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4 mag 2022 · History. ‘Scenes of the wildest description’. Professor Claire Chatterton remembers the Radcliffe strikers 100 years on from the explosive events. 4 May 2022. Bulletin. In April 1922, nursing staff at the Radcliffe Asylum locked themselves into wards with their patients for a sit-in strike.
Saxondale Hospital was a psychiatric hospital near Radcliffe-on-Trent in Nottinghamshire, built to replace the Sneinton Asylum in Nottingham. History Nurses at Saxondale Hospital. The foundation stone was laid on 25 July 1899 by Lady Belper, wife of the chairman of Nottinghamshire County Council.
- 1902
- Public NHS
- Mental health
5 set 2021 · Nottingham News. How former Notts mental hospital site still shows signs of its past with bricked up doors to underground tunnels. Its' now an upmarket housing estate, but Upper Saxondale was...
25 apr 2022 · The Radcliffe Asylum had been opened in 1902 as a mental asylum for the poor of Nottinghamshire and by the time of the dispute, twenty years later, it had over 600 inpatients. Like all asylums in this period, it had sexually segregated wards, where patients were cared for by nursing staff of the same sex.
Funds had to be raised first, so the foundation stone of the Radcliffe (or Oxford) Lunatic Asylum was laid on 27 August 1821. Jackson’s Oxford Journal reported as follows on 1 September 1821:
History. The Warneford was not founded by Samuel Warneford, as generally believed. In 1810 John Vye, the vicar of Wootton in Northamptonshire, gave the Radcliffe Infirmary 100 guineas (£105).
Previous Names: Oxford Lunatic Asylum, Radcliffe Asylum. Location: Warneford Lane, Headington, Oxfordshire. Principal Architect: Richard Ingleman. JC Buckler. William Wilkinson. Layout: Early Corridor Plan. Status: Remains open, with original asylum in use. Opened: 10th July 1826. Closed: n/a.