Gentlemen,
'The season has again arrived
when we are expected to report upon the state and progress of the Asylum during
the past year.
The mortality has been increased
beyond the usual amount by a variety of causes; amongst the most prominent of
which, we are again concerned to remark, has been the cruel and thoughtless
manner in which many parochial officials have sent patients into the Asylum,
when the poor creatures have been in so reduced a state of bodily health as to
render speedy death inevitable. Another cause has been the admission of several
cases of that most fatal disease, general paralysis.
Thanks to the liberality and
benevolence of Mr. Townshend Mainwaring, the house has at length been most
efficiently supplied with gas, and at a comparatively small cost to the
Counties in Union. This is a boon which none can duly estimate, but those who
have witnessed the former gloom of the Asylum during the long winter nights,
and contrasted it with its present bright and cheerful aspect.
A barrel organ has been purchased
for the amusement of the patients during the winter evenings. Considerable
increase has taken place in the amount of useful occupation amongst the
patients, both male and female, during the past year.
The same entire freedom from
mechanical restraint, which has always marked the management of the Asylum
since its opening, continues to be followed up with decidedly good results. We
wish that we could say that this humane and rational plan found favour beyond
the precincts of the Institution.
One most atrocious case of an
opposite kind of treatment has fallen within our notice during the past year.
It is most deplorable to contemplate, after the repeated generous efforts made
by the press, both Welsh and English, to diffuse useful knowledge upon the
subject of insanity, that in a Christian country and in a populous district,
and with the knowledge of most of the neighbouring inhabitants, a fellow
creature should have been permitted to be chained by both his legs in a
miserable shed for seven long years.. The case is so painfully interesting,
that we will add to this report the document which was sent to the Lord
Chancellor, who, at the instigation of the Commissioners in Lunacy, issued an
order for visiting the poor sufferer.
The Commissioners, with a
laudable alacrity, ordered a prosecution to be instituted, and the principal
offender was tried at the Carnarvonshire Autumn Assizes, convicted, and
sentenced to be imprisoned. The determination of the Commissioners to protect
the helpless lunatic, and the punishment awarded to the offender in this case,
will, we hope, serve to teach others that they cannot inflict such cruel
injuries upon their insane relatives with impunity.
Denbigh, June 16th 1853)
(extract)
(extract)
Sir,
I found the alleged lunatic, Evan Roberts, in a small shed, 6 feet wide, and 9 feet 4inches long, which had been built for the purpose. The room had a small sky-light in the roof and a window about a foot and a half square in the gable, just above the bed, which admits of being partially opened, but which was closed at the time of my visit; and as he (Evan Roberts) stated was seldom opened.
I found the alleged lunatic, Evan Roberts, in a small shed, 6 feet wide, and 9 feet 4inches long, which had been built for the purpose. The room had a small sky-light in the roof and a window about a foot and a half square in the gable, just above the bed, which admits of being partially opened, but which was closed at the time of my visit; and as he (Evan Roberts) stated was seldom opened.
The room felt very close and
damp. There was no fireplace, or any other means of ventilation except the door
and window. The approach to the room was through a sort of scullery and very
dark and obscure. Evan Roberts was lying on a chaff bed on a wooden bedstead,
to which both his legs were chained, by fetters fastened and riveted, just
above his ankles. In a recess in the wall at the bottom of the bed appeared a
seat, covered by a lid, with hinges attached to it, which upon examination I
found was a sort of privy, by which he was enabled to obey the calls of nature
the chains which fastened him to the bedstead being just sufficiently long to
enable the poor man to sit upon this contrivance. I found this internal privy
emptied itself into a hole in the adjoining garden.
The room had been recently
coloured, and the floor washed. The poor man’s body and bed linen were clean,
and as Mr. Lloyd Jones, who kindly accompanied me, stated, in a very different
and improved condition to what he found them on his two former visits. The
appearance of the poor man was pale and pasty, like a plant long deprived of
air and solar influence. His bodily health is tolerably good, and his condition
rather inclined to be fat and stout; he said his appetite was good, and that he
was not stinted in his food such as it was.
During a lengthened interview,
and a very close examination, I failed to discover the existence of any
hallucination or delusion of any kind; on the contrary, he was very sensible
and intelligent
I collected from his mother and
sister, that Evan Roberts was 48 years of age that he had been liable to
periodical mania for 27 years, and which the mother attributed to some injury
to his head, received in a rural affray, that at first the maniacal paroxysms
were infrequent, but that they became more violent and frequent as he advanced
in life. About seven years ago, his violence became so great, that he
threatened to murder his father and brother; and it was at that time that he
was first chained to the bed.
This restraint has never been
relaxed, although both mother and sister admitted that he was perfectly sane
and harmless for many weeks and months continuously. For the first five years
he was confined upstairs, and it was only about two years ago that he was
carried into the shed he now occupies.
During the examination, Evan
Roberts frequently, but mildly and with much temper, contradicted the mother
when she advanced anything which he deemed too highly coloured in extenuation
of the treatment pursued towards him, and desired meekly she would adhere to
the strict truth.
Finding that the poor fellow was
awed by the presence of his mother and sister, I requested them to retire, as I
wished to examine the alleged lunatic free from their presence and
interference. The mother for some time refused to comply with my request; but
upon being told that I would report her refusal, she very doggedly complied.
The poor man then became less reserved, he complained bitterly of the state in
which the privy had long been suffered to remain. For more than twelve months
he had been obliged to pass all his urine as well as his excrements into this
receptacle, and it became at last so full as to reach to within a foot of the
room. The heat of the sun produced so much fermentation, that the stench became
intolerable, and it caused him severe illness. Since this period, he has been
allowed a chamber- pot. The soil has only been removed twice in two years, the
last time about six weeks ago. It has however been less offensive since he has
ceased to pass his urine into the privy.
In reference to the alleged
threats to murder his father and brother, he denies the fact, and says his
brother attempted to strangle him about twelve months ago.
The poor man complained that the
chaff in his bed was never changed, or even shaken, except once, since his
confinement in the shed; and from the dampness of the room, and the warmth of
his body, it had become rotten, and like a wet sod. He said he was now shaved
once a week, whereas his beard was allowed to grow for months before Mr. Lloyd
Jones’s first visit.
In regard to the property, I
found the Tenement was only worth about £20 a year, as it only consisted of
five acres of land. The mother and sister alleged that the father had made a
will, leaving the property to the younger brother in trust for the support of
Evan Roberts and his mother for life. This he contradicted, and said he was the
owner, and that £500 had once been offered for the Tenement. Mr. Lloyd Jones
kindly promised to search the register at Bangor for both the father and
grandfather’s wills, and report to me; the result of which I will communicate
to you.
I remain, Sir,
Your obedient servant,
R. Lloyd Williams.
Your obedient servant,
R. Lloyd Williams.
The Commissioners in Lunacy
applied to the Lord Chancellor for an order to visit the farmer’s wife
mentioned in one of our former reports, as having been tied to her bed by a
cart rope, and her hands secured by a muff. She was accordingly visited, and a
report upon her case sent to the Commissioners, who directed an enquiry to be
made with a view of her removal to an asylum. The family obtained information
of this investigation, and considerable amendment in the treatment of the lunatic
took place before the Justices and the Medical Officer appointed to visit her
arrived, and no order for her removal was made. We have reason to know that
that poor creature is still under restraint, and her hands being secured, she
is strapped to a chair, which is fastened to the leg of a strong table.
Three Kids Gripped By Evil By Polly Mullaney
Amazon Kindle, Amazon paperback
http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=Three%20kids%20gripped%20by%20evil
Three Kids Gripped By Evil By Polly Mullaney
Amazon Kindle, Amazon paperback
http://www.amazon.co.uk/s/ref=nb_sb_noss?url=search-alias%3Daps&field-keywords=Three%20kids%20gripped%20by%20evil
No comments:
Post a Comment