Jump to content

Alice Worden: Difference between revisions

From Historic Saranac Lake Wiki
Migratebot (talk | contribs)
Created page with " '''Born:''' '''Died:''' '''Married:''' Psychiatrist Dr. Stephen Worden; Walter Laidlaw of Syracuse, c. October 1941 '''Children:''' Frederick Worden, Donald Worden '''Alice Garfield Worden Laidlaw''' operated the Algonquin School, consisting of two large buildings and several acres of land on Algonquin Avenue, as a residential school for developmentally disabled children. Th..."
 
(No difference)

Latest revision as of 20:37, 26 July 2024


Born:

Died:

Married: Psychiatrist Dr. Stephen Worden; Walter Laidlaw of Syracuse, c. October 1941

Children: Frederick Worden, Donald Worden

Alice Garfield Worden Laidlaw operated the Algonquin School, consisting of two large buildings and several acres of land on Algonquin Avenue, as a residential school for developmentally disabled children. The building was built by Alice Worden's husband, psychiatrist Dr. Stephen Worden, who erected the two large buildings on several acres as a mental hospital. She established the school after the death of her first husband, Dr. Stephen Worden, a psychiatrist, who erected the buildings as a mental hospital.

The school was taken over by Lee Knight, and later by the Knight's daughter, Glenda Clayton and her husband Ray. It burned in 1976, and was closed shortly thereafter.

    1. Comments