Finding collections relating to d/Deaf, disabled and neurodiverse people

One of the aims of our project is to make collections relating to d/Deaf, disabled and neurodivergent people more visible – and to share some of the objects our Fellows and Trainees are discovering.

Some will have quite obvious connections to disabled people’s lives – a walking stick, some braille or images of disabled people. But we will also be exploring less obvious connections too. Sometimes the significance of an object is its owner; its part in a bigger story, or the way someone with lived experience of disability has responded to it. In this way we hope to broaden the ways that d/Deaf, disabled and neurodivergent stories are told.

Collections

COUNTY ASYLUM, WINWICK PHOTOGRAPH (Photograph)

1909

MMM.1989.24.5

ID: A black and white photograph of the front of Winwick Hospital. The hospital sits at the end of a long driveway. It is a large brick building with a pillared entryway. It has 3 floors with 7 sets of white panelled windows on each floor, and bay windows to the far left and far...

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Rights information: Courtesy of Museum of Liverpool

Description

ID: A black and white photograph of the front of Winwick Hospital. The hospital sits at the end of a long driveway. It is a large brick building with a pillared entryway. It has 3 floors with 7 sets of white panelled windows on each floor, and bay windows to the far left and far right.

This postcard, featuring a photograph of the front of Winwick Hospital, was sent in 1909 by hospital attendant Gilbert Lea.

On the reverse, a handwritten letter read:

"Dear J. Hope mother and all are well, I expect to see you before long. how do you like the card. G Lea". It was addressed to Miss J Lea at 87 Albert Road, Widnes.

Gilbert worked at Winwick Hospital, then known as Winwick Asylum, in the early 1900s and 1910s. He often wrote home to his family and sent them photographs of the hospital during his time working there, from pictures of the grounds to day to day life with the staff and patients.

The hospital, then known as Winwick Hospital and Mental Asylum, opened in 1901, a time when people with mental health conditions were contained, rather than cared for. By 1959 it was one of the largest hospitals in Europe with nearly 2,000 patients.