25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital

25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital

Jacob Miller - August 8, 2017

25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
Esther Hannah Still (right), also arrived at the hospital in 1858 and was diagnosed with chronic mania and delusions. Daily Mail
25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
John Bailey and his son Thomas (pictured together, left) were both admitted in 1858 with acute melancholia. Daily Mail
25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
A treatment, invented by Erasmus Darwin (pictured) called rotational therapy, involved putting a patient in a chair before spinning them around. Daily Mail
25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
Edward Oxford was the first of eight people who tried to kill Queen Victoria in 1840. He was armed with a gun and fired twice – both missed both times. He was found not guilty by reason of insanity and sent to Bedlam. Daily Mail
25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
Elizabeth Thew was admitted to Bedlam after committing infanticide. Museum Of The Mind
25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
An outdoor tutorial for nurses in the ground of the Bethlem Royal Hospital. The South London and Maudsley NHS Trust
25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
Bedlam was so horrific that it would routinely refuse admission to patients deemed too frail to handle the course of their therapies. BBC.
25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
The most notorious aspect of Bedlam was its availability to the public. It was expected that friends and family would drop in on patients, but for many years, Bedlam was run like a zoo, where wealthy patrons could drop a shilling or two to roam the fetid hallways. These visits were so frequent that they made up a significant portion of the hospital’s operating budget. Wellcome Library
25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
An image of a chained prisoner of Bedlam. Pinterest
25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
Bedlam, as depicted in William Hogarth’s series, The Rake’s Progress. Wikimedia
25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
In 1402, St. Mary of Bethlehem, an asylum popularly known as Bedlam, opened to receive mental patients in England. The institution itself was founded in 1247 as a priory. The famous painting of Bedlam is by William Hogarth, 1735. Pinterest
25 Portraits of Patients and Living Conditions at London’s Notorious Bethlem Royal Hospital
A painting of wealthy Londoners visiting the Bedlam Hospital. The failed policy hoped to see family members visit their relatives, but it turned Bedlam into a human zoo. Wikimedia Commons.

 

Sources For Further Reading:

BBC Culture – How Bedlam Became ‘A Palace for Lunatics’

Encyclopedia Britannica – Erasmus Darwin

The Atlantic – Showering Has a Dark, Violent History

Building Conservation – 18th-Century Bath Houses and Plunge Pools

Medical News Today – Bloodletting: Why Doctors Used to Bleed Their Patients for Health

BC Medical Journal – The History of Bloodletting

Health Line – What Is Leech Therapy?

University Hospital – How Leeches Can Save Lives and Limbs for Some Patients

History Extra – Bethlem Royal Hospital: Why Did the Infamous Bedlam Asylum Have Such a Fearsome Reputation?

Hyperallergic – A Visual Record of Four Centuries of Asylum Care

Find My Past – The Masters of Madness: How the Monro Family Ruled Bedlam

Listverse – 10 Crazy Facts From Bedlam, History’s Most Notorious Asylum

History Collection – 16 Terrifying Facts About Mental Asylums in the Early 20th Century

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