Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- List of Figures
- Introduction
- 1 Viewing the Early Twentieth-Century Institutional Interior through the Pages of Living London
- 2 ‘French Beef was Better than Hampstead Beef’: Taste, Treatment and Pauperism in a London Smallpox Hospital, 1871
- 3 From Asylum to Mental Hospital: Gender, Space and the Patient Experience in London County Council Asylums, 1890–1910
- 4 Refuge or Prison? Girls' Experiences of a Home for the ‘Mentally Defective’ in Scotland, 1906–1948
- 5 Paupers and their Experience of a London Workhouse: St Martin-in-the-Fields, 1725–1824
- 6 ‘A Veritable Palace for the Hard-Working Labourer?’ Space, Material Culture and Inmate Experience in London's Rowton Houses, 1892–1918
- 7 ‘The Place was a Home from Home’: Identity and Belonging in the English Cottage Home for Convalescing Psychiatric Patients, 1910–1939
- 8 ‘The Father and Mother of the Place’: Inhabiting London's Public Libraries, 1885–1940
- 9 ‘Discipline with Home-Like Conditions’: The Living Quarters and Daily Life of the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps in First-World-War Britain and France
- 10 Halls of Residence at Britain's Civic Universities, 1870–1970
- Notes
- Index
4 - Refuge or Prison? Girls' Experiences of a Home for the ‘Mentally Defective’ in Scotland, 1906–1948
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- List of Contributors
- List of Figures
- Introduction
- 1 Viewing the Early Twentieth-Century Institutional Interior through the Pages of Living London
- 2 ‘French Beef was Better than Hampstead Beef’: Taste, Treatment and Pauperism in a London Smallpox Hospital, 1871
- 3 From Asylum to Mental Hospital: Gender, Space and the Patient Experience in London County Council Asylums, 1890–1910
- 4 Refuge or Prison? Girls' Experiences of a Home for the ‘Mentally Defective’ in Scotland, 1906–1948
- 5 Paupers and their Experience of a London Workhouse: St Martin-in-the-Fields, 1725–1824
- 6 ‘A Veritable Palace for the Hard-Working Labourer?’ Space, Material Culture and Inmate Experience in London's Rowton Houses, 1892–1918
- 7 ‘The Place was a Home from Home’: Identity and Belonging in the English Cottage Home for Convalescing Psychiatric Patients, 1910–1939
- 8 ‘The Father and Mother of the Place’: Inhabiting London's Public Libraries, 1885–1940
- 9 ‘Discipline with Home-Like Conditions’: The Living Quarters and Daily Life of the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps in First-World-War Britain and France
- 10 Halls of Residence at Britain's Civic Universities, 1870–1970
- Notes
- Index
Summary
Mental Deficiency and Institutional Care
The Mental Deficiency and Lunacy (England and Scotland) Acts of 1913 provided funding for the institutionalization of those considered to be ‘on the borderland of imbecility’ at a time of neither universal access to healthcare nor entitlement to education beyond elementary schooling. One explanation historians have offered has been the influence of eugenics: contemporary fears that the ‘feeble-minded’ required permanent segregation or they would multiply and become a threat to society. Another is that universal elementary education, which was compulsory in Scotland from 1872, and in England and Wales from 1880, drew attention to those who were considered incapable of being educated in ordinary schools. For Mathew Thomson, a historian specializing in psychology and mental deficiency, the ‘problem’ also concerns the definition of citizenship within new forms of democracy, and new forms of disciplinary medico-legal power.
Despite the potential impact of this legislation on children and adolescents as well as adults, only limited research exists on how these institutions were experienced. Oral history accounts provide mixed responses, though Jane Read has shown how such sources might be problematic. Steve Humphries highlights the opposition of working-class parents to attempts by the authorities to incarcerate disabled children, the grim realities of institutional life and inmates' resistance. Anne Borsay argues that ‘once inside, personal identity was systematically attacked’.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Residential Institutions in Britain, 1725–1970Inmates and Environments, pp. 65 - 78Publisher: Pickering & ChattoFirst published in: 2014