The Archives photograph

The Archives

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Initial release September 29, 2003
Directors Pieter Kuijpers
Screenplay Kees van Beijnum
Cast Angela Schijf
Date of Reg.
Date of Upd.
ID2960328
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About The Archives


Letters from Seven Years' War opened 250 years later

Letters from Seven Years' War opened 250 years later
Nov 7,2023 12:51 am

... Prof Morieux said he only asked to look at the box in The Archives " out of curiosity" before discovering them...

Cambridge University releases 1913 English test question

Cambridge University releases 1913 English test question
Jul 25,2023 12:21 pm

... " The question from the first ever C2 Proficiency exam paper - which is held in The Archives at Cambridge University Press & Assessment - tested students skills in recognising a split infinitive and use of the correct tense, as...

Windrush: Hundreds of people with mental illness sent back to Caribbean

Windrush: Hundreds of people with mental illness sent back to Caribbean
Jun 21,2023 1:21 am

... Government letters and policy documents from The Archives indicate that each patient should have " expressed a wish to return"...

King Charles' Coronation Oath Bible will contain mistakes

King Charles' Coronation Oath Bible will contain mistakes
May 6,2023 6:30 am

... OUP will produce three identical copies, one as a personal gift to King Charles and a further two to be placed in The Archives of Westminster Abbey and OUP s head office in Oxford...

Royal Society: Four incredible objects that made science history

Royal Society: Four incredible objects that made science history
Apr 25,2023 10:40 pm

... It is the first letter in The Archives of the Society s journal - called Philosophical Transactions - known to be sent by a woman in her own name...

Pierre Lacotte: French dancer who helped Rudolf Nureyev defect dies

Pierre Lacotte: French dancer who helped Rudolf Nureyev defect dies
Apr 10,2023 3:20 pm

... After suffering an ankle injury, Lacotte turned his attention to The Archives of the Paris Opera from 1968...

BBC to cut 1,000 hours of new TV programming in 2023 to save money

BBC to cut 1,000 hours of new TV programming in 2023 to save money
Mar 30,2023 2:10 pm

... Elsewhere, BBC Four is showing more material from The Archives...

The asylum patients being given their stories back

The asylum patients being given their stories back
Feb 26,2023 5:01 am

... Their notes have remained hidden from view in The Archives at the Somerset Heritage Centre but they are now being transcribed for the first time...

The asylum patients being given their stories back

Feb 13,2023 9:22 am

By Sarah-Jane BungayBBC News

" They were called lunatics and imbeciles, idiots. The terms dementia or schizophrenia weren't known. Psychiatry was an infant science"

In a Somerset town a small group of volunteers are slowly and sensitively revealing the stories of those who lived at the Somerset and Bath Pauper Lunatic Asylum.

" Patients who were put in there were dirt poor, " said Clare Blackmore, one of The Volunteers .

" They had nothing. There were quite a few children in there. It often says in their notes, the mother cannot cope anymore, " she added.

The asylum opened in South Horrington near Wells in 1848, initially caring for 300 patients.

It admitted patients from Somerset and Bristol and was later known as the Mendip Hospital, before The Building closed in 1991.

" It was run by Dr Robert Boyd when it opened, " Ms Blackmore said.

" He believed in the moral treatment of The Insane . He believed in kindness, care, exercise, good nutrition and a bed to sleep in.

" He would feed the patients up, they would learn occupations, have music therapy, entertainment. He Said if you could improve the physical, the mental condition would improve too, " she added.

Land close to the asylum was set aside for The Burial of patients and a chapel was created on The Site .

About 2,900 burials took place there but when the asylum closed, the cemetery was abandoned.

It became overgrown and was earmarked for housing but a campaign by the community in Wells led to The Site being saved, with volunteers restoring The Land as a nature reserve.

As the patients were paupers, there were no headstones. Instead, each grave was given an iron marker with A Number to identify the person buried in The Plot .

Many of the original markers have been uprooted and now lie in clusters around the cemetery but The Volunteers are planning to identify where each patient is buried and install a plaque to remember them individually.

" We've got The Records for everyone who is buried here, " said Peter Jaggard, who chairs The Volunteer group.

" They tell us who they are, their next of kin, their occupation, their description from the Hospital Records .

" We're compiling a database and people can come and find their relatives or read about the working classes of the 19Th Century .

" These people were well cared for. It wasn't called asylum for nothing. People think oh, lunatic asylum, bad place, but people seek asylum. It was for people to be looked after, " he added.

For decades, the lives of many asylum residents were effectively forgotten. Their notes have remained hidden from view in The Archives at the Somerset Heritage Centre but they are now being transcribed for the First Time .

Casey Reddin said she often feels emotional as she goes through archives to research the lives of patients.

" I've been particularly affected by a Little Boy called Joseph Tye who went in when he was ten and ended up dying in there, " She Said .

" I love him so much. He's buried here. I talk to him quite often. I talk to all of them. It has been so emotional.

" To see people either improve and Go On to a better life or see people go downhill, it is an emotional journey, " added Ms Reddin.

The Group has received enquires about ancestors from people living In America , Australia and Germany, as well as closer to home.

Ms Blackmore said at one of The Group 's recent exhibitions one lady had seen a picture of her great-grandmother for the First Time .

" One lady cried, she had to leave for a while to collect her thoughts, " She Said .

" I love this place. When we say 'welcome' to the cemetery to visitors, it is not something you'd usually say to people, but we're proud.

" We're proud of The Work that's been done by just volunteers and The Passion and research which has gone into it. It's a special, unique place, " she added.

The cemetery opens to The Public on Sundays and Wednesdays from The Beginning of April.

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Source of news: bbc.com

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