The Haverford State Hospital was a mental hospital outside of Philadelphia. Its extensive former grounds occupy the northern sections of Delaware County west of the city of Philadelphia, in Haverford Township.
The Hospital was constructed in 1964 as a state of the art hospital. Its patients enjoyed a bowling alley, private rooms, recreational activities, jobs within the hospital, some even being able to leave regularly. The entire complex consisted of 23 buildings, the largest being the Acute Intensive Care Center, named Hilltop (building 4). The facility also contained a boiler plant, garage, warehouse, administration building, recreation building, five extended treatment wards, two geriatric wards, and two kitchen buildings. At the time of its closure in 1998, its superintendent was Aidan Altenor. Its closure was due in part to a lawsuit using the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 as well as the general deinstitutionalization of the state hospital system. When it closed, most of the patients were then transferred to the Norristown State Hospital. Its lands were used for a few years as a haunted hayride though in the years leading up to its demolition and redevelopment this practice had ceased.
With the broken down mess of the hospital's past, the new development plans bring great change to the property's history of deer and weeds. According to the News of Delaware County, the grounds will be a highmark for Haverford township, recreation properties overlooking the I-476 (the blue route).
Victory Gyory was discharged through a writ of Habeas Corpus on September 3, 1969.
On November 14, 2006, the Haverford Township Board of Commissioners approved the Agreement of Sale and Preliminary Land Development Plans. The so-called Haverford Reserve development will include 100 carriage homes and 198 condominiums plus the Township will ultimately have several athletic fields and over 120 areas for passive recreation. The hospital has also been plagued in the past year by people scrapping for copper and other valuable metals. On April 5, 2007, the Pennsylvania Attorney General filed an indictment against 5th ward commissioner Fred C. Moran in conjunction with the sale of the state Hospital property. This scandal involved Fred Moran disclosing the bids of other potential developers (that were supposed be confidential) to one contractor in particular. He was convicted of Bribery in Official and Political Matters in 2008, and lost his appeal.