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Infamous Hoarders: Homer & Langley Collyer
The New York Times

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The Collyer Brothers' Harlem Brownstone in 1947

When does collecting cross the line into hoarding? The New York Times re-examines the story of brothers Homer and Langley Collyer. The brothers' bodies were discovered by police in 1947 — buried under trash and junk in their Harlem brownstone.

 
 

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The exterior of the Collyer Brothers' Harlem Brownstone in 1947 — the day it was raided by police.

The Collyer's obsessive-compulsive collecting has inspired a previous book and play and the author E. L. Doctorow has a new book Homer & Langley that uses the truth as a stepping-off point for a fictionalized novel.

The New York Times has a story about the book, How Did They End Up That Way? and also features pictures of the author's home At Home With E. L. Doctorow | Writing About the Stuff of Legend.

(Images: The New York Times)

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history, books, guides & resources, The New York Times, collection, hoarding, Collyer Brothers

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Comments (16)

Hell on Earth!

posted by Henrietta the Terrible on September 3rd 2009 at 5:50pm
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I have a 'hell room' where I close the door. It's where I keep my extra stuff. Now...I don't feel so bad after seeing this. This makes my room look spare by comparison!

posted by junklover on September 3rd 2009 at 5:59pm
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And I used to think my sewing room was a mess...

posted by Stiletto on September 3rd 2009 at 6:14pm
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i am quite intrigued by these guys, i think because my grandma is a hoarder. that's why i force myself to do a yearly purge of my house. it's not hereditary, is it??

posted by monthcalledmae on September 3rd 2009 at 6:24pm
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technically only one brother was actually buried under the stuff. and that was a booby trap they'd rigged themselves that he sprang. the other was hard to get to, but he died of starvation after his brother was crushed.

posted by Lady J on September 3rd 2009 at 6:48pm
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Sick and fascinating. The wikipedia article is rather good:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Collyer_brothers

"The New York Times on March 26, 1947 wrote:
There is, admittedly, something unattractive about the avidity with which society now pores over every detail the Collyer brothers vigorously withheld from public scrutiny... It is almost as though society were taking revenge upon the brothers for daring to cut the thread that binds man to his fellows."

posted by tulpoeid on September 3rd 2009 at 6:51pm
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wow. there goes my mother-in-law!

posted by the polish chick on September 3rd 2009 at 6:55pm
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This saddens me. After watching a couple of shows about people who hoarde , I have nothing but sympathy for them. It is a problem that is becoming more and more common. People are so wrapped up in "stuff" and material things. I had a problem hoarding when I was younger and going through some difficulties in my life so I know how it feels. People need to realize having all this stuff will never make you truly happy. I know when I threw away all the junk, it was like I was liberated. Alas , with some it really is a mental problem and needs to be dealt with proffsionally.

posted by citygirlincountry on September 3rd 2009 at 7:13pm
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oops professionally

posted by citygirlincountry on September 3rd 2009 at 7:14pm
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Very scary stuff. Even scarier when I watch A&E's hoarders and recognize a few of my habits (grossly exaggerated, of course). A strange mix of clinging to the past and preparing for the worst.

posted by LittleEdie on September 3rd 2009 at 7:28pm
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scary and sad... I have an acquaintance who seems to have 'obsessive-compulsive disorder'.
He collects everything, especially plates and paintings from charity shops, the streets, etc... also he never disposes of dead batteries, hundres of them are displayed on the edge of every section of book cases, and newspapers from 5 years ago already occupy the livingroom and the couch. There were also several broken TVs on the floor... also he collects plastic milk cartons when finished... countless...sigh.
One day I was invited to that house by his wife and at the moment I walked in through the hall way, I got terrified - there was only the narrow way where people can slightly pass and dining chairs were the only place where we could sit and relax.
I thought they would need some help and at the same time, felt sympathy for the wife who seems to already have given up about what her husband has been doing and even doesn't seem to think it would be the problem.

posted by dreamhouse4gina on September 3rd 2009 at 10:54pm
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My wife and I once looked at a one bedroom apartment in Manhattan, approx 800 sq ft., the guy living there had a bed and a table. He had fruit boxes stacked floor to ceiling filled with newspaper, with only a narrow passageway to navigate. The table and the bed were all covered with the boxes as well. I saw no other furniture. Only a path between the front door and the kitchen, and paths leading to the bed and bathroom. I could only guess that he moves boxes around to sleep at night. We then found an apartment in Brooklyn. Got married. Have kids. Now their clutter of toys is making me feel as I did before on that day.

posted by funstraw on September 4th 2009 at 9:02am
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See?
Clutter Kills!

posted by bepsf on September 4th 2009 at 3:57pm
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I have to laugh. When I was a tween, my Dad would always say, "the Collyer brothers must have been here", when referring to my room!

posted by GreatFriend on September 8th 2009 at 4:24pm
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Hmmm. Wondering if hoarding is a mental health issue confined to post-industrial age, Western culture. If you lived in a yurt, teepee, sod hut or the like would you also be prone to hoarding behavior?

posted by somalicat on September 14th 2009 at 2:54pm
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Somalicat, there was a good post here about a MoMA installation by a Chinese artist that had the accumulation of material things as its theme. I don't think the issue is limited to Western culture.

I'm posting here basically because there was nowhere else that allowed me to say that I think that oversized fish on Martha Stewart's wall is laughably terrible ... If I walked into that room, I'm afraid I'd burst out into uncontrollable laughter.

posted by AustinSarah on September 14th 2009 at 11:51pm
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