EAW013522 ENGLAND (1948). Rushden House Sanatorium and environs, Rushden, 1948

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Nearby Images (12)

EAW013522
  0° 0m
EAW013527
  159° 17m
EAW013523
  318° 37m
EAW013529
  118° 38m
EAW013525
  235° 72m
EAW013521
  249° 92m
EAW013526
  239° 101m
EAW013528
  219° 130m
EAW013520
  206° 156m
EAW013524
  212° 168m
EAW013531
  193° 174m
EAW013530
  211° 175m

Details

Title [EAW013522] Rushden House Sanatorium and environs, Rushden, 1948
Reference EAW013522
Date 9-March-1948
Link
Place name RUSHDEN
Parish RUSHDEN
District
Country ENGLAND
Easting / Northing 495946, 266032
Longitude / Latitude -0.5933223039417, 52.283651053799
National Grid Reference SP959660

Pins


totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:47:06 PM
Hall Park or Rushden Hall Park

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:35:24 PM

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:34:50 PM

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:33:01 PM
Wymington Road

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:30:17 PM
Greenacre Drive now leaves High Street South around this point

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:29:48 PM
Manning Street

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:27:38 PM
Hilly Farmhouse and Attached Outbuilding and Barn to North, Rushden - NN10 0NA Grade 2 listed - English Heritage Building ID: 423025 Farmhouse, outbuilding and barn. Early C18. Squared coursed limestone with C20 concrete tile roof to house and pantile roof to barn. C19 single-storey extension to left in similar style. C19 one-unit, 2-storey, outbuilding to right links with C18 barn which has small central plank door under wood lintel.

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:26:48 PM
Harborough Road

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:20:56 PM
61, Little Street, Rushden - NN10 0LS Grade 2 listed - English Heritage Building ID: 423026 Farmhouse, now house. Late C18/early C19. C19 single-unit, 2-storey brick extension attached to right of front (to the left in this image from the rear). Formerly known as Mannings Farm.

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:20:05 PM
120, 122 and 124, High Street South, Rushden - NN10 0RD Grade 2 listed building - English Heritage Building ID: 423024 Terrace of 3 houses. Datestone 1826. C17 datestone to left of first floor window of No.124 is reset. No.120 was originally occupied by the builder of the terrace and has a slightly higher standard of detail. Originally named Bayes Yard after the builder.

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:15:43 PM

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 10:10:29 PM

User Comment Contributions



Rushden House Sanatorium - Wymington Road, Rushden

Was a TB (tuberculosis) sanatorium. The property was purchased and converted about 1920.



Later in 1960 (with a decline in TB) this became Rushden Hospital catering for patients suffering from other chest diseases such as lung cancer, chronic bronchitis, asthma, spontaneous pneumothorax.

In 1975 an out patients department was opened, and in 1980 became Rushden House Day Centre (a Psychogeriatric Day Hospital).

The sanatorium was demolished in 2014, old Rushden House to become flats.



Before the sanatorium days- Rushden House- built about 1871,for the Currie family, sold in 1901 to Mr Browning who lived there until 1914. In 1915 the area became a POW camp for German prisoners ("Ploughmans Camp").



Following purchase and conversion, acutely ill patients were cared for in the house, whilst ex-army huts were erected for the less ill to recuperate in. After 1934 the wooden huts began to be replaced by brick buildings.



In 1957–58 a Dermatological Unit was opened in the large house

In 1968 one ward became used for "children with Mental Handicap".





"Open air", rest and nutrition were the basic requirement, although the British climate and the large numbers of TB sufferers delayed the opening of sanataria until after other European countries. Open air treatment could be found in Cromer as early as 1895 with the first purpose built sanatorium opening in nearby Mundesley in 1899.



Treatment could be from 6 months to two years at a sanatorium. Patients could wake in winter to find snow on their beds.



In 1949 it was reported that one of the oldest wards at Rushden, with seven beds, which had opened in 1922, had to close due to a shortage of nurses (presumably a short term closure).



The light comedy film Twice Round the Daffodils (1962) provides a glance at life in a tb sanatorium.

totoro
Wednesday 11th of June 2014 09:59:57 PM