Springfield

Details
Previous Names: Surrey County Lunatic Asylum, Wandsworth Asylum, Springfield Asylum, Springfield Mental Hospital, Springfield Hospital
Location: Lapidge Drive, London
Principal Architect: William M. Moseley
Layout: Corridor Plan
Status: Open
Opened: 1842
Closed: 2019
History
The Surrey Magistrates decided that it was time to follow suit of other counties and construct their own County Asylum. The First Surrey County Asylum was built upon the Springfield Park in Wandsworth, originally owned by the Second Earl Spencer who leased the site to Henry Perkins from 1823. In 1834 the Third Earl Spencer sold the freehold to Perkins who decided shortly after to move to Dover and out the land up for sale. The Committee decided that Springfield Park was an ideal location for their first asylum because of its location to the population centres, good clean air, a suitable water supply and a southerly aspect. Further land was purchased 1860 and extended the land to the east, the committee were pleased with this purchase because it contained a public footpath that had taken away the privacy that was needed by the patients. Passers-by, before the path was closed, used to peer into the walled airing courts and at the patients. In 1864 two further strips of land were added to the site, this was the final land purchase for the site and bringing the total land size to approximately 97.5 acres.
Work began on the site in 1838 following the design laid out by W. M. Mosely who was the County Surveyor to Middlesex and had designed parts of the Hanwell Asylum. He was advised by Alexander Morison and Sir William Ellis. Mosely designed Springfield in a Corridor Plan and the exterior was stylised in a Tudor fashion including twisted chimneys (now removed), similar to places such as Hampton Court Palace. The design was praised in architectural journals for its variegated brickwork and subtle angles that saved the façade from becoming bland. The interior however was commented on for being plain and devoid of interest, except for the main hall and staircase. The hospital, including purchase of the estate came to 85,366: 19s: 1d.
The hospital opened on the 14thJune, 1841 and admitted 299 patients that had all be examined by Alexander Morison, the visiting physician to Springfield, and taken out of various private madhouses around Surrey. The committee had not realised the demand that the Asylum would receive and in 1849 two further wings to the north of the building were opened, they had space for a further 400 patients, this cost the hospital a further £35,000. Further additions were made to the buildings in the ever losing battle against increasing patient numbers, with two further wings being added to the south of the site in 1874. To combat the problems with infectious diseases spreading through the hospital a cottage hospital was opened in 1872. The chapel was moved from within the main building to a purpose built chapel in 1880, in accordance with the Lunacy Commissions wishes. In 1885 a water tower was constructed to attempt to solve the water supply problems that were being experience from the two onsite wells, this was demolished in 1976. The most ambitious extension to the site was construction of the Annexe for Idiot Children whose purpose was to remove all the mentally handicapped patients, especially children, from the main wards within the hospital, this was opened on the 15th October, 1897. Under the Mental Treatment Act of 1930 the annexe was converted to house voluntary patients, it is now the admission block. This idea was strongly advocated by the current superintendent, Hugh Gardiner Hill and one of the committee members, John Langdon Down. The final extension, bar the current upgrades and extensions, was in 1931 when the infirmary block was opened.
The hospital closed in 2019 after moving to new buildings north of the site. The conversion was carried out by City & County
External Photos
Internal Photos
Records/Info
Records
Hospital records are currently held with The London City Archives – https://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/a/A13532670
Burials/Cemetery
There was no onsite burial due to the adjacent Wandsworth Cemetery – https://maps.app.goo.gl/3gcSQ8WZFFKyhvjHA





























































































































































































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