1. Headline
  1. Headline
Dwaine Scott
Bud Merritt discovered a lost cemetery of patients at the largest mental hospital in the United States while hiking in Milledgeville, Ga. The graves are marked only with numbers.
By
TODAY contributor
updated 6/9/2009 10:41:55 AM ET 2009-06-09T14:41:55

Sometimes spring uncovers unexpected stories. Bud Merritt was hiking in Milledgeville, Ga., when he came across a long-forgotten cemetery.

“There almost seemed to be no end to it. You would find areas where there were no markers. And then you walk a few yards and you would find more,” he explains.

Overgrown with shrubs, the tall, thin headstones were nearly lost amongst the oak trees. Upon closer inspection, Bud noticed the graves bore no epitaphs. Not even a name or date could be found. They were simply numbered posts.

It turns out Bud had discovered a lost cemetery of patients at the largest mental hospital in the United States.

  1. Stories from
    1. The Daily Treat: What Would You Call Mariah Carey's Puppies?
    2. Val Chmerkovskiy Took Stitches 'Like a Champ,' Says His Plastic Surgeon
    3. Amy Poehler, Michelle Obama, Stephen Colbert & More Commencement Speeches
    4. Robert Pattinson in 'Really Good Mood' After Kristen Stewart Split
    5. Is Justin Timberlake the Best Dressed Man at Cannes?

City of the dead
Founded by Quakers in 1842, Central State Hospital once housed more than 13,000 people. Beautiful antebellum buildings, now mostly abandoned, haunt the sprawling campus.

During the Civil War, General Sherman’s troops camped here. Today you can still find descendants of the original hospital staff caring for the 800 patients here now. Scattered in the surrounding acres lie an estimated 30,000 dead — more than the current population of Milledgeville.

For years the mentally ill were discarded, not just in Georgia, but all over the country. Families who didn’t claim their relatives left it up to hospitals to choose the patients’ final resting places. Given the stigma attached to mental illness, many were given just numbered markers.

Unfortunately, records were often lost or incomplete. In some cases, even the markers were pulled up and tossed away. It’s estimated there are more than 100,000 of these forgotten graves nationwide.

National correspondent Bob Dotson and I headed to Milledgeville to find out more. Bud Merritt greeted us at the hospital museum. A sprightly man with a mischievous smile, he showed us the records listing — in theory — the name and number of everyone buried on the grounds. The books date back to the 1900s, and with each handwritten entry is an incomplete story — the name of a person who came to the hospital and never left.

"There's a lot of people that, frankly, have expressed the attitude to me that it's too late and there's no need to raise these issues again. It would be best forgotten. But I've never felt that way,” says Bud.

Death by heartbreak
Casey McClain grew up in the shadow of her great-grandfather Herbert Martin Williams. Once the backbone of the family, Papa Williams suffered a breakdown after losing his wife in childbirth, his infant son to illness, and his business to a dishonest partner. Overwhelmed, he checked himself into Central State and died of heart disease — literally brokenhearted.

Casey's grandmother, Mollie, learned of Papa Williams’ death when she was a teenager. Not knowing where her father was buried pained the young woman. For years, she kept photos of Papa Williams hidden in a shed. Later, Casey would tag along as they searched local graveyards for his headstone.

“It was a child loving her father and mourning,” Casey says. “Grandmother told us, ‘There's a reason why people do what they do. You just have to look for the answer.’ ”

Dwaine Scott
It’s estimated that 100,000 mental patients lie in forgotten graves nationwide. These graves in Milledgeville, Ga., are marked only with numbers.
In 1997, Casey went to work as a counselor at Central State. She had a hunch that Papa Williams was buried somewhere on the 10,000-acre property. Bud, also an employee at the hospital, had been so moved by his cemetery discovery that he made it his personal mission to help interested families identify graves.

Together they combed hospital records. Within six months, they were able to locate the plot where Papa Williams is buried. “I just got a peaceful feeling,” Casey says.

Casey and her family now have a headstone at grave No. 1951. It reads, “Herbert Martin Williams, February 1859-October 9, 1907.”

Visiting the cemetery is still extremely emotional. Casey considered moving Papa Williams to a family plot, but then realized that he belonged where he was; a name in a sea of numbered graves.

This month, a new national memorial dedicated to remembering those unnamed graves of the mentally ill will break ground at Saint Elizabeth’s Hospital in Washington, D.C. The memorial is a significant step in acknowledging the plight of those suffering from mental illness.

As Casey puts it, marking these graves is “like our Arlington. It recognizes all of the unknowns and gives them dignity in death that they didn't have in life.”

A final goodbye, too long in the making.

For more information, visit the Mental Health America Web site by clicking here.

If you would like to contact the subjects of this American Story with Bob Dotson, write to:

Bud Merritt
c/o Central State Hospital
620 Broad St
Milledgeville, GA 31062
info@centralstatehospital.org

Keep those ideas coming. Know someone who would make a great American Story with Bob Dotson? Drop a note in Bob’s mailbox by clicking here.

© 2013 NBCNews.com  Reprints

Video: The city of lost graves

  1. Transcript of: The city of lost graves

    MATT LAUER, co-host: Today's AMERICAN STORY WITH BOB DOTSON is a mystery. It begins down in Georgia where a hiker found a city of lost graves. That discovery led to our newest national memorial breaking ground in Washington tomorrow, a place to remember more than 100,000 people all across the country who lie in unnamed graves.

    BOB DOTSON reporting: This is a forest filled with forgotten lives, their final resting places marked with numbered stakes, not names. Overlooked until Bud Merritt stumbled upon them. He discovered the first of six lost graveyards at what was once the largest mental hospital in America , Milledgeville , Georgia .

    Mr. BUD MERRITT: These people were devalued all through the lives, so it's really no surprise they weren't afforded any dignity during their death.

    DOTSON: Bud and his friends have found more bodies in those forgotten graves than the entire population of Milledgeville , at least 25,000. Across the nation, there are many more, about 100,000, who were hidden away in life, and in death lost even their names. Why didn't families take bodies back home?

    Mr. MERRITT: In many cases, families had exhausted every resource they had just to care for the person in life.

    DOTSON: So in death, they left it up to the Central State Hospital staff to bury their loved ones . Numbers were used instead of names to preserve patient confidentiality. But lists of the dead are incomplete, some of the 167 years of missing.

    Mr. MERRITT: I think what's really part of the irony is is that there are documents in this museum that will tell you how many mules were bought in 1905 , but when it comes to these thousands of human beings , it's almost impossible to find out where they were buried.

    DOTSON: Casey McLean 's family has been searching for her great-grandfather's grave nearly 90 years.

    Ms. CASEY McLEAN: Groundskeeping had pulled up the stakes, because it was too inconvenient to mow around the stakes.

    DOTSON: Thousands were tossed aside. Bud set out to find them.

    Mr. MERRITT: Each person buried out there has a story and had a life.

    DOTSON: Casey 's great-granddad, Herbert Williams , lost his wife, two kids and his business all at once. Checked into Central State Hospital feeling depressed. Died of a broken heart , heart disease , six weeks later. A dozen years ago, your family's story circled back to Milledgeville and you went to work at the mental hospital .

    Ms. McLEAN: Mm-hmm

    DOTSON: Did you have any reservations?

    Ms. McLEAN: No.

    DOTSON: But this was the place where you lost your great-grandfather.

    Ms. McLEAN: And this would be the place where I found him.

    DOTSON: Bud helped; he worked there, too. Central State at one time had 10,000 acres. That's a lot to walk, Johnny Appleseed .

    Mr. MERRITT: Central State Hospital was a city.

    DOTSON: With 13,000 people. But Bud figured the graves would not be on prime land.

    Mr. MERRITT: If you could put a building on it or if you could raise a crop on it, it didn't have a cemetery on it.

    DOTSON: That narrowed his search. Six months later, Bud found Papa Williams .

    Mr. MERRITT: Right under this dot is the exact location of your ancestor's grave.

    DOTSON: Casey 's great-granddad finally got a headstone.

    Ms. McLEAN: You'll never be forgotten.

    DOTSON: Because Papa never left her mind.

    Ms. McLEAN: This is a battleground, and like the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier in Arlington , there are hundreds of thousands of tombs of unknown men and women who didn't survive and didn't have a name, but now they do.

    DOTSON: Because one man did not pass them by. For TODAY , Bob Dotson NBC News , with an AMERICAN STORY in Milledgeville , Georgia .

    AL ROKER reporting: Wow.

    LAUER: You know, we have to be thankful that there are people in the world who grab onto something...

    ROKER: That's right.

    ERIN BURNETT, co-host: Mm-hmm.

    NATALIE MORALES, anchor: Absolutely.

    LAUER: ...and they don't let go.

    ROKER: Right.

    MORALES: They make it their mission.

    LAUER: Exactly right. Because a lot of us don't have that stick-to-itiveness.

    MORALES: Mm-hmm.

    LAUER: And it's nice for that -- Casey McLean , by the way, one of the lucky ones , less than 1 percent of the people in those graves has been -- or have been identified.

    MORALES: Yeah.

    BURNETT: Right. And hopefully there will be more, more people who will...

    ROKER: Yeah.

Discuss:

Discussion comments

,

More on TODAY.com

None
  1. Farm battered by tornadoes: ‘There is nothing there’

    An Oklahoma local farm home to hundreds of animals is still reeling from the storm, and staffers are trying to figure out how many animals were lost.

    5/21/2013 9:07:47 PM +00:00 2013-05-21T21:07:47
  2. Oklahoma staggered by ‘storm of storms’
  3. Tales from the tornado: First-person accounts from survivors
  4. Orr Family Farm
None
  1. 9-year-old girl among first tornado victims identified

    Third-grader Ja’Nae Hornsby is among the first of the Oklahoma victims to be identified. Hornsby was one of the students who perished when the tornado hit Plaza Towers Elementary School in Moore, Okla. on Monday afternoon.

    5/21/2013 8:55:00 PM +00:00 2013-05-21T20:55:00
None
  1. Arias pleads for her life: 'I want everyone's pain to stop'

    Asking the jury that convicted her of murder to now let her live, Jodi Arias said in a Phoenix courtroom Tuesday that she never meant to cause her victim’s family so much pain — and that if she was given a life sentence she would contribute to society.

    5/21/2013 8:03:52 PM +00:00 2013-05-21T20:03:52
None
  1. Nate Billings / AP

    Educators emerge as heroes in Oklahoma

    5/21/2013 3:59:53 PM +00:00 2013-05-21T15:59:53
None
  1. Adrees Latif / Reuters

    Search for survivors: 48-hour window of opportunity

    5/21/2013 10:50:15 PM +00:00 2013-05-21T22:50:15