Difference between revisions of "Workhouses/Hospitals/Asylums And Sanitoriums"
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<div align="right">[[Image:Boston.jpg|250px|thumb|Boston Workhouse Gatehouse submitted by Jennie]]</div> | <div align="right">[[Image:Boston.jpg|250px|thumb|Boston Workhouse Gatehouse submitted by Jennie]]</div> | ||
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+ | Records of patients and their treatment are closed for 100 years. Similarly with Asylum and/or workhouse records, although entry and discharge dates may be available. Hospital and Asylums should appear on census records, with the names of the people that worked there. Patients or inmates are sometimes only listed by initials. | ||
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+ | Records about people that worked in these places are available in some cases, as are administration and records in relation to committees and other involved groups/people. | ||
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+ | Sources for finding specific hospital records can often be found on: [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/hospitalrecords National Archives Hospital Records Database] where you will find towns searchable by name, and once having located the hospital, find information as to where records are held and the history of the particular establishment, its status (who ran it and when) and any former names. | ||
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+ | Some hospitals - bigger ones - may have their own archives. The ARCHON Directory includes contact details for record repositories in the United Kingdom and also for institutions elsewhere in the world which have substantial collections of manuscripts noted under the indexes to the [http://www.nationalarchives.gov.uk/archon/ National Register of Archives]. | ||
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+ | To access closed records you need to contact a relevant NHS Trust - often a letter of permission is then needed, with very good reason, and someone from the records office will seek out the particular record you need rather than hand it over so as to protect the privacy of others mentioned in the record. This is due to data protection act 1998 | ||
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*[http://homepage.ntlworld.com/jeffery.knaggs/Instuts.html#5113 An Index to Institutions in The 1901 Census of England and Wales] | *[http://homepage.ntlworld.com/jeffery.knaggs/Instuts.html#5113 An Index to Institutions in The 1901 Census of England and Wales] | ||
− | *[http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/forewords/A138.pdf Although written as an introduction to the Apprenticeship Register for Dawlish, Devon.Parish Apprenticeship system in England in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.] | + | *[http://www.devonfhs.org.uk/forewords/A138.pdf Although written as an introduction to the Apprenticeship Register for Dawlish, Devon. Parish Apprenticeship system in England in the late 18th and early 19th centuries.] |
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*For more information see [[Poor Law and Workhouse Records]] | *For more information see [[Poor Law and Workhouse Records]] | ||
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Back to [[Main Page]] | Back to [[Main Page]] | ||
Back to [[General History]] | Back to [[General History]] |
Latest revision as of 16:55, 25 September 2022
Contents
Records of patients and their treatment are closed for 100 years. Similarly with Asylum and/or workhouse records, although entry and discharge dates may be available. Hospital and Asylums should appear on census records, with the names of the people that worked there. Patients or inmates are sometimes only listed by initials.
Records about people that worked in these places are available in some cases, as are administration and records in relation to committees and other involved groups/people.
Sources for finding specific hospital records can often be found on: National Archives Hospital Records Database where you will find towns searchable by name, and once having located the hospital, find information as to where records are held and the history of the particular establishment, its status (who ran it and when) and any former names.
Some hospitals - bigger ones - may have their own archives. The ARCHON Directory includes contact details for record repositories in the United Kingdom and also for institutions elsewhere in the world which have substantial collections of manuscripts noted under the indexes to the National Register of Archives.
To access closed records you need to contact a relevant NHS Trust - often a letter of permission is then needed, with very good reason, and someone from the records office will seek out the particular record you need rather than hand it over so as to protect the privacy of others mentioned in the record. This is due to data protection act 1998
General Sites
Irish Maps of Poor Law Unions
Welsh Poor Law Unions
Other Information Sites
- For more information see Poor Law and Workhouse Records
Back to Main Page
Back to General History