Crossley Hospital East

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Coordinates: 53°15′18″N 2°42′29″W / 53.255°N 2.708°W / 53.255; -2.708

Crossley Hospital's main building
Inside the main building

Crossley Hospital East (founded 1905 as Crossley Sanatorium) is a former tuberculosis sanatorium situated on the outer edge of Delamere Forest in Cheshire near Northwich, within the township of Kingswood.

History

Crossley Sanatorium opened in 1905 and operated as a sanatorium until the 1960s, when it became a care home for the elderly. It was built at the expense of Sir William Crossley, Bart., chairman of the board of management of the Hospital for Consumption and Diseases of the Throat and Chest, Manchester, and then donated to it. 100 beds were provided.[1] During the later stages of its life, Crossley Hospital East was also used as a psychiatric hospital, and then spent the last years of its life as a boarding school.

Since 1993 Crossley Hospital East has been completely abandoned and lies derelict to the north of Delamere Forest. The decline of the building was first documented by Ian Cooper, a photographer, graphic designer and film maker.[2] He also produced the first ever photography exhibition based around a derelict building in the UK after 3 years researching the hospital, entitled; "No Longer Used; The Decay of Crossley Hospital East", which received coverage from the UK national press. Later the building was also documented by photographer Daniel Clark [3] The former hospital has been recently converted into residential apartments and some of the original buildings have been demolished. The former mortuary is now called Willow House.

Television

The hospital was featured on the TV programme "Ghost Hunting with Girls Aloud", where Yvette Fielding and the pop group Girls Aloud explored various parts of Crossley Hospital in search of ghosts. However, on the programme, the hospital was referred to simply as "the old abandoned hospital".

See also

References

  1. Brockbank, E. M. (1927) "The hospitals of Manchester and Salford", in: The Book of Manchester and Salford. Manchester: George Falkner & Sons; pp. 114-155 (pp. 130-131)
  2. Ian Cooper
  3. Crossley Sanatorium

External links


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