Tablespoon with handle end shaped into a key,
by one of the patients at St. Francis Hospital, HA1987.17
'In no town in the kingdom do the extremes of cleanliness and squalor exist more than in Brighton'
From the mid 1700s, Brighton became famous for its sea water cure. But its slums were breeding grounds for cholera, typhoid and smallpox.
The town became over-crowded in the 1840s and 1850s. Few Victorians could afford doctors. Charities set up 'dispensaries' to provide free advice and medicine. Hospitals, funded by wealthy benefactors, struggled to meet demand. State medical help was only available to paupers in Brighton Workhouse (now Brighton General Hospital). The situation was transformed by the National Health Service Act in 1946. However, no new public hospitals have been built in the town for over 100 years.