Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 July 2009
Writers on seventeenth- and eighteenth-century England have stressed the significance of doctors and clergy in the provision of residential care for the better-off mad person. “The private madhouse trade in fact started with the practice of doctors taking private patients into their homes.” So wrote Macalpine and Hunter. According to William Parry-Jones, English “lunatics from the more affluent classes were cared for individually, often in the custody of medical men or clergymen.” The two professions commonly overlapped, meaning that clerics could provide medical care. Andrew Mason has written enthusiastically that “towards the end of the seventeenth-century, so-called ‘clerical mad doctors’ abounded.” As educated men working in an occupation with few barriers to entry, English clergy could “readily take up medicine,” which was just one element of the burgeoning eighteenth-century market place. “Those entering the madbusiness were drawn from … clergymen, both orthodox and non-conformist, businessmen, widows, surgeons, speculators, and physicians.”
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45. NAS C22/91, 193. CC9/7/79, 538.
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47. NAS JC54/1, report for Forfar (1 May 1818). However, the Third Report of the Committee on Madhouses in England, etc. (June 1816), 377–78, had stated that there were no licensed private madhouses in Forfarshire.
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55. A portioner was an heir to a section of an estate.
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