Haunting photographs of Victorian patients who were banished to lunatic asylums are brought to life after being
Haunting photographs of Victorian patients who were banished to lunatic asylums are brought to life after being
These haunting portraits of Victorian patients banished to asylums have been brought back to life after being painstakingly colourised.
One of the striking pictures shows Frances Mary Antoinette Spackman whose husband Henry had her declared insane in 1901 and sent her to a private asylum near Bristol, then later to the Herrison Asylum in Dorset.
Her husband Henry died in 1904 and left his considerble wealth to Frances, but for an unknown reason the maintenance payments stopped in 1908, she was removed from Herrison and sent to Wells Asylum as a pauper lunatic.
She died in May 1909 from a twisted bowel and was buried in an unmarked grave in Mendip Hospital Cemetery, in Somerset.
Other haunting photographs show a woman with a vacant expression, open mouth, dribbling saliva, and fixed attitude, John Constantin who was deaf mute and admitted aged just 10 before spending 55 years in containment and care and John Phillips of Gower, whose facial growth led him to believe he was cursed.
The original black and white images were painstakingly colourised by Nicola Branson 47, from Wellingborough in Northamptonshire.
'I chose these images originally after reading up about the history of how people were treated during the Victorian times,' she said.
'How people were quick to condemn people to the lunatic asylums not just for mental health issues, but for minor offences to husbands wanting to get rid of their wives.
The photos I was seeing through researching, suggested that some were ordinary people with ordinary lives, look deeply into their eyes and they portray their individual story without the need for words.
'One of the men stares blankly, a lost soul forever forgotten in history. Yet here he is in an old photo being remembered for his troubled life that put him in an asylum. Some lunatic asylums had very harsh ways of dealing with patients, I think colour adds to the realities of what these people went through.
'Thankfully lunatic asylums of the Victorian era no longer exist, however history does remain of the people who were committed to these places. Thankfully in today's society there is a lot more help and understanding of the different conditions that exist.' Continue reading
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