Sheriff Hill Lunatic Asylum

Sheriff Hill Lunatic Asylum (also known as Gateshead Fell Lunatic Asylum) was located at Sourmilk Hill in Sheriff Hill, Gateshead, Tyne and Wear. At that time Sourmilk Hill Lane continued across Church Road and onto what is today Larne Crescent, the asylum occupied the land on the corner of modern-day Larne Crescent and Church Road. It operated during the nineteenth century and provided isolation and medical care to hundreds of patients at a time when disease and illness in England were treated predominantly through isolation and asylum.[1] At least two patients escaped from the institution, which closed around 1880.

Sheriff Hill Lunatic Asylum

Conception and opening edit

 
Ordnance Survey map of Sheriff Hill in 1862 showing the asylum

Sheriff Hill Lunatic Asylum was situated on Sour Milk Hill Lane, Sheriff Hill, during the nineteenth century.[2] Wesleyan records circa 1830 note that "Sheriff Hill Lunatic Asylum is pleasantly situated on an ninence, about two-and-a-half miles south of Gateshead, from which a fine aspect of Ravensworth and its vicinity may be obtained".[3] The old site of Sheriff Hill Asylum lies dormant today. Surviving archive photographs show that the asylum was designed in a rough square, with buildings on all four sides enclosing a courtyard.[4] The exact date of opening remains the subject to debate. Contemporary sources indicate that the asylum opened in 1817,[5] yet others note that when the asylum was advertised in 1834 the posting revealed that "this institution has been established for over thirty years".[6]

Ownership and Operation edit

 
The site of the asylum

It is likely that the asylum was opened by a Mrs Orton and that at some stage soon after ownership was transferred to Jacob Gowling and his wife, who soon moved onto nearby Wrekenton to open a new asylum in a similar vein.[7] In 1834, the asylum was in the hands of Samuel Kent, a wealthy local man who owned Beacon Lough Farm and who remained proprietor until the asylum was closed.[7] According to the 1841 census there were 81 inmates at that time.[8] In 1844, records show that the asylum had 86 patients. Of these, some eighty are recorded as being "pauper" whilst the other six are listed as "private". The weekly charge for the receipt and treatment of paupers was "8/- including clothes". In 1855, the asylum was contracted to receive paupers requiring treatment from neighbouring Newcastle.[5] This increased the patient numbers to ninety-four, with eighty-eight paupers.[5]

In 1817, Jonathan Martin, the brother of artist John Martin, was committed to the asylum after threatening to shoot the Bishop of Oxford. He escaped via the roof three years later.[9] Another, more notorious incident occurred in December 1842:

An epileptic lunatic escaped from Mr. Kent's asylum at Gateshead Fell ... He was immediately pursued but was not retaken ... He escaped on Saturday night and on the Monday after his escape he murdered his wife and his daughter in a violent paroxysm of epileptic mania, in a most savage and horrid manner. This wretched man is now a furious criminal maniac...[10]

Closure edit

The exact date of closure is unknown. However, once the asylum closed, the buildings survived and were renamed to the less conspicuous "Kent's buildings" and the rather more so "Asylum Square". The buildings were to prove durable and as late as 1932, local historian D. Lumley wrote that "a great part of the building still remains".[11] It is not known when the building was finally demolished, but the present site is derelict.

References and Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Carlton, 1974: 55
  2. ^ Manders, 1973: 241
  3. ^ Manders, 1973: 242
  4. ^ Available at Gateshead Council's public archives at I-See Gateshead[permanent dead link]
  5. ^ a b c Roberts, 2001 This database is a resource maintained by Andrew Roberts, a professional academic at the University of Middlesex (retrieved 18 March 2011)
  6. ^ This advertisement from the Newcastle Evening Chronicle (dated 13 June 1834) has been retained, in original form, in the third of four books of scraps at Gateshead Central Library.
  7. ^ a b Manders, 1973: 211
  8. ^ "Gateshead Fell St. John burials 1825-1864". Durham Records Office. Retrieved 5 September 2018.
  9. ^ Manders, 1973: 212
  10. ^ The Earl of Shaftesbury, 1844: 72
  11. ^ Paraphrased by Manders, 1973: 213

Bibliography edit

External links edit

54°56′16″N 1°35′25″W / 54.9377°N 1.5903°W / 54.9377; -1.5903