Last weekends display, Conflict and Consequences.

I just wanted to share with you the background to some of the display Conflict and Consequences and how we (Friends of Willow Court) were able to put it together last weekend. It was easy to get information about wars and times of conflict and it was easy to access documents that told us of the Hospital’s history but the challenge was to see where these two subjects intersected and the people who were involved. The research was done over a reasonable length of time and we had access to a Historian, the Archives Office of Tasmania, the Tasmanian Military Museum and private collector and also we had connections with families. These family connection were what was the most humbling because we were being told of family stories of pride, sorrow and pain. To be able to listen to each of these stories and come to an understanding of that place, that time, and that horror was educational and highly emotive for us, the researchers. A simple thanks doesn’t seem to suffice sometimes. We were able to show the completed stories to some of those families and that was a delight. For a short time we were able to understand the journey that they had to have and some continue to travel.

The history of mental health issues post war is well documented and now days is recognised as post traumatic stress disorder but previously throughout the history of this condition, could have been known as “shell shock”, “melancholy” or simply being “depressed”. It is a condition that some live with and for others it was too much to endure on the human spirit. The hospital’s admission rate increased during these time of world conflict as found in the graph below.img001 Matron Morey and others returned from areas of conflict themselves and either joined or rejoined the hospital staff. It was these people who supported those that came back only to find life too hard, especially after time spent in camps as a prisoner of war.

Some other interesting things we discovered during our research was that a lot of records were used as paper pulp because of the paper shortage experience at the time. Most of the paper was imported from Britain, even the Mercury and Examiner both wrote to the Hospital regretfully informing the administration that they could not longer supply free newspapers. Times were tough when you consider that was the main means of communication with events from abroad and locally. Some files were written on coloured paper as staff were asked to use and reused what ever paper they could including the carbon copies that were often different in colour than the original documents. Some records were also lost during the second world war in particular because of the need to make more paper and this was frustrating when Dr Crabbe came to write the history of Lachlan Park Hospital after his own war service and return after being a prisoner of war. He saw the files before he departed for war and on his return lots had gone. His book was on display last weekend and we had a voice over of the introduction (below).

Here is a small selections of photos of the display.

 

 

Continue Reading

New addition to Willow Court

Somebody is watching! New security is now visible at Willow Court despite people on social media helping others enter the site with their knowledge of security. While many people wish to see the site, the Derwent Valley Council is not allowing anyone except those that have had private tours escorted by Councillors. The next Council agenda has a closed section of the meeting dealing with Willow Court security. Also recorded on the Derwent Valley Council’s VANDALISM REPORT is a cost of $1825.00 for repairs for April. Also on the agenda is a proposal to sell some Council owned  land and the funds to go towards the restoration of Willow Court.

That if approval is obtained for the calling of Expressions of Interest for the sale of the George Street Land that the Mayor undertake a press release advising that expressions of interest will be called for the sale and that the proceeds from the sale will be directed to undertake restoration works at “Willow Court”.  

Also of interest is the Council’s plan to lease part of the Bronte Ward to the Derwent Valley Community House and the Department of Health and Human Services. We are still waiting for more information on this one and would love to see an impact study on the potential of tourism at Willow Court before any decision is formalised.DSCF0635

Continue Reading

A big weekend at Willow Court

DSCF0824It has been a big weekend at Willow Court and the place was buzzing today and yesterday with anyone who has a passion for the place. Friday started early for some and was the accumulation of months of research and sourcing of information, personal stories, interviews, meetings, rehearsals and the extensive hunting for authentic items for display and for costumes for the drama. The Governor of Tasmania Professor Kate Warner opened the Friends of Willow Court Display and Play which were advertised during the Tasmanian Heritage Month. Along with invited guests she looked through the professional display which was an intersection between the lives of people who served in conflicts or behind in the local community effort and the Lachlan Park Hospital’s history and the lives that these people had before, after and during such conflict. Limited themes were chosen which told this story and also the story of the consequences of such conflict and the care and compassion of others. The generous support of many people and businesses has to be acknowledged because without this community effort this wouldn’t have happened. A special thank you to those families that allowed us to respectfully tell the stories of their loved ones, patient and worker alike. Of particular interest to me was the story of returned serviceman Bruce McLean, who’s story of life within Millbrook Rise post WWII was told and while Bruce wasn’t the only person to return after conflict and time incarcerated as a prisoner of war, his is one of the limited stories we have permission to share.

Partners include:

Returned Serviceman’s League (RSL), New Norfolk

Masonic Lodge, New Norfolk

Tasmanian Heritage Council

Derwent Valley Players, New Norfolk

Derwent Valley Council

The Friends of Frascati, Willow Court

The Military Museum. Hobart

Business and organisations include:

Willow Court Antiques, New Norfolk

Antiques Warehouse, Hobart

NIDA School of acting, Sydney.

Coles Supermarket, Bridgewater

Woolworth’s Supermarket, New Norfolk

Top of the town Bakery, New Norfolk

The Handyman, Chris Salt, New Norfolk

St Mary’s College

Personal Supporters:

Mayor Martyn Evans

Craig Farrell MLC

Eric Hutchinson MP

Family of all the people displayed.

 

 

 

 

Continue Reading

Heritage Month Activities at Willow Court

It is on this weekend!!!

DSCF0645The opening was on tonight and a Friends of Willow Court Member, Mr Tony Nicholson introduces Her Excellency The Governor of Tasmania Professor Kate Warner.DSCF0652 DSCF0665

Here is a sneak peek at the activities from the Friends of Willow Court during the National Trust Heritage Festival this Weekend 10 am til 4 pmheritage week flyer

Continue Reading

DVC host Minister

groomToday the Derwent Valley Council played host to the current Liberal Government and from reports, each Minister was tackled about current issues facing the Derwent Valley. Among those issues and high on the agenda was Willow Court. The Minister, Matthew Groom who is Minister responsible for, State Growth, Energy and for Environment, Parks and Heritage was accompanied by Councillors, Damian Bester (passionate advocate for Willow Court), Julie Triffett (ex-employee of Willow Court) and Frank Pearce (present committee member of the Friends of Willow Court) and Barry Lathey (past committee member of the Friends of Willow Court). The group today toured the site in its current state. We are looking forward to any response from either Councillors or the Minister on funding or any other ideas that came from this meeting. We can only hope that the past 15 years of little action will cease and some of the efforts put into today will bear fruit.

Continue Reading

A special Mum on Mother’s Day

Here is a special mum that we can read about on Mother’s Day, someone who knew that her rights were clearly being ignored. She was  clearly well educated and knew the power that the Newspaper had in finding answers for what must have been a personal tragedy of loosing her 12 year old son and not hearing about this til well after his death, nor did she hear of what ailed the boy. Willow Court’s history is rich and is dotted with tragedy, loss and the perils of institutionalisation. Yet we also hear of many good stories over such personal and institutional adversity. This weekend the Friends Of Willow Court will have two events to celebrate Heritage month, the first is the play about Dr Meyers at Frascati House. The play is set in 1853 when Dr Meyer was the Medical Superintendent of the Asylum at New Norfolk and after the loss of his own four children he heads off to the Crimean War. The play is set at his farewell afternoon tea.

monday 24 July 1881The second event is a display which shows the connection between war and the consequences suffered by individuals. The positiveness of those that supported people on their return at the Hospital is a feature of each display. Each story is connected by the history of the Hospital and the community that was around it.

 

 

Cost:

  • Play and Display: Adults $25, children 12 and under $10, including afternoon tea. Also includes entry to the display.
  • Play without entry to display: Adults $20, children 12 and under $10 (includes afternoon tea).
  • Display: Adults $5, children 12 and under $2.

Bookings for play to Derwent Valley Council 6261 8500, door sales available. (Some tickets still available for both days)

 

 

 

 

Continue Reading

Evelyn Rose Morey

Pages 1 and 32 of Matron’s publicly available first world war records are only part of the display at Willow Court for Heritage Month. Along with original uniforms and the equipment used in the Hospital to treat ex-solders who returned needing the services of either the Hospital or Millbrook Rise. Matron Morey returned to the Hospital after her Military Service and after a short break became Sub-Matron and later Matron. She served the Patients for many years and died shortly after her retirement. The display will be in the Masonic Lodge which will also have open days and is in partnership with the RSL at New Norfolk and some funding received from the Derwent Valley Council, entry to the display is via Humphrey Street and cost $5. morey enlist page 1 morey enlist page 32

Continue Reading

The Asylum from a Patient perspective

lucy winerDocumentary maker Lucy Winer has produced an amazing story of her own history and her journey of discovery when returning back to the Asylum that she once called a temporary home. The following is a review I wrote for Florish Newsletter.

Only last week I heard this phrase by Morgan Freeman as the character Red in the film Shawshank Redemption, “These walls are funny. First you hate ’em, then you get used to ’em. Enough time passes, you get so you depend on them. That’s institutionalized.” I had to find the quote later on the internet because this helped me sum up the documentary that I had just watched called “Kings Park, stories from an American Mental Institution”. Most documentaries about Mental Health facilities are written by ex-staff or historians who have either one perspective or no lived experience and are often taken as an accurate record of events. This film is very different because it tells the story from the an insider’s perspective, Lucy Winer was a Patient at Kings Park Hospital at the early age of 17 years, back in June 1967, diagnosed with severe depression she made a number of failed attempts to take her own life before being admitted.

The film is broken down into three parts; the first is Lu-cy’s own story and her return to the rooms of Ward 210, the female violent ward of Building 21. It is a deeply per-sonal journey which is well articulated through Lucy’s commentary. The strain of facing her history and the past helped her but also created more questions than it did answers. Lucy explains some of the scenes she witnessed and was involved in while also attempting to hold onto her own feelings of being confronted by the peeling walls and deep memories of past treatment practices in
a decaying old building that ruled over her life during the late 60’s and has stayed with her up until her 50th birthday.
While this was the first part of the film and the only part that was originally planned, the questions that she was left with needed answers. So parts two and three took on a life and explored the history of the hospital and its context within a community. Like all of these institutions, people’s memories are extremely varied, some memories stay vivid and others fade over time while the different perspectives are confronted and examined as Lucy meets the old former staff, her first Psychiatrist, the town’s people and fellow ex-patients.

Some people just couldn’t face their past, like the torment and abuse that they had been subjected to many years ago, there present disallowed and controlled even walking toward the old buildings, while others took heart that they could swing the wrecking ball to destroy their own past experiences and suffering by physically knocking down the walls. Ex-staff admitted that they often didn’t know what they were doing and were over-whelmed by the enormity of the job in front of them. Many remember the life of close friendships with other staff and the life lived around one of the largest employers in the area.

The third part explores the deinstitutionalisation programs and shared living arrangements that were set up during that phase. Lucy again explores Mental Health Services and the slow decline of facilities and services to those with a mental health condition. She visits the last place people arrive at once they fall between the cracks of a poor system of care, the State Prison Services are now considered to be one of America’s leading Mental Health Care Providers.

All through watching this well made, professionally produced and edited film I realised that the institutional language that Lucy was talking about in America is the same in just about every western country in the world that went down the path of segregation and isolation. The same institutional behaviours that governed the patients also imprisoned the staff, even the local town’s folk. Kings Park isn’t unsimular to any institutional story I’ve heard before except for the fact that this is one of the limited stories told from a patient’s view, a patient that is willing and able to confront her past mental health, her treatment, her past clinical staff and look toward the future. She wants her film to challenge and agitate debate about the future of mental health services. The power of this film lies in the connections it draws between the hopes and failures of the past and the challenges of the present.

It is easy to take a person out of an institution but it is not so easy to take the institution out of the person.
The DVD is available in Standard Definition and Blu-ray; it’s also available as an educational version and comes with a range of teaching materials. The cost is $30 US dollars plus postage of $25 US dollars, which is about $71 AU dollars for the SD version. There is an online version available. As the Moderator of the Willow Court History Group I have approached Lucy and we are discussing a cheaper way to view or purchase this film in Australia. Information will be posted on my website once Australian distribution rights and permission to screen the film are granted.

Mark Krause

Official US website

Continue Reading

76 Years Ago Tomorrow

Lachlan Park Management and the Municipal Council are at it again! 76 years ago the long history of the tenuous relationship was again in dispute with Councillor Shoobridge stating “a few home truths were good for the Council” after Dr Charles Brothers opened up on the Councillors .

home truths at dinner, new norfolk council criticised

Continue Reading