- Birch Hill Hospital -
 
Birch Hill Hospital © Jeff Mills

The Rochdale Healthcare NHS Trust serves a population of approximately 216,000 people. The Trust operates two hospital sites: The Rochdale Infirmary, which is located in the centre or town, and The Birch Hill Hospital, which is situated approximately 3 miles from the city centre. This Victorian building, or collection of buildings, was erected in the 19th century in the community of Dearnley east of Rochdale. It opened its doors in 1877, but not as a hospital. It was the Dearnley Union Workhouse.


The issue of how to deal with people, who could not or would not work and found themselves homeless or penniless, had stimulated quite a bit of legislation in England from very early times. The questions to be answered though remain universal:

 1. Can the destitute be divided into those who cannot work and those who could were they to find employment? If this is possible, then who decides and how can society require every able bodied person to work for their living?
 2. Who is going to pay for the shelter and keep of those who cannot provide for themselves?
 3. Who is entitled to receive support from the ratepayers of a particular area?

In 1598 a Parliamentary Act was passed which required every parish to appoint a person who would oversee the poor. It was this person's role to find them employment and set up "parish-houses" for those who could not support themselves. This act was replaced in 1601 by "An Acte for the Reliefe of the Poor" which essentially built on the provisions of the 1598 act. This 1601 act is regarded as the First Poor Law in the United Kingdom.

In 1662 another piece was added to the puzzle when legislation known as the Settlement Act was passed.

Essentially under the provision of these two acts each parish was responsible for providing assistance to the poor. They responded by providing relief to people who were unemployed. They provided shelter to the old and sick who were unable to provide for themselves. They found employment for those who could work. Some parishes were seen to be more generous than others and people moved around to improve their lot. This obviously put a strain on the resources of some parishes so the Settlement Act was designed to prevent such behaviour by essentially tying the poor to a specific parish. Were they to leave, they would be hard pressed to receive any assistance in their new setting and might even be transported home should they attempt to do so. Parishes found it cheaper to send people back to their own parish than it was to care for them.

A report published in the Cork Examiner on September 6, 1847, illustrates this practice and the feelings of the Irish newspaper about it. It describes the human cargo aboard the sailing ship the Saunders which had recently arrived in Ireland.

"The Saunders of Friday furnishes us with an affecting statement of the privations and wretched condition of a steamboat-load of unfortunate people who were flung, as it were, on the Quays of Dublin, having been driven from the hospitable shores of our "sister" England. This ship-load of Irish destitution was composed of Irish reapers and Irish paupers; the latter of whom were grabbed up by the humane officials of generous England, and thrust on board a steamer, without provision for the voyage, or shelter against the inclemency of the weather, and the exposure of a wild night and an open deck. So that England was freed from the human rubbish, what cared the merciful Poor-law authorities and their tender-hearted officials! If the wretches died on the voyage, it was only one of those casualties which daily happen; and "we all must pay the grand debt, sooner or later." The sick, the feeble, the fevered, the starving, were accordingly gathered from various places, from Rochdale as well as Liverpool; a loaf was placed in their trembling hands; and thus fortified against cold and hunger, they were shipped for the land of rags and starvation."

Ironically, this practice did not fade away with the 19th century. During the 1990s, the province of Alberta in Canada, with a booming oil-based economy, attracted large numbers of unemployed people from across Canada. Among those people were many who hoped to benefit from the wealthier economy which they believed would translate into better support of the unemployed or disabled. They were instead provided with a bus ticket home. Alberta had no desire to accept the cost of providing for the needs of the "unemployable" of the rest of Canada.

In 1834 Parliament introduced legislation that was known as the "Poor Law Amendment Act". This was a highly controversial law which stimulated protests and riots throughout the country but especially in the North. The New Poor Law was designed to eliminate the parish-based support for the poor and replace it with the requirement that any person unable to provide for themselves must be placed in a workhouse. Communities were required to cooperate through the creation of a Union that would build and operate the Workhouse. It would provide shelter, food and employment to those unable to provide for themselves. Since the conditions within most of these workhouses were so horrible, they also provided a deterrent to those who were able bodied but preferred not to work. The law passed in 1837, but it met considerable opposition and a great deal of resistance. However, by the early 1850s most of the towns in Britain had a "Union" Workhouse.

The situation was rather different in Rochdale. Thomas Livsey, a strong opponent of the Law, found an effective way to thwart its implementation by becoming the chairman of "The Guardians", the committee charged with its implementation. In 1844 the central government actually issued a writ to prosecute Livsey and his fellow Guardians. They were tried in Liverpool but were acquitted on a technicality. The Government then used its considerable power to remove Livsey and his supporters from the committee, but that proved fruitless when many of them were re-elected soon after.

However, in 1877 the Dearnley Union Workhouse, with its central clock-tower, did open.

Clock Tower © Jeff Mills

When it finally closed its doors as a workhouse, the building took on new roles. During W.W. I., it was used as a military hospital for soldiers injured at the front. In more recent years it has operated as the Birch Hill Hospital.

Today Birch Hill Hospital is in transition. The Rochdale Infrmary has been redeveloped to take most of the services from Birch Hill, however many of the less acute services are still on the site.

There are plans for a second phase which will see almost everything move to the Infirmary site, but this could be some years off.

I understand the intention is to demolish the bottom half of Birch Hill and develop the site for housing. However, there is a great uproar in the local community about the demolition of the Clock Tower.