Management 1792-1948; administration 1807-1982; finance 1841-1971; history and publications 1845-1983; staff 1846-1985; patients (bound records) 1817-1971; patients (unbound records) 1900s-1960s
Royal Edinburgh Hospital
This material is held atLothian Health Services Archive
- Reference
- GB 239 LHB7
- Dates of Creation
- 1791-1985
- Name of Creator
- Language of Material
- English.
- Physical Description
- 212.3 shelf metres: bound volumes, papers, photographic material
Scope and Content
Administrative / Biographical History
First appeal launched in 1792 by Andrew Duncan Snr. A government grant in 1806 funded the purchase of land in the Morningside area. The foundation stone of the Edinburgh Lunatic Asylum, designed by Robert Reid, was laid in 1809 and its first patients - all fee paying -were admitted four years later. In 1842, a new William Burn building was added to accommodate pauper patients and others who could not afford the higher rates of board. This was known as "West House" in contrast to the original "East House". A succession of influential keepers and medical superintendents (W Mackinnon, F Skae, T S Clouston ensured an international reputation for the Asylum. A further building, Craig House, was added in 1894. Renamed the Royal Edinburgh Hospital for Mental and Nervous Disorders in 1922, the Jordanburn Nerve Hospital was added seven years later for the treatment of informal patients. A children's clinic began in 1931. In 1948, the hospital became part of the Royal Edinburgh and Associated Hospitals. The Andrew Duncan Clinic opened in 1965; the Young People's Unit in 1968, the Alcohol Problems Unit in the same year and the Jardine Clinic in 1982. In 1994, it became the Edinburgh Healthcare NHS Trust Hospital, and in 1999 the Lothian Primary Care NHS Trust.
Arrangement
Chronological within record class
Access Information
Normal 30 year and 75 year Scottish closure rules apply
Acquisition Information
Royal Edinburgh Hospital February 1983
Note
Compiled by Mike Barfoot and Jenny McDermott using existing handlists
Other Finding Aids
Manual item-level descriptive list available
Custodial History
Records held within the National Health Service prior to transfer
Accruals
Further accessions are expected