GUEST BLOG BY DR FRANK CROMPTON

In my investigation of Mental Health in Worcestershire 1780 to 1980,  the only humanitarian action by Officialdom came, following the County Asylums’ Act in 1845 (8 & 9 Vict, 126), when the Worcestershire County Authorities were forced to open a Pauper Lunatic Asylum. Prior to the opening of Powick Asylum, the Worcester City and County Parishes had sent their pauper patients to 3 Private Madhouses; fortunately, all of which were of good quality. This was in stark contrast to much of the rest of England and Wales, where all too often, the madhouses used were scandalously poor. The Private Asylum at Droitwich, founded in about 1780, by William Ricketts, was regarded as one of the best such establishments in England. William Ricketts himself, gave evidence to a Parliamentary Commission, in 1816, when he had roundly criticised most Private Madhouses in England, including the New Bethlehem Asylum, Bedlam. He particularly criticised the treatment of James Norris, who had been strapped to a vertical iron bar in the wall of his cell for over 15 years. William Ricketts stated that he would never have treated a patient in this way. His evidence, in part, eventually led to the passing of the 1845 County Asylums’ Act, and to the creation of the City and County of Worcester Pauper Lunatic Asylum, at Powick, that opened on 11th August 1852. This is the starting point for the Special Event we are holding on 17th July 2023. Please come along to this Event and learn more.

Dr. Frank Crompton.    

25th April 2023.

Book your ticket here:- https://www.eventbrite.co.uk/e/evening-of-talks-redressing-the-balance-powick-mental-hospital-1852-1978-tickets-618942512717

VOLUNTEERS NEEDED

George Marshall Medical Museum is looking for help from people who are have a keen ear, are interested in healthcare, can type, and can do all of this from home!

After collecting some oral histories recorded with healthcare staff about their experiences of the covid-19 pandemic, we’re now ready to transcribe and summarise them.

This is where you might come in!

Let us know if you’d like to get involved. Email gmmedicalmuseum@gmail.com

george braine-hartnell, medical superintendent 1897-1919

Dr. Frank Crompton, Research Fellow, has worked “obsessively” for almost 20 years to ensure that the Patients’ Notes from the Worcester City and County Pauper Lunatic Asylum are secure for future use by historians.

We are pleased to e-Publish his most recent book: GEORGE BRAINE-HARTNELL: The Man Who Administered the Worcester Mental Hospital in a Period of Gross Overcrowding and Then Through the Great War and Its Aftermath – 1897 to 1919.

Click the following link to download the book as a .pdf., which Dr. Crompton has also indexed: https://static1.squarespace.com/static/55b52e37e4b0addeebb56e63/t/63c53511e629af326188bc94/1673868563144/George+Brain+Hartwell%2C+Frank+Crompton+2023.pdf

You can find further resources by Dr. Crompton at the following link on our website:- https://medicalmuseum.org.uk/frank-crompton