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Southern Mysteries Podcast

Episode 174 Southern Asylums and the Spirits Within

Southern Mysteries Podcast

Shannon Ballard

True Crime, Society & Culture, History

4.81K Ratings

🗓️ 6 October 2025

⏱️ 35 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Across the South, asylums were built with the promise of healing — but inside their walls, countless lives were marked by fear, neglect, and cruelty. In this episode of Southern Mysteries, explore the haunting history of institutions like Broughton Hospital, Cherry Hospital, Central State, and Bryce. From mysterious deaths and forced sterilizations to the tragedy of the Eller twins and the lifetime confinement of Junius Wilson, these are the real horrors that gave rise to Southern asylum ghost stories — and the suffering that still echoes through their halls. Join the Community on Patreon: Want more Southern Mysteries? You can hear the Southern Mysteries show archive of 60+ episodes along with Patron exclusive podcast, Audacious: Tales of American Crime and more when you become a patron of the show. You can immediately access exclusive content now at patreon.com/southernmysteries 🎧 Explore More Southern Mysteries Visit SouthernMysteries.com for more episodes and source lists. 📱 Follow on Social Media: Facebook: Southern Mysteries PodcastTikTok @southernmysteries Instagram: @southernmysteriesEmail: southernmysteriespodcast@gmail.com  Episode Sources Associated Press coverage, April 1962 — “Twin Sisters Die Together in Asylum.” Winston-Salem Journal, April 1962 (coverage of coroner Dr. John C. Reece’s statements). Morganton News Herald, April 1971 coverage of Dr. Paul Douglas Boyles and Betty Cheek Yarborough. Associated Press regional wire, April 14–15, 1971. Find a Grave – Betty Jo Eller & Bobbie Jean Eller memorials. Southern Spirit Guide: “Ill Defined and Unknown Cause of Morbidity and Mortality.” Asheville Terrors: “Broughton Hospital.” Schoen, Johanna. Choice and Coercion: Birth Control, Sterilization, and Abortion in Public Health and Welfare. University of North Carolina Press, 2005. Segrest, Mab. Administrations of Lunacy: Racism and the Haunting of American Psychiatry at the Milledgeville Asylum. New Press, 2020. Pennsylvania Hospital Archives – Dr. Thomas Story Kirkbride papers. Grob, Gerald N. The Mad Among Us: A History of the Care of America’s Mentally Ill. Harvard University Press, 1994. Yanni, Carla. The Architecture of Madness: Insane Asylums in the United States. University of Minnesota Press, 2007. “Central State Hospital Cemetery Restoration Project.” Georgia Department of Behavioral Health & Developmental Disabilities. Atlanta Journal-Constitution archival coverage on Central State Hospital. The Crimson White (University of Alabama student paper): “The Hidden History Behind Bryce Hospital” (2023). “Bryce Uncovered: A Look at the Asylum’s Short-Lived Newspaper” (2017). Wyatt v. Stickney, 325 F. Supp. 781 (M.D. Ala. 1971). Alabama Department of Mental Health archives. HauntedPlaces.org – “Bryce Hospital.” Ghost Hunts USA – “Bryce Hospital.” Ghost City Tours – “Central State Hospital.” US Ghost Adventures – “Central State Hospital.” UNC–Chapel Hill Southern Oral History Program — Junius Wilson case archives. News & Observer (Raleigh) coverage of Junius Wilson’s release and life, 1990s–2000s. Episode Music Out of the Mines, courtesy of Ross Gentry, Asheville, North Carolina.

Transcript

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0:00.0

Hey y'all, I'm Shannon Ballard, hosting creator of Southern Mysteries.

0:05.4

The often forgotten stories and mysteries of the South that you hear here are made possible in part

0:11.2

due to incredible folks who support this show on Patreon.

0:15.6

I want to say a big welcome and heartfelt thanks to new patrons, Hayden Cran of Fredericksburg, Virginia,

0:23.0

Penny Neff of Udor, Kansas,

0:25.3

and Elon Rainey of Mount Vernon, Kentucky.

0:28.7

And to those who joined from mysterious locations,

0:31.7

Patricia Serpice, Teresa Coonle,

0:34.3

Deborah Douglas, Ellen Frizzell, and Bobby.

0:40.4

Thank you. Your support helps keep these stories alive. If you'd like to join them in supporting the show and getting access to a lot

0:46.6

of content you haven't heard before, head to patreon.com slash southern mysteries. There you can

0:53.4

unlock the first three seasons of the podcast, exclusive bonus episodes, and the monthly audacious series, where I dig into some of the most scandalous crimes and controversies in American history. You can sign up now at patreon.com slash southern mysteries or just search Southern Mysteries podcast if you already

1:14.1

have the Patreon app. Thanks for being here. Now let's get into the story. Dorothea Dix, the 19th century reformer, who fought to improve conditions in America's mental hospitals,

1:38.3

once said that the walls of an asylum aren't built of stone and iron. They're built of the silence of society, the neglect of families, and the fear of the unknown.

1:51.0

And she was right.

1:53.0

Behind those walls were lives the world seldom heard from.

1:57.0

But once in a while, their voices broke through.

2:00.0

In the 1870s, patients at Alabama's Bryce Hospital began publishing a newspaper called The

2:06.7

Meteor.

2:07.9

In one issue, a patient wrote, Here the weary mind paces in circles, longing for freedom,

2:15.8

counting days that do not end.

2:18.3

Asylums were meant to be sanctuaries, yet behind their locked doors, they became places where hope withered,

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