Time register for recording asylum warder patrols, made in Clerkenwell, London, 1870-1920
When the Sussex Lunatic Asylum opened in 1859 there were 400 patients. Doors to the wards and corridors were locked. Attendants patrolled the male and female sleeping areas. This ‘pegging clock’ time device was part of a ‘tell-tale system’. The Grandfather-type clock has no hands, but a rotating dial. Around the dial are ‘pegs’. These had to be pushed in at the right time. It showed staff were alert and where they should be. It also showed they were safe from attack. This system is symbolic of the rules, regulations and surveillance routines in large Victorian asylums. It also shows how staff as well as patients were rigidly controlled by institutional life. This contrasts with the flexible care now offered by psychiatric nurses in the community.
Object number:
1996-271/25
Related Themes and Topics
Glossary:
Glossary: psychiatric hospital
Psychiatric hospital specialising in the treatment of serious mental illness, usually for relatively long-term patients.
Glossary: asylum
A historic term for a psychiatric hospital. The term in this context was common in the 1700s and 1800s, but is no longer in use.
Glossary: time register
No description.