Newpaper article describing the general life of the patients on the Bull Street campus. The author deems those who work in the Laundry and the Bakery as "the lucky ones."
Photograph of the white-washed brick extension of the Bakery where flour and bread were stored. An awning has been placed over the door to the storage room's entrance.
"The years 1951-1954 have been as a result the greatest period of sustained construction in the more than 125 years of the hospitals existance." "To replace the kitchen at the Columbia Division, from which the hospital was attempting to feed moreā¦
Details the completion of the new Bakery, its dimensions, and some of its new machinery. Receiving and distributing rooms were added to the Northern and Southern ends of the Laundry as well.
Reports the installation of overhead sprinklers at the Laundry as well as an additional room added to the Bakery for storing flour. Details the concern of overcrowding, what it is and its risks, and the refusal of patients and admission restraints.
Lists Ward 18A (Trezevant) as 5700 square ft in area; patient capacity of 50; and patient occupancy blank (vacant?); among other estimated costs of repair, value, and depreciation.