Records of the Maudsley Hospital, which opened to the public in 1923 under the control of the London County Council. Please note this collection does not include the records of the time the Maudsley was a military hospital, from 1915 up to 1919.
Maudsley Hospital
This material is held atBethlem Museum of the Mind
- Reference
- GB 1007 MH
- Dates of Creation
- 1868/2018
- Name of Creator
- Physical Description
- 428 archival items
Scope and Content
Administrative / Biographical History
In 1907 the renowned psychiatrist Henry Maudsley offered the London County Council £30,000 to fund a new mental health hospital that would be responsible for early and acute cases rather than chronic cases, such as those housed in the county asylum system at the time. The Council agreed to provide half of the initial funding, and to pay the running costs of the hospital, which was also to have an outpatients department and pathology laboratory. When the building in Denmark Hill was completed in 1915, the Hospital was immediately requisitioned by the War Department, and only came back under the control of the LCC in 1923. When it finally opened to the public, it also had a children’s department, and, from 1924, a specialist teaching school. During the Second World War the Hospital staff decamped to two sites, Mill Hill School in North London and Belmont Hospital in Sutton, Surrey. In 1948 the Maudsley joined with Bethlem Royal Hospital and entered the NHS together as a joint hospital. The medical school became the Institute of Psychiatry, and, though it split away from the Hospital in 1997 to become a school of Kings College London, remains closely linked to the Maudsley. The Joint Hospital became the foundation for the South London and Maudsley NHS Trust formed in 1999, known as the South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust from 2006.
Arrangement
These records are arranged in the Australian Records Series System, and the catalogue has been adapted for display on Archives Hub. There may be some slight differences in description between this entry and the initial cataloguing work.
Access Information
Any records containing sensitive personal information of subjects who may still be alive will be closed. Some records may be unavailable for access due to preservation concerns
Other Finding Aids
Full catalogue available at http://archives.museumofthemind.org.uk/brha.htm