Eventually an extension was built
including, also in the old buildings, a new heating system, electric lighting,
a new sewage system and a new water supply. The building work incorporated a
new dining hall opened in 1904.
The visiting commissioners, each
year, monitored the food being served to the patients and regularly found it to
be of good quality with liberal servings. Certainly it was a far better diet
than many received at home.
Since the asylum opened the
pauper patients were provided with an allowance of beer, but by 1879 the
allowance stopped except during harvest and some seasonal occasions.
Patients, despite the label ‘pauper
lunatic’, were drawn from a cross-section of occupational backgrounds as can be
seen by the close correspondence of the backgrounds of the inmates to the
occupational census for that year. Ill health very quickly reduces the victim
to the status of ‘pauper’, and anyone with a mental illness receiving partial
financial support from the state was labelled ‘pauper lunatic’ under the terms
of the 1890 Lunacy Act.
Time and again, over the years,
many patients were admitted following dramatic and obsessive expressions of
religious beliefs, but during 1904-5 a remarkable wave of religious enthusiasm
swept across Wales, with revivalist hymn singers touring the country, filling
the chapels with worshipers and new converts. The movement reached a peak, but
collapsed as quickly as it had burst forth, leaving in its wake many disturbed
casualties. In 1905 Dr, Cox reported that ‘early in the year an exceptional
number of patients were admitted suffering from religious mania attributed to
religious fervour due to the Revivalist movements’.
Exctacts from the 'North Wales
Guardian' December 1908
North Wales Counties Lunatic Asylum, Denbigh
North Wales Counties Lunatic Asylum, Denbigh
‘The care and possible cure of
the mentally afflicted is a problem that has occupied the most serious
attention of medical experts, scientists, and public authorities, for many
years. There seems an idea that insanity is greatly on the increase, probably
because there are now more inmates in asylums than was formerly the case. But
this may be accounted for by the natural increase in population, and even more
so by the fact that mild forms of idiocy and insanity were formerly treated at
home - or probably were not treated at all - whereas they are now very properly
drafted into our asylums. In a word, the standard of lunacy has been greatly
lowered during recent years.
It was
recently my privilege to visit the North Wales Counties Lunatic Asylum at
Denbigh, which provides accommodation for lunatic patients from the counties of
Denbigh, Flint, Anglesey, Carnarvon, and Merioneth. It is a large institution,
containing nearly 900 patients, to attend upon whom there is a staff of over
100 persons, including three qualified resident doctors.
Dr.
Llewelyn F. Cox.M.R.C.S., is the Superintendant; Dr. W.W.Herbert, M.D., C.M.,
first assistant; and Dr. Frank G. Jones, M.D., C.M., second assistant. The
inmates are mostly drawn from the pauper classes, but private patients are also
received, and they have accommodation apart from the ordinary inmates. At
present there are about sixty of these private patients.
It is
interesting to note that the asylum has grown to its present large dimensions
out of a small beginning; intended for 200 patients. The institution is
self-contained - almost everything required is done within its environment.
Thus it manufactures its own electric light, it has its own pure and wholesome
water supply, drawn from Llyn Bran, eight miles away; and its farm of over one
hundred acres supplies much of the food required, both vegetable and animal.
I was
taken round the institution by Dr. Herbert, who proved a most efficient and
entertaining guide. He is evidently on the best of terms with the inmates, and
one or two quaint little episodes occurred which showed that tact and kindness
are distinguishing features on the part of the staff in their care of the
unfortunate people under their charge. Those who have friends or relatives in
the institution may rest assured that they are kindly and humanely treated,
their individual cases receiving the best of attention, and every means taken
to affect a cure where there is the slightest ground for hope. I was so struck
with everything I saw that I feel I can write nothing but praise with regard
thereto. Over sixty per cent. of the male patients are usefully employed in
various ways, and thus have an object in life, which is found of the greatest
service in the efforts towards cure. This is particularly the case of those
male patients who are able to labour outdoors; many of them evidently take
great pride in their work. Of the women, the percentage employed is slightly
less than in the case of the men, but a great number perform housework and
laundry work, and many of them agreeably pass a portion of their time in
needlework. Exercise is regularly taken in a spacious (enclosed) airing courts
whilst about one-third are allowed to walk out weekly beyond the Asylum estate.
Physical recreation is also encouraged, and provision is made for football,
cricket, tennis, bowling, etc.
Weekly
entertainment is much looked forward to by both patients and attendants, and
proves a most welcome break in the routine. The dances in particular are very
popular functions, and a stranger looking on would probably have no conception
of the real character of the gathering. For these dances and entertainments a
large dining hall is utilised, with a capital platform and handsome proscenium
and drop curtain.
The
social side of life is regarded as important, and everything possible is done
to interest the patients. Occasionally an entertainment is thrown open to the
public, and several pounds taken at the doors.'
When a
pauper patient is discharged, he or she receives a grant from a fund founded in
memory of the late Mr. Ablett, sufficient for maintenance until employment is
obtained.
Dr. Cox
concluded, after careful investigation, that in the majority of cases there was
obvious evidence of heredity predisposition to insanity.
This
belief remained paramount during this period. In 1914 Dr. Jones reported that an
hereditary taint has been traced to 30 per cent. of admissions.
Visitors' Book 1914
A good dinner of boiled beef and
potatoes was served in the hall during our visit to the evident satisfaction of
those who sat down to it. The plates were warm, the table cloths clean, and the
knives and forks had received proper attention.
We had the opportunity of speaking
to the engineer as to the instruction of the nurses in the use of the fire
appliances. In one of the wards we found a nurse quite ignorant of the proper
method of using them.
No use of mechanical restraint
has been recorded during the period under review; 5 patients have been secluded
, on 41 occasions.
The old workshops have been
converted into a temporary day room for workers pending the buildings
operations. We hope when these are finished the room will be restored to its
old use; for the present workshops are dark and unsuitable for their purpose.
In the laundry the bands for driving the collar ironing machine are
insufficiently protected, and there is no proper guard for the hands of those
working the machine.
We were glad to see that the medicine
cupboards are provided with locked inner compartments to hold poisons. The day rooms are well supplied with books and bound illustrated periodicals, and
some addition has been made to the number of pianos; but there is still some
deficiency of objects of interests to attract the patient's attention, which we
hope will in time be supplied.
Postmortem examinations were
made in the very inadequate proportion of 60 per cent. It is satisfactory to
report that in no instance was a bedsore present and that none of the 29
patients (or 3 percent of the whole) whom we saw in bed in the wards was so
suffering. This affords a good indication of the care and attention which are
bestowed upon the nursing of the sick, and is very credible to the staff. It
is, however, still impossible to avoid treating many patients for tuberculosis
in the open wards, although an effort has, as we have said, been made to
segregate as many of the men as possible in the isolation section.
In the important question of the
open air treatment of such and other suitable cases, we trust that verandas
will be provided for in the plans of the proposed new buildings already
referred to. Provision is we understand to be made for an open air balcony,
which we hope will not only be made safe for all classes of patients, but be
redeemed from any objectionable appearance by some appropriate decorative
treatment.
We entirely endorse our
colleagues' views as to the urgent need for an acute hospital or wards for the
treatment of fresh admissions.
Excepting influenza, one case
each of erysipelas and dysentery represent all the zymotic disease which has
appeared in the Asylum.
Dr. Jones is evidently sparing no
pains to cooperate judiciously with the committee in endeavouring to bring this
Asylum throughout up to a high modern standard. He is assisted by two medical
colleagues, by whom the medical records are carefully kept, and who have a good
knowledge of their cases. We think that a third is needed for the work of this
large Asylum, and that a laboratory and the necessary appliances should be
provided to enable research to be made by the medical staff.
L.L.Shadwell....F. Needham
Commissioners in Lunacy
There was little change in the
practices at the asylum during, and as a result of, the First World War, and
any that did occur were more to do with public health measures than psychiatric
advances.
Notice of Death 1919
Three Kids Gripped By Evil By Polly Mullaney
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