Bibliography

Bibliography

BIBlIOGRApHY PRIMARY SOURCEs ARCHIVEs AND LIBRARIEs CONsUlTED Bedfordshire Archives Berkshire Record Office Birmingham Archives Bodleian Library, Oxford Bristol Record Office Bristol University Library British Library, Additional Manuscripts Cheshire Archives Coventry City Archives Cumbria Archives, Carlisle Devon County Record Office Essex Record Office Gloucestershire Archives Hampshire Archives Herefordshire County Record Office Hertfordshire Archives and Local Studies Huntingdonshire Archives Kent History Centre © The Author(s) 2020 283 L. Smith, Private Madhouses in England, 1640–1815, Mental Health in Historical Perspective, https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-41640-9 284 BIBLIOGRAPHY Lancashire Archives Lichfield Joint Record Office Lincolnshire Archives Liverpool Record Office London Metropolitan Archives Magdalen College, Oxford, Archives Manchester Royal Infirmary Archives Norfolk County Record Office Nottinghamshire Archives Royal College of Physicians Archives Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Shropshire Archives Somerset Heritage Centre Staffordshire County Record Office Surrey History Centre The National Archives Warwickshire County Record Office Westminster Archives Wiltshire and Swindon History Centre York City Archives ACTs OF PARlIAMENT 1774. 14 Geo. III. Cap. XLIX. An Act for Regulating Madhouses. GOVERNMENT PUBlICATIONs British Parliamentary Papers: 1807, Vol. II, Report From Select Committee on the State of Criminal and Pauper Lunatics. 1814/15, Vol. IV, Report From the Committee on Madhouses in England. 1816, Vol. VI, First Report From the Committee on Madhouses in England. Journal of the House of Commons, 1763. Journal of the House of Lords, 1828. The English Law Reports, King’s Bench, Vols. 94, 98. REpRODUCED DOCUMENTs Jonathan Andrews and Andrew Scull (eds), ‘John Monro’s 1766 Case Book’, in Andrews and Scull, Customers and Patrons of the Mad-Trade: The Management of Lunacy in Eighteenth-Century London (Berkeley and London: University of California Press, 2003). BIBLIOGRAPHY 285 Hall, William (ed.), ‘The Casebook of John Westover of Wedmore, Surgeon, 1686–1700’ (1999; copy in Wellcome Library, London). Temple Phillips, Dawn R. and H. (eds), ‘An Eighteenth Century Gloucestershire Diary. 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A Full and True Account of the Whole Tryal, Examination and Conviction of Dr James Newton, Who Keeps the Mad House at Islinstton, For Violently Keeping and Misusing of William Rogers (London: J. Benson, 1715). A Report from the Committee, Appointed (Upon the 27th Day of January 1763) To Enquire Into the State of Madhouses in This Kingdom With the Proceedings of the House Thereupon (London: Whiston and White, 1763). A Terrible Thunder-Clap at Wangford in the County of Suffolk (London: Printed for John Jones, 1661). Alsop, Vincent, A Vindication of the Faithful Rebuke to a False Report Against the Rude Cavils of the Pretended Defence (London: John Lawrence, 1698). An Account of the Rise, and Present Establishment of the Lunatick Hospital in Manchester (Manchester: J. Harrop, 1771). An Earnest Application to the Humane Public, Concerning the Present State of the Asylum Erected Near York for the Reception of Lunatics (York, 1777). Archer, John, Every Man His Own Doctor. In Two Parts (London: Peter Lillicrap, 1671). Archer, John, Every Man His Own Doctor, Compleated With an Herbal…The Second Edition, with Additions, viz. A Treatise of Melancholy and Distraction, With Government in Cure (London: For the Author, 1673). 288 BIBLIOGRAPHY Arnold, Thomas, Observations on the Nature, Kinds, Causes, and Prevention of Insanity, Lunacy, or Madness (Leicester: G. Ireland, 2 volumes, 1782–6). Arnold, Thomas, Observations on the Management of the Insane; and Particularly on the Agency and Importance of Humane and Kind Treatment in Effecting Their Cure (London: Richard Phillips, 1809). B.A., The Sick-Mans Rare Jewel, Wherein is Discovered a Speedy Way How Every Man May Recover Lost Health, and Prolong Life, How He May Know What Disease He Hath, and How He Himself May Apply Proper Remedies to Every Disease, With the Description, Definition, Signs and Symptoms of Those Diseases (London, 1674). Bakewell, Thomas, The Domestic Guide in Cases of Insanity, Pointing Out the Causes, Means of Preventing and Proper Treatment, of That Disorder (Hanley, 1805). Bakewell, Thomas, The Domestic Guide in Cases of Insanity (Second Edition, Newcastle: C. Chester, 1809). Bakewell, Thomas, A Letter Addressed to the Chairman of the Select Committee of the House of Commons Appointed to Enquire into the State of Mad-Houses: To Which is Subjoined Remarks on the Nature, Causes, and Cure of Mental Derangement (Newcastle: C. Chester, 1815). Battie, William, A Treatise on Madness (London: Whiston and White, 1758). Belcher, William, Belcher’s Address to Humanity: Containing, A Letter to Dr Thomas Monro; A Receipt to Make a Lunatic, and Seize His Estate; and a Sketch of a True Smiling Hyena (London, 1796). Brislington House. An Asylum for Lunatics, Situated near Bristol on the Road from Bath, and Lately Erected by Edw. Long Fox, M.D. (London: S. Couchman, c.1806). Brothers, Richard, Wrote in Confinement. An Exposition of the Trinity. With a Farther Elucidation of the Twelfth Chapter of Daniel: One Letter to the King: and Two to Mr Pitt, &c. By Richard Brothers, the Descendant of David, King of Israel, Who Will be Revealed to the Hebrews as Their Prince, Deliverer and King (London, 1796). Brothers, Richard, A Letter From Mr Brothers to Miss Cott, the Recorded Daughter of David, and Future Queen of the Hebrews, With an Address to the Members of His Brittanic Majesty’s Council, and Through Them to All Governments and People on Earth (London: G. Riebau, 1798). Brothers,

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