Summary. Recent studies of the historical development of lunatic asylums have increasingly sought to gain access to the experiences and perspectives of patients and their families. Generally, historians have had to rely mainly on data extracted from admissions records or casebooks. With one or two notable exceptions, little material has survived emanating directly from patients. This article draws largely on a collection of correspondence from the Gloucester Asylum in the period 1827 to 1843. Most of the letters were written by patients ’ relatives to the medical superintendent. They offer valuable insights into a range of issues—circumstances that led to admission; the quality of relationships between patients and their families; interacti...
This chapter introduces three principal types of asylum record that can be used by historians of psy...
Interest surrounding the Victorian county asylum network and its treatment of mental illness has bee...
This article explores the responses of the Poor Law authorities, asylum superintendents and Lunacy C...
This article investigates the practice of letter writing from family and friends of patients to doct...
This article uses hundreds of letters written by the families of patients committed to Victorian Bro...
Purpose To investigate whether lifelong admission to psychiatric asylum care was usual practice befo...
This research uses the records of the Hampshire County Asylum (HCA) between its opening in 1852 and ...
Using the archival admissions records and the case history of a patient at a British asylum in the 1...
There is a wide and impressive historiography about British lunatic asylums in the nineteenth centu...
Background. This paper is based on a rich archive of 1151 letters by patients, who were admitted to ...
Through an examination of previously unseen archival records, including patients’ letters, this arti...
This thesis examines the history of Lancaster Asylum, Lancashire’s first county asylum, from 1840 to...
This research uses the records of the Hampshire County Asylum (HCA) between itsopening in 1852 and t...
The history of psychiatry is not merely the history of psychiatrists; it is also the history of pati...
Within the vast array of literature concerning the county lunatic asylums of the late nineteenth-cen...
This chapter introduces three principal types of asylum record that can be used by historians of psy...
Interest surrounding the Victorian county asylum network and its treatment of mental illness has bee...
This article explores the responses of the Poor Law authorities, asylum superintendents and Lunacy C...
This article investigates the practice of letter writing from family and friends of patients to doct...
This article uses hundreds of letters written by the families of patients committed to Victorian Bro...
Purpose To investigate whether lifelong admission to psychiatric asylum care was usual practice befo...
This research uses the records of the Hampshire County Asylum (HCA) between its opening in 1852 and ...
Using the archival admissions records and the case history of a patient at a British asylum in the 1...
There is a wide and impressive historiography about British lunatic asylums in the nineteenth centu...
Background. This paper is based on a rich archive of 1151 letters by patients, who were admitted to ...
Through an examination of previously unseen archival records, including patients’ letters, this arti...
This thesis examines the history of Lancaster Asylum, Lancashire’s first county asylum, from 1840 to...
This research uses the records of the Hampshire County Asylum (HCA) between itsopening in 1852 and t...
The history of psychiatry is not merely the history of psychiatrists; it is also the history of pati...
Within the vast array of literature concerning the county lunatic asylums of the late nineteenth-cen...
This chapter introduces three principal types of asylum record that can be used by historians of psy...
Interest surrounding the Victorian county asylum network and its treatment of mental illness has bee...
This article explores the responses of the Poor Law authorities, asylum superintendents and Lunacy C...