Difference between revisions of "Storthes Hall Hospital"

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Revision as of 20:39, 29 March 2013

Storthes Hall Hospital
Opened 1904
Closed 1990
Demolished 2003
Current Status Demolished
Building Style Echelon Plan
Architect(s) J. Vickers-Edwards
Location Kickburton
Alternate Names
  • Fourth West Riding Pauper Lunatic Asylum
  • Storthes Hall Mental Hospital



History

Storthes Hall estate dates back to the Middle Ages and it is essentially the spoils of the dissolution of the monasteries by Henry VIII. It was sold to Richard Horsfall, a gentleman, and was occupied by various branches of the Horsfall family until the middle of the 19th century. Once they had moved out the property was leased for a while but eventually sold to the West Riding County Council as the site for an asylum for the mentally ill. The hall, now known as the Mansion, was built in 1787. The estate comprised 629 acres.

The asylum was opened in 1904. It had almost a thousand patients. It was a state-of-the-art institution with its own farms (including Ravensknowle and Moorside), water supply, kitchen and laundry, and even proposals for a branch railway. It was declared redundant in 1987, closed and bought by Huddersfield University. The site of the old Acute Hospital has been redeveloped into 1,400 student flats. The University sold the accommodation in 2003 for £28m (it is now operated by a private company) and put in a planning application for housing development which was turned down, feeding speculation that the whole exercise was a way of getting land cheaply and selling it on at an enormous profit. In 2005 plans for a retirement village within the confines of the Main Hospital were passed. This site remains derelict apart from the Administration Building, designed by J Vickers-Edwards, the West Riding County Architect and Surveyor, which is still standing but sadly neglected.