Bristol and
Inebriates
Page 3
The
End of Inebriate Reformatories
Soon after the start of the Inebriates
Acts
came into force it was realised that it
was not going to work as intended. Many rebelled and it was found that overall
‘about 10 to 15 per cent were too unmanageable to retain in certified
reformatories under surroundings so desirably light and unprison-like.’ In
addition in 1905 the published legal commentary for magistrates was that to be
classified as a ‘habitual drunkard’, one had to be incapable of managing ones
affairs when sober as well as when drunk. The result was that most being
sent to reformatories after this date were classifiable as ‘mental defectives’
and had an even lower success rate.
Even before this legal commentary there
already was a view that many inebriates were feeble-minded, if only to justify
why reformatories were not working. This is highlighted in the considerations
of the Royal Commission on the Care and Control of the Feeble-mindedwho met from 1904 to 1908.
The Rev. Burden, as a 'manager of inebriate reformatories', was appointed to the
Commission. This was in part as he was a friend of several of the high
officials of the Home Office
and was seen as a useful man in
generating accommodation where needed. In 1904 he had left Brentry to set up
the 'National Institutions for Inebriates' and created a further 600 beds that
were critical to the operation of the Inebriacy Acts. However it also reflected
a feeling that Inebriates were feeble-minded. The Mental Deficiency Act that
followed included people who were habitual drunkards.

From the outset of the Inebriates Act
there was increasing frustration with the low rates of success. This came to a
head in 1906 when the Treasury cut its grant for cases in reformatories. London
County Council
responded by cancelling its contracts
with the National Institutions and sending only the more obviously
treatable cases to reformatories. The number of persons admitted nationally had
been consistently rising since 1899 but now almost halved from 493 in 1907 to
262 in 1908. It recovered slightly afterwards but admissions ran at a steady 300
a year until 1913. The system was now overprovided. In 1910 the Rev Burden
complained to the Home Office
that his new contract with the London
County Council
was 'most unsatisfactory' as they were
not sending enough cases, but that he had had to sign it. He warned that:
"
It is I fear very obvious that
unless the number of cases committed is greatly increased, it will be
hopeless for me to attempt to carry on more than one of our Reformatories. I am
closing Lewes next week, and I see no alternative to closing Ackworth,
Chesterfield, and Horfield as soon as I can conveniently do so. I hope to
continue to use the East Harling premises as an Inebriate Reformatory, but
unless the committals are sufficiently numerous it will be impossible to do so
indefinitely."
Though the Royal Commission on the Poor Laws advocated early intervention and
committal, the magistrates continued to turn against the use of the inebriate
acts. A survey of the magistrates of London in March 1910 gave the inebriate
reformatories no hope of recovery:
Mr Garrett: "Has long ceased to look upon Inebriate Homes
as Reformatories and merely uses them as places of detention for women who are
an intolerable nuisance. All such cases as have been before him for some time
past have already been in Inebriate Homes."
Mr Fordham:
"Cases which he considers fit for treatment in Reformatory seldom come before
him. Doubts usefulness of treatment but sends cases at all likely to benefit.
Finds that the threat to send to Reformatory is effective."
Mr Hutton:
"Remarks on strangeness of authorities devoting almost exclusive attention to
women who are as a rule practically irreformable whereas men are less difficult
subjects for treatment."
Mr Mead: "Does
not intend to send any more cases to Inebriate Reformatories.
Every single case committed has returned and been convicted again of
drunkenness. Perhaps remedy of Reformatory treatment is not applied soon enough
by magistrates but the fault is rather in the restricted definition of "habitual
drunkard". Has long felt that workhouses sufficient substitutes for "these
expensive institutions", viz Inebriate Reformatories."
A failed attempt was made to resurrect
the reformatories with new legislation in 1912, but at this time people expected
many of the inebriates to be dealt with under the new Mental Deficiency Act.
Many campaigners preferred the indefinite confinement authorised by the Mental
Deficiency Act to the fixed maximum of three years under the Inebriacy Acts,
and so stopped pressing for a new Inebriacy law.
In 1913 the London County Councilcarried a resolution to close
its inebriate reformatory, Farmfield.
The Home Office was
aghast.
"If this resolution is carried out,
and Mr Burden closes more of his reformatories, the work will practically come
to an end. This would mean a deplorable waste of money and labour. A certain
proportion of the inebriates might be dealt with under the Mental Deficiency
Act, but for the rest we should loose a piece of machinery which is not only
beneficial to inebriates, but also useful for the public."
The demand for places in Inebriate
Reformatories
almost totally collapsed in the war
when the sale of alcohol was restricted and convictions for drunkenness
dramatically reduced. All the reformatories run by the National
Institutions
closed in turn, often to temporarily
become mental deficiency colonies. Because the National Institutions
sent their cases to Brentry as they closed its inmate numbers remained high
at over 200 until 1915.
The final transfer of inebriates from
other institutions came in November 1915 when the London County Councilclosed its reformatory at
Farmfield and transferred the 45 female inmates to Brentry before it
converted Farmfield to being a mental deficiency colony. As well as having
been the first licensed Inebriate Reformatory in England Brentry became the
last, struggling with the staff shortages generated by the war. As
inebriates could only be confined for up to three years it was clear that
the institution would be virtually empty by the end of 1918.
The Board decided to
set up a committee to look at Brentry's future as a reformatory. In March
1916 it was decided to ask councils to permit an application to the Charity
Commission for a change in the purposes of Brentry
to also accept mental defectives. This was agreed and on 16 December 1916
the Charity Commission approved a new scheme permitting this.
The first 11 new 'Mental Defective'
inmates
were admitted in June 1917 to the
lower village. This transfer from being an inebriate reformatory to a
colony
for adult male mental defectives was
not unique to Brentry. Farmfield
transferred from being a female
inebriate reformatory to a mental deficiency colony for adult males. Cattal
(or Whixley) in Yorkshire made
the same transition shortly after Farmfield.
The
Langho reformatory in
Lancashire probably also did so. Only the Midland reformatory is known to
have changed from being a reformatory for female inebriates to being a
colony for female mental defectives when the National Institutions,
now renamed the National Institutions for Persons Requiring Care and
Control
[NIPRCC], changed it to
Whittington Hall
Colony. This initial demand for beds
for male mental defectives contrasts strongly with the demand for female
inebriate beds. It probably was because the male mental defectives were
less likely to have dependants than the inebriate men and were more likely
than females to be seen as a nuisance who were difficult to control in the
existing institutions of care.
At the same time as
the growth of the inmate population of male mental defectives at Brentry
there was a rapid run down of the number of Inebriates. By the end of 1917
there were only 11 men and 49 women left. In January 1918 the Brentry
Committee wrote to the Home Secretary, stating that there were now only 8
male inebriates in the colony and soon would be only 6. They asked if the
Secretary of State felt the expenditure justified and 'if he would authorise
the discharge of the six cases referred to'. He agreed but by the end of the
year there remained one man as well as 18 women. The last man left soon
afterwards and in 1920, when an application was made to admit a male
inebriatethe Home Office stated that
there was now no reformatory accommodation in the country to take Male
Inebriates. The final 6 ladies finally moved into the stable wing of the
main administration block. The last admission of an inebriate was admission
Number 957, a woman admitted on 11 March 1921. The last two inmates were
discharged on the 31 October 1921, the day the licence for inebriates was
formally surrendered. The Inebriate Acts remained in force but with no
practical usefulness until they were repealed in the 1970s. The 1959 Mental
Health Act excluded alcohol use as grounds for detention.
