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Ok so right now we are jumping back in time a little bit to when we was in the Ireland now this Asylum was too good to pass up as a Halloween episode so I've been saving it for October 1st (TODAY) to release as the start of the Halloween season. So happy 1st of October everybody and prepare yourselves for a spooky ride....... Want to send me fan mail, haunted object or just something cool? ⬇️SEND TO⬇️ Exploring with Fighters PO Box 390 Leyland PR25 9FL SHARE SHARE SHARE LEAVE US A COMMENT AND IT COULD BE FEATURED IN OUR NEW "BEST COMMENTS OF THE MONTH" INTRO BECOME A PATREON? I FUND ALL MY OWN TRIPS AND EQUIPMENT BUT IF YOU WOULD LIKE TO CONTRIBUTE HEAD OVER TO MY PATREON ACCOUNT. ALL MONEY RECEIVED WILL GO TOWARDS MORE TRIPS WHICH I WOULDN'T OF NORMALLY PLANNED MEANING MORE VIDEOS! ⬇️TO DONATE CLICK HERE⬇️ / exploringwithfighters HEAD OVER TO MY CHANNEL, SUBSCRIBE AND CLICK THE BELL SO YOU CAN BE ONE OF THE FIRST TO SEE MY WEEKLY UPLOADS ⬇️Dan Vlogs All⬇️ / @danvlogsall ⬇️Exploring with fighters⬇️ / exploringwithfighters ⬇️Instagram⬇️ / exploringwithfighters ⬇️Facebook⬇️ / exploringwithfightersofficial ⬇️Twitter⬇️ https://twitter.com/FighterExplore?s=09 ⬇️Exploring with Bucky⬇️ / @buckysworld The Ennis Asylum (1868): “Dances are held weekly” Ireland’s programme of asylum-building was an extensive one, eventually involving a range of individual architects and including the asylum in Ennis (with its Florentine palazzo, in 1868), the Monaghan asylum (the first to adopt a villa or pavilion format, in 1869) and the auxiliary asylum to the Richmond Asylum (Grangegorman, Dublin), in Portrane, County Dublin (1900). By that time, approximately 21,000 people, or 0.5% of the population of the 32 counties of Ireland, were accommodated in the district asylums, with a small number of the mentally ill still in workhouses. In 1906, there were 409 patients in the Ennis Mental Hospital, which also had a medical superintendent and just one assistant medical officer. Overcrowding was a persistent problem in Ennis, as was the case elsewhere. This led to the inevitable expansion of many asylums, including Ennis. In 1931, the Inspector of Mental Hospitals reported in some detail on the situation in Ennis, with a mix of positive and negative observations. “The new buildings, which will soon be completed, will relieve the very much overcrowded state of the institution [in Ennis]. Open-air shelters or verandas should be erected for tubercular cases. Restraint and seclusion were necessary in a few cases. “The practice of allowing patients to be absent on trial should be extended. Notwithstanding the overcrowding, the institution is maintained in a satisfactory manner. Sanitary and bathing accommodation require to be improved. A number of patients are employed on the farm, but only a few are engaged with the tradesmen. The feasibility of the employment of a larger proportion of the patients should be considered. “The female patients are employed in the laundry and kitchens and at knitting, sewing, rug-making and repair work. Dances are held weekly, and gramophones, cards and draughts are supplied. Chemical extinguishers, fire hydrants and hose are provided. The water pressure is good. Twenty-two attendants and 26 nurses are undergoing instruction with a view to obtaining the nursing certificate. The dietary is ample and satisfactory.” The hospital in Ennis, then, demonstrated many of the key features of many of the asylums in early 20th-century Ireland: large numbers of patients, extensive efforts to provide activities and amusements, and the increased professionalisation of clinical staff, though training. Even so, it remains the case that the Irish mental hospitals were simply too large and too institutional in their processes and procedures. While real efforts were made to treat and support patients, and mental hospitals were often quite integrated with local communities, they were, nonetheless, still big institutions, with all of the problems that big institutions invariably bring: chronic overcrowding, problems keeping large numbers of patients and staff safe and well, and a shift in focus from individual patient care to managing the large, unwieldy establishments themselves. An epidemic of mental hospitals, not an epidemic of mental illness It is now clear that Ireland in the 1800s and early 1900s suffered from an epidemic of mental hospitals and not an epidemic of mental illness. The hospitals were underpinned by unmet social need, unhelpful legislation and a desire by communities to find places for the mentally ill, intellectually disabled and people who did not fit in. Families often had very limited resources to care for such persons at home.