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Was your ancestor admitted to Bethlem hospital? Or maybe your relative helped to treat the patients in the famous mental hospital? Explore thousands of historic records from admission registers, staff books, governors’ minutes and even patients’ casebooks. Read descriptions of your ancestor’s behaviour, physicians’ notes and medical histories. The records also include those of the criminally insane. Discover where and when your ancestor was convicted and the duration of his/her stay in Bethlem. The records also include the names of some famous assassins. The records include the name of James Norris, the American seaman who spent ten years in confinement and restraint in Bethlem in appalling conditions. His story led to a government enquiry and the passing of England’s Mad House Act of 1828.
Each record will include a transcript and most will include an image of the original document.
Transcript
The details in each transcript will vary depending on the type of document the information has been taken from. In a transcript you may find:
Image
To get the most out of the records it is always best to view the image. There are various types of records available therefore the information in each record can vary. You may find your ancestor in more than one record type. Below are the different types of records available and the information you can find in each:
Admission register (Reference ARA)
Incurable Patient Admission Registers 1723-1919 (Reference ARB)
Female Voluntary Patient Admissions Registers 1890-1910 (Reference ARC)
Criminal Patient Admission Registers 1816-1864 (Reference ARD)
Minutes of the Court Of Governors 1559-1689 (Reference BCB)
Patient Casebooks Covering the Dates 1815 To 1919 (Reference CB)
Male and Female Patient Casebooks Covering the Dates 1903 To 1913 (Reference CWA)
Male and Female Private Patient Casebooks Covering the Dates 1903 To 1913 (Reference CWB)
Discharge and Death Registers 1782-1906 (Reference DDR)
Staff Salary Books 1777-1932 (Reference SB)
These records cover Bethlem Hospital and Warlingham Park near Croydon. There are 329 volumes in total. Each volume can be read from the beginning to end by using Findmypast’s London, Bethlem Hospital Patient Admission Registers and Casebooks 1683-1932 Browse. In these records there are 250 years of fascinating, revealing records; extraordinary insight into why people were regarded as mentally ill during the last 4 centuries. However very rarely do the records include details about treatments or patient’s opinions about the hospital.
Bethlem Royal Hospital was founded in 1247 as the Priory of St Mary of Bethlehem and is one of the world’s oldest hospitals for the treatment of mental illness. In 1547 it came under the control of the City of London as one of the 5 Royal hospitals refounded after the Reformation, the others being Barts, St Thomas’s, Bridewell and Christ’s Hospital. From the 1570s, Bridewell and Bethlem were governed together, which can be seen in the Minutes of the Court of Governors records.
Bethlem hospital became known for scandal and intrigue through the centuries. It was popular in plays, literary works and Hogarth’s A Rakes Progress. Conditions in the hospital had become poor and ‘Bedlam’ become synonymous with madness and pandemonium. Bedlam came from the pronunciation of ‘Bethlem’ in the Jacobean era.
The original hospital was located near Bishopsgate, outside the walls of the city of London. In 1676 it was moved to Moorsfields, now known as Finsbury Circus, outside Moorgate. Everything from the original building was auctioned off except for the two famous sculptures of Melancholy and Raving Madness.
The new building was large and grand to impress the wealthy and well born visitors to the hospital. Until 1770, unrestricted visiting was permitted by the hospital governors – this resulted in the inmates becoming an attraction for the amusement of the public. It was a popular tourist site and was even listed in guidebooks. On the way to the hospitals you could find people playing games and selling pies. The wealthy could connect the grandness to what they knew of their own new stylish houses. Those visiting the hospital took the experience to be like visiting a zoo, patients were expected to ‘perform.’ Many came to the hospital because they desired to meet odd and eccentric people. However, due to the abuse towards patients and security, access to the grounds was restricted by 1770 to those who were given permission by the governor.
The records tell little of the treatments given to the patients. We do know that it was common in the 18th and 19th centuries to give patients cold baths or restrain them in strait jackets. Some patients were confined to their rooms. Other treatments included bloodletting or purges. Today, these methods seem archaic and even inhuman. However, these treatments were not unique to Bethlem and were used widely. In 1815 a parliamentary enquiry into the treatment of patients in institutions such as Bethlem led to reforms in the treatment and management of mental illness. In the last two centuries treatment of the mentally ill has vastly improved.
The hospital moved one more time before settling in its current location in Beckenham. In 1815, it was moved to St. George’s Fields in Southwark. The Moorfields location had declined from its grand state when it was first opened in the 17th century. Much of the building had fallen into disrepair. The new site was larger and gave the patients more space for outdoor activities including gardening. A new ‘moral therapy’ began and patients’ comfort was more of a priority than in the early days of the hospital.
In 1930, the hospital moved a final time to Beckenham, a suburb of London. The previous location at Southwark has now become the Imperial War Museum. Today, Bethlem Royal Hospital is at the front of humanitarian treatment for mental health and is a part of the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust.
Edward Oxford
On 10 June 1840, Edward Oxford shot two pistols at Queen Victoria and Prince Albert as they rode in an open horse-drawn carriage. Both shots fired and Oxford was seized. He was found guilty of high treason. He is found in the Bethlem Admission register from 1840-1864 as insane. The records also show that he was sent to Broadmoor on 30 April 1864.
Margaret Nicholson
Nicholson attempted to kill George III with an ivory-handled dessert knife. She stabbed at him twice as the King got out of his carriage. The blade on the knife was too dull and the King was not injured. Nicholson was declared insane and her admission record shows she was admitted to Bethlem on 11 August 1787, where she spent the remainder of her life until she died in 1799. During her time at Bethlem she became a huge draw for the public and many paid large sums to see her.
Daniel M’Naghten
Daniel M’Naghten tried to kill the Prime Minister Sir Robert Peel in January 1843. However, instead he killed the Prime Minister’s private secretary, Edward Drummond. A jury found him to be not guilty on the grounds of insanity. The verdict led to the creation of the M’Naghten Rules for deciding whether an individual was insane and could not be criminally liable. The records show that M’Naghten was transferred to Bethlem from Newgate Prison and he was later transferred to Broadmoor in 1864. The records also note observations of his behaviour. He is recorded as being adverse to conversation and very annoyed. He stays away from the others and chooses to sit in darkish corners where he reads or knits.
Jonathan Martin
On Sunday, 1 February 1829, Jonathan Martin hid in the York Minster until after dark. Then he piled cushions and prayer books together in the choir where he used them to set fire to the woodwork. The blaze was not discovered until the early hours of Monday morning. The fire collapsed part of the choir roof, destroyed the organ and the pulpit. Martin was captured, tried at York Castle and found guilty by a jury, but the judge ruled that Martin was not guilty on a grounds of insanity and he was sent to Bethlem. The records show that Martin’s behaviour was uniformly good and inoffensive. He was subject to slight excitement but showed personal restraint. The records also recount episodes where Martin attempted to take his life and then while at Gateshead he attempted to escape out of a chimney.
Mary Frith
Mary Frith was also known as Moll Cutpurse, a notorious master thief in 17th century England. She was born in London and started her criminal career as a cutpurse – this is how she achieved her nickname. A cutpurse today would be known as a pickpocket. Frith drank in taverns, dressed as a man and is even said to be the first woman who smoked. She participated in highway robbery and even posed as a fortune teller to rob her victims. Eventually, Frith was caught and taken to Newgate prison but paid the large bribe of £2,000 to have the charges dropped. Her notoriety spread after two plays were written based on her life, The Roaring Girl and The Madde Pranckes of Mery Mall of the Bankside. We can find Mary Frith in the Minutes of the Court of Governors of Bridewell & Bethlem. Frith is listed along with other patients as being released from the Hospital of Bethlem in June 1644. Mol Cutpurse’s career as a criminal did not last long after her release from Bethlem. She died of natural causes in 1659.
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