Handbill on the projected new House of Recovery [Manchester], c 1803

Date:
c 1803
Reference:
RET/8/8/1
Part of:
The Retreat Archive
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view Handbill on the projected new House of Recovery [Manchester], c 1803

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Credit

Handbill on the projected new House of Recovery [Manchester], c 1803. In copyright. Source: Wellcome Collection.

About this work

Description

This is a report by the House of Recovery Committee about the sums required, necessity for the institution, and how it will work The first Manchester House of Recovery was opened in 1796, and was an innovative attempt to treat fever by isolating cases in a fever hospital - or house of recovery. It was established by the equally innovative Manchester Board of Health, an organisation set up by local doctors and others to institute health measures, of which the fever hospital was the most important. This handbill exhorts financial help to replace the House of Recovery with a second larger one. This was completed in 1803 with 100 beds It is not clear why this handbill is in The Retreat archive, but The Retreat may have been circulated with this request for funding

Publication/Creation

c 1803

Physical description

1 document

Terms of use

Open and available at the Borthwick Institute for Archives. This material is being digitised by the Borthwick Institute for Archives as part of a Wellcome Trust funded project. Material that is digitised will be accessed freely online through the Wellcome Library catalogue.

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