1st Edition

The Asylum in the Long Nineteenth Century Volume I: Lunacy and Lunatic Asylums

Edited By Steven King, Steven Taylor Copyright 2026
440 Pages
by Routledge

440 Pages
by Routledge

This volume is concerned with the public and private lunatics asylums of England in the long nineteenth century, focusing on transcriptions of unusual and difficult-to-access primary source materials. The Introduction to the volume deals broadly with the state of the literature in the field and details the complex primary materials. Our sources include letters written by or about the ‘mad poor’... Read more

Volume 1. Lunatic Asylums

General Introduction

Volume 1 Introduction

 

Part 1. Letters regarding the 'mad poor' from families, officials, advocates, and poor writers under the Old Poor Law, 1800-1834

Part 2. Vestry Minutes and Vestry Correspondence, 1800-1835

Part 3. Letters regarding the 'mad poor' from families, officials, advocates, and poor writers under the New Poor Law, 1834-1906

Part 4. Billington Private Asylum Records

Part 5. Leicester Borough Asylum: Records of the Superintendent

Part 6. Leicester Borough Asylum: Records associated with Medical Staff

Part 7. Leicester Borough Asylum: Patient Records

Part 8. The New Poor Law: Certificates to Detain Lunatics in the Workhouse

 

Index

Biography

Steven King is a modern British historian with primary research interests in the period from 1750 to the present. He is best known as an historian of welfare, writing on topics such as regional welfare regimes, the agency of poor people and welfare claimants, advocacy for the poor, and the particular experiences of the sick and disabled under the British welfare system from 1601.Professor King joined Nottingham Trent University in 2020. He has previously held posts at the University of Leicester, Oxford Brookes University, the University of Central Lancashire and the Institute of Historical Research.

Steven Taylor, University College Dublin, is a historian of health, medicine, and welfare with a focus on drinking culture and substance use amongst the Irish communities of London and New York. He has previously taught at the University of Kent (Lecturer in the History of Medicine) and University of Leicester (Teaching Fellow) where his modules have focused on medicine, health, disability, and welfare from the eighteenth century.