Fulbourn Hospital [Cambridgeshire Archives: H/F R98/009]
The Lunacy Act and County Asylums Act of 1845 consolidated Lunacy Law in England and required the provision of a public asylum for all pauper lunatics by local authorities.
Fulbourn Asylum for the Borough of Cambridge, Cambridgeshire and the Isle of Ely opened in 1858 after 12 years of wrangling and lengthy legal battles, as well as disputes over its design.
It accommodated 250 patients. The new regime imposed was fairly liberal; the prevailing approach to treatment was one of ‘non-restraint’. At Fulbourn there would be ‘neither belt, straightjacket, manacle, (or) strong chair.’
First admission register of Fulbourn Hospital,1858.
[Cambridgeshire Archives: H/F R63/009]
In the early days of the hospital, patients were occupied with laying out garden paths and cultivating a skittle alley and bowling green. Practical outdoor activities such as gardening and farming, were seen as beneficial to the overall health of the patient.
Interior shot of the hospital with female nursing attendants in their pristine uniform c.1890s.
[Cambridgeshire Archives: H/F R98/009]
When Dr David Clark became Medical Superintendent in 1953, however, Fulbourn was viewed as a dreaded institution, with the mentally ill kept behind bolted doors and attendants acting as virtual jailers. His appointment initiated genuine change and improvement in mental health care.
By the time Clark retired, patients lived in open therapeutic communities, the staff were partners in the proper provision of care and the hospital was internationally renowned as a pioneering centre of social therapy and rehabilitation. Fulbourn became internationally renowned for its pioneering therapeutic community.
The hospital is still in use as a mental health hospital and has been considerably enlarged over the years. In 2002, it became part of the Cambridgeshire and Peterborough Mental Health Partnership NHS Trust.