Greystone Park Psychiatric Hospital, that is also known as Greystone Psychiatric Park, Greystone Psychiatric Hospital, and formerly known as the State Asylum For The Insane At Morristown and the Morris Plains State Hospital, New Jersey State Hospital, Morris Plains Borough in Northern New Jersey, opened during the 20th November 1876.

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