There's Something Creepy About This Abandoned Orphanage In Michigan
By Sophia
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Published May 02, 2017
While orphanages may be something we’ve relegated to history books and horror movies, they were once important institutions. This abandoned orphanage in Marquette, Michigan once sheltered countless children, and the way it looks today is completely fascinating.
Read on to learn more about the site, and check out the haunting images photographer Dan Turner captured at this relic of the past.
Once known as the Holy Family Orphanage, this place was founded in 1915.
It was built to handle the overflow from Michigan's two other largest orphanages.
The first residents were 60 Native American children, six of whom were sisters.
Eventually, the orphanage went on to care for about 240 children.
Most of the kids were between the second and eighth grades.
It was a Catholic institution, so children were required to pray frequently and their caretakers were nuns.
After playtime was over, a nun would summon the children to bed by blowing a large horn.
In 1963, the orphanage opened its doors to young Cuban refugees through a program called Operation Pedro Pan.
A year later, the last of the orphans left Holy Family and the building was used only for its offices.
In 1982, the orphanage was completely abandoned.
The fate of the orphanage is uncertain, but it would certainly be a shame to lose such a historic local landmark.
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