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Allan
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22 Jan 2011 21:20 |
For reference, here is part of the email received from LRO. it may not read correctly as I have deleted anything that could identify my Aunt, but the main gist is still there
"Register of Patients admitted under Sections 20 and 21 of the Lunacy Act 1890: 1948-1954 [NB This does not appear to be a standard Admission Register and may not include the patient if they were admitted under a different category]
General Register, 1948-1951
, Box 14* Medical Register (Voluntary, Temporary and Certified) – Rate-Aided Patients, 1949-1953
Register of Discharges or Regrades, 1956-1960
, Box 19* Death Register, 1964-1970
* Asterisk denotes records not yet fully open to public inspection
Records which are not marked with an asterisk are fully open to public inspection and you may gain access to them in one of the following ways:
• Visit the Lancashire Record Office in person. Details of our Opening Hours and other information to help you make the most of your visit to the Record Office are available on our website at www.archives.lancashire.gov.uk. • Use the Record Office's Research Service. This is an in-house paid service provided by the Record Office for shorter enquiries in specific kinds of records (more details below). • Ask an independent Record Agent to carry out research on your behalf. Record Agents offer a wider range of research than the Record Office's Research Service, and can often extend research to include records held at other archive locations. A list of Record Agents showing contact details and the kinds of research each provides is available on the Record Office's website at www.archives.lancashire.gov.uk.
The records marked with an asterisk are, as you mention in your e-mail, records which are not yet fully open to public inspection. However, the records of a specific patient can be accessible, using the Record Office's in-house Research Service, providing permission for disclosure is obtained in advance from the NHS Trust with responsibility for the records. In order to request permission for information to be released from these records, it would be necessary for you to contact the Lancashire Care NHS Trust which retains responsibility for those records of Lancaster Moor Hospital which are deposited here in the Lancashire Record Office. The contact details are as follows:
Peter Holden IHRIM Health Records Manager Lancashire Care Foundation Trust Sceptre Point Sceptre Way Walton Summit Preston PR5 6AW
E-mail: [email protected]
In the case of records such as these that are not yet fully open, if and when permission has been obtained for the release of the relevant information, this information can only be provided by means of the Record Office’s Research Service, details of which are provided above. It would therefore be necessary for you to contact the Record Office again, providing a copy of the permission obtained, if you wish to request a search to be carried out in the records that are not fully open, as part of the Research Service.
We can in fact supply a copy of any relevant information found in all of the above records, both open and not yet fully open (conditional on permission being obtained in the case of the latter), as part of the Record Office’s Research Service for a fee of £30.00 sterling including postage and VAT.
If you would like to make use of this service, payment should be made in advance, by cheque or Postal Order made payable to 'Lancashire County Council' and sent to the Record Office at the following address:
Lancashire Archives Lancashire Record Office Bow Lane Preston Lancashire PR1 2RE
It is also possible to pay by Credit Card or Debit Card, for which the following details should be provided by post or fax rather than by e-mail (pending the provision of a secure e-mail site for the Record Office): NB The fax number is 01772 533050 when dialling from Britain. • Card Number (16-19 digit number across centre of card) • Card Issue Number (Switch cards only) • Cardholder's name and initials as they appear on the card • Expiry Date • Start Date (if given) • Security Code (the last three digits printed on or just beneath the card signature strip either after the full card number) • Name of the bank or other financial institution that issued the card • Cardholder's full postal address, including postcode • Delivery address (if different from the above), including postcode
Please note that, although all reasonable care will be taken with this information, card details are provided at your own risk.
I am attaching a Copyright Declaration Form which you should complete and sign, and return to the Record Office at the above address, if you would like us to supply a copy of part or all of the above information.
I hope that this information is helpful to you.
Yours sincerely David Blake Enquiries Officer Lancashire Archives Lancashire Record Office Lancashire County Council Telephone: 01772 533042 www.archives.lancashire.gov.uk This enquiry was dealt with by David Blake 2011/0111 DB 12 January 2011 "
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Allan
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22 Jan 2011 21:12 |
Madmeg and Colin, many thanks.
I will keep the thread going and nudge it up from time to time
Colin you are spot on with your information as I was told the same thing in the email I received from the Lancashire Records Office.
I suppose that part of my curiosity was why my Aunt was in the hospital, but more importantly the date that she was admitted, which was very much later than I had fixed in my mind.
Regards
Allan
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allotment
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20 Jan 2011 08:48 |
I have posted this previously but will do so again as it may help anyone who wishes to access asylum records of an ancestor. It may not apply to all areas of the UK of course and will not benefit Allan living in Australia as he does.
Assuming that you are able to visit the area in question then access should be fairly easy despite the fact that the medical records are normally covered by a 100 year secrecy rule.
Firstly you will have to find out where the hospital records are kept…possibly the local records office.
Obtain the necessary birth certificates to prove your relationship to the patient.
Send a letter to the local NHS office telling them in detail what you want to look at and enclose the certificates [not photocopies].
They should issue you with a letter addressed to the records office granting you access.
Go along to the records office and in you go. You will be able to look at anything relating to your relative and take notes of course. You may even be lucky and see a photograph. They will cover up anybody else’s records on adjacent pages etc.
This is the procedure that I had to follow to view Barming Heath records held in Maidstone and hopefully it is standard practice throughout the NHS. My great grandfather spent the last 32 years of his life in there and was never spoken about again by his family nor was he visited. I needed to bring him back to life and give him a decent ending by pointing out to the rest of my family what we had done to one of our forebears.
Be wary though as it is not for the faint hearted and the reading can be pretty harrowing particularly as it is a close relative and it will detail examinations carried out and the treatment given. Not a pretty sight I can assure you.
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Madmeg
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20 Jan 2011 02:10 |
Oh, no, don't delete it Allan, it could be very useful for other people interested in the same type of information.
You never know when they might come along, and find your thread useful.
Please don't delete it. You would be wiping out useful findings.
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Allan
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19 Jan 2011 21:43 |
As I now have the information which I was seekink, or at least, part of it, I will delete this thread next week unless anyone wishes me to keep it going
Allan
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Allan
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16 Jan 2011 21:17 |
Dear All
A very big thank you to Mistycat who, although not knowing me from a bar of soap, went out of her way to help me by visiting the records office.
Although no able to access the records due to the hundred year rule, Misty gave me the contact details of a person in the office. I did say earlier in this thread that I was looking for my Aunt's diagnosis on entry.
I revised that in light of the hundred year rule and decided that the year of admisssion would suffice.
I sent my Aunt's details to the records office and within a very short period of time received a response from Mistycat's contact giving me the precise date of admission. There was also reference to other record collections which may have contained information but some may not be available and would entail a personal search by myself or a researcher on my behal,f and there would be a fee of £30.00.
The information regarding the date of admission was provided free of charge.
Once again my sincere thanks to Mistycat
Allan
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Madmeg
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28 Oct 2010 01:47 |
Maggie, that is awful. I don't know what to say to you.
Stay strong.
Love
Margaret
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Allan
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28 Oct 2010 00:52 |
Hi Maggie
As I put in an eaarlier post, I've checked the Records Offic website at Preston.
Medical details are restricted for 100 years.
However dates fo admission and discharge, without any other information is only restricted for 30 years.
I'm just following up a hypothesis that the admission of my Aunt to the hospital may have been the cause of my grandmother leaving her husband.
Dates will do, although I am still curious as to why she would have been admitted in the first place.
As far as I am aware she had been there for most of her life
Regards
Allan
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maggiewinchester
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28 Oct 2010 00:33 |
Hi Allan, I was incarcerated in a sanitorium in Scotland for 3 months in the early 1960's - and I can't even get my own records!! My mum doesn't know why I was in there (it was mainly TB - which I didn't have), and my current doctor has none of my records for when I lived in Scotland. I've applied to the relevant health authority, but they won't give them to me/ deny they have them, which is a bit of a b*mmer as they may affect my current situation.
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Allan
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27 Oct 2010 22:57 |
Misty
Have found two possible entries for my Aunt's death on FMP. I will send off for the respective death certificates.
I have pm'd you
Kind regards
Allan
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Mistycat
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24 Oct 2010 12:43 |
My pleasure Allan....
Let me know when you have info ( maybe by pm as well as here, just so I dont miss it!! ) and I shall see what I can find.
I cant say when it will be but will contact you when I know...
Misty x
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Allan
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21 Oct 2010 22:11 |
That's a very kind offer indeed, Mistycat!
Thank you.
I will first have to ascertain the precise date of death of my Aunt as all the rest of the events have been enveloped in the mists of time nad the demise of the people involved.
I will keep in periodic contact, if I may, when I have any further information
Kind Regards
Allan
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Mistycat
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21 Oct 2010 13:31 |
Hi Allan
I am staying in Lancater at the mo ( very close to the Moor Hospital in fact ) and shall be visiting the Preston RO along with Harris Library, some time before Christmas....if I can help at all give me a shout...
Misty x
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Allan
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21 Oct 2010 09:02 |
Kathleen
Just a quick update. I've done a search of the catalogue at the Records Office and the items relating to the Hospital have various restricted periods.
Medical Records are restricted for 100 years as you say, but patient admissions (without any medical information) are only restricted for 30 years.
I'll check on my aunt's actual date of death and use that as the basis for my enquiries.
Once again, my thanks
Regards
Allan
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Allan
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20 Oct 2010 23:15 |
Thanks Kathleen. I did google it.
Fascinating site! I haven't sent anything off yet regarding the hospital but my gran's husband's father was shown as a superannuated police constable on the marriage certificate and his name appears on the Police Records
There is only an 85 year period for these records so I have been able to make an enquiry regarding him.
Thanks for all your help
Regards
Allan
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Bernard
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20 Oct 2010 22:58 |
Sorry, it looks as though the e-mail address has been knocked off. Will try again [email protected] Kathleen
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Bernard
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20 Oct 2010 22:55 |
Hello Allan, I have the e-mail address on some correspondence I received from the Lancashire County Council Record Office. It is Kathleen
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Allan
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20 Oct 2010 22:31 |
Thanks Kathleen, I'll try to find the email address and find out what's involved
Regards
Allan
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Bernard
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20 Oct 2010 20:09 |
Hello Allan, I have recently had cause to try to obtain information about Lancaster Moor Hospital records. They are held at The Lancashire County Records Office at Preston. The hundred year rule applies, so you cannot read what may contain "sensitive material" about inmates recorded in the ledgers. However if you have details of the inmate, they will (for a charge) duplicate the information for you. Kathleen
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Allan
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20 Oct 2010 09:40 |
Many thanks, Shirley
When i lived in the UK I never even thought about the family history. I remember visiting my Aunt from when I was a child right up until I got my driver's licence and took my mother up there. My mother used to vistit her half sister every few months.
I enjoyed the train trip from Manchester, but the hospital itself wasn't very pleasant, particularly for a small child
Regards
Allan
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