April News

The weather here in Scotland has been so lovely in late March and early April that I have been outside as much as possible. However, I have also had time to do a little work on Historic Hospitals and have had some interesting enquiries. So here is a summary of this month’s progress.

The mysterious case of a TB patient at Arlesey Hospital, Bedfordshire

A lady contacted me about the whereabouts of the Arlesey hospital to which her father had been admitted as a TB patient in the late 40s or early 50s. Having looked up Arlesey on the Historic Hospitals website the only reference she found was to Fairfield Hospital at Arlesley, the large psychiatric hospital that was founded as the Three Counties Asylum. She was understandably confused – as was I.

The former Three Counties Asylum, later Fairfield Hospital, Arlesey, photographed in December 2018 ©️ H. Blakeman

There was a severe shortage of beds for TB cases after the Second World War, so I wondered if some accommodation had been taken over at Fairfield Hospital for that purpose. A bit of research revealed that during the Second World War the London Chest Hospital established a country branch at Arlesey in the hutted annexe built in the grounds of Fairfield Hospital. This made perfect sense, as the patient was from London.

City of London Chest Hospital, photographed in 1992 ©️ H. Blakeman

The Chest Hospital was severely damaged during bombing in 1941 hence the need to evacuate to the country. During his stay as a patient, the lady’s father, David Tatch, composed the following poem:

With Apologies to Rudyard Kipling
If you can take your strep and P.A.S. and multicoloured pills,
And swallow them, and still can smile, in spite of all your ills,
If you can sit precariously upon a bedpan chill,
With screens agape, and then can wait, while Ingrid has her fill.
If you can take a gastric tube, and still with sickly grin,
Say "Nursie dear, I didn't feel the blessed thing go in".
If you can stand "Bomb Happy" and say she's sweet and kind,
And listen to the row each night, and still retain your mind,
If you enjoy the country air, and don't mind losing weight,
If you can eat with relish the "bangers" on your plate,
And dine on stew, that's far from new, oblivious of the smell,
Then come to Arlesey, my son, PERHAPS you will get well.
a poem by David Tatch
One of the hutted ward blocks built on the Fairfield Hospital site at the beginning of the Second World War, photographed in the 1990s © Louis Holmsted

Developments in Devon

I also had an enquiry about the Bideford Isolation Hospital (North Devon) from someone who had been a patient there in 1954 with suspected polio. He recalled that he stayed there for most of the school summer holiday, and for about half that time was the only patient in the entire hospital. He also remembered that the hospital comprised ‘three bungalow style wards – each with about 6-10 rooms’. He got on well with one of the sisters, who informed him that not many summers prior to his stay, the place would be overflowing into the corridors with diphtheria cases, but vaccinations had put a stop to that. He also remembered the name of one of the doctors as either a Dr Hewitt or Hewitson.

Kingsley Hospital, Bideford, on the large-scale OS map revised in 1957 CC-BY (NLS)

Unfortunately, the Devon page on this site is another one that has very little on it. A little bit of investigating revealed that the North Devon Joint Isolation Hospital at Bideford was renamed the Kinglsey Hospital in 1955. This was probably in response to changing use with the decline in the need for isolation hospitals once vaccines dramatically reduced the incidence of measles, scarlet fever and diphtheria. I was delighted to find that the buildings are still extant, though now named Kinglsey House, a residential centre for people with autism run by the National Autistic Society. I have not yet tracked down any photographs of the buildings, which mostly seem to date from the 1920s and ’30s, of one and two storeys, in white-painted render with slate roofs. I would be very grateful if anyone had any that I could post on the website.

Dean Clarke House, the former Royal Devon and Exeter Hospital, photographed in 2017 © Derek Harper from Geograph

Devon is particularly rich in historic hospitals. Exeter has the earliest purpose-built voluntary hospital in England outside London. It is no longer a hospital, but the building is still extant having been converted to offices, named Dean Clarke House. Devon also nearly had a cottage hospital designed by the Modernist architectural husband and wife team of Jane Drew and J. T. Alliston. They won a competition to design a replacement for the Dawlish Cottage Hospital held in 1937, but the outbreak of the Second World War led to the scheme being laid aside.

Dawlish Cottage Hospital elevation and plan, from The Builder, 28 May 1937, p.1136 (from the Internet Archive)

James Thomas Alliston and Jane Drew were married in 1933 and their architectural partnership lasted from 1934 until 1939, when the couple’s marriage was dissolved. Drew subsequently married Maxwell Fry. Their architectural partnership is perhaps best known today for its work in West Africa and India, which included housing and public buildings, including hospitals.

James T. Alliston and Jane Drew, from The Builder28 May 1937 (from the Internet Archive)

A Start to Revising Cumbria

Apart from dabbling in Devon and Bedfordshire, I have also started to tackle the hospitals in Cumbria. Earlier this month I began to add in some historic maps, photographs and potted histories. This work is very much in its early stages, but the highlight so far has been Brampton War Memorial Hospital. It is a particularly good example of the handsome cottage hospitals built after the First World War. It was designed by the Carlisle architect and photographer, Samuel W. B. Jack, and built in 1922-3.

Brampton War Memorial Hospital photographed in 2018 ©️ Rose and Trev Clough from Geograph

Ten Years Ago This Month

Finally, as it is ten years since I first launched the Historic Hospitals site, I thought I would look back at some of the earliest posts that I wrote. The very first one was on Airthrey Castle Maternity Hospital. Since then I have visited the site, which is now on the University of Stirling campus, so I have updated the post and added some maps and photos. Lots of people who were born there have commented on the post, though only a very small fraction of the 2,050 babies born there between 1941 and 1945, and no doubt many more thousands from 1945 up to about 1969 when it finally closed.

Garden front of Airthrey Castle, Bridge of Allan, Stirlingshire, that was a maternity hospital from 1941 to 1969. Now part of the University of Stirling campus. Photographed in August 2018 ©️ H. Blakeman

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