It was, as Mike correctly says. Aston Union Workhouse. There was also Aston Union Cottage homes on the other side of Highcroft Road. It was an incredibly large complex and that at some stage became a mental hospital with a geriatric ward too.
There was quite a lot of land with this hospital, which I understand some of the inmates would farm and grow vegetables etc. The lower part of the complex adjacent to Slade Road, behind the prefabs was called North Croft Hospital. I have a feeling that this hospital also treated people with mental health problems.
I was told that there were padded cells at Highcroft and that people were interned there for violent crime. In the early eighties, I was given a job to develop a couple of rolls of film taken at the hospital. The subject of the photos was an exhibition held at the hospital showing the various methods of restraint for severely disturbed people. Most certainly, the pictures did show straight jackets, shackles and chains.
There are stories of people being interned at the hospital and becoming institutionalised, teenage girls who had become pregnant, syphilis cases and people with cerebral palsy.
In the forties and early fifties that was a threat that a lot of misbehaving children heard, the other one was to girls who brought home poor reports and that was 'you'll be lucky to be able to get a job in Woolworths if you go on like this'. My poor sister suffered this regularly. What a change now if they still existed Wooworths would demand University degrees I have no doubt.Agreed, I was trying to say that there were padded cells and it also housed people convicted of violent crime (allegedly).
There was a lot of stigma attached to mental institutions like Highcroft that ultimately leads to the generation of local stories, collective and reconstructed memory.
Most certainly there was a local story (my dad told me, who grew up on Hermitage Road) of an inmate escaping and killing a young school boy.
My mom was always saying the “you lot are going to have in in Highcroft Hall, the way you’re going”
Have you any of those photos still available for purchase please?Just off the top of my head, it was Aston Union Workhouse and then became Highcroft Hospital. I am wondering if highcroft Hall was a local name?
I do know it was a geriatric ward for the elderly, and it was also home to a lot of people with both mental and physical disabilities. There were a lot of ‘stories’ associated with the site. Some say it used to home quite dangerous inmates in padded cells etc. I was asked to develop and print a set of photos from an exhibition showing some of the restraint devices used at the hospital.
With changes in medical care and new drugs, these practices fell out of use.
Trying to get the book Julian Cleaver refers. There was no luck from Amazon. Any ideasSeems to be what the developers call the central buildings of Highcroft
http://www.birminghamconservationtrust.org/2014/04/18/the-friday-photo-highcroft-hall/
Hi Lyn,i have a family birth cert here saying date of birth 3.8.1947..where born 18 highcroft road at highcroft hall hospital...the child was taken for adoption at about 8 months old...from what i understand due to the mothers mental state
lyn
Have you any of those photos still available for purchase please?
Hi Lyn,
Highcroft was being used as a routine maternity hospital at this time, I have a family member who was born there in June '48.
birminghamhistory.co.uk