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Archive Reference / Library Class No.D2546/ZZ/20
TitleLetter from Florence Nightingale to Dr Dunn asking him to update her on a patient with an ankle injury and discussing the possibility of committing a patient suffering from "religious mania" to an asylum if she cannot be cured
Date28 Aug 1878
DescriptionThe letter indicates that this would not be the first time the patient has been admitted to an asylum
Extent1 item
LevelItem
RepositoryDerbyshire Record Office
SenderFlorence Nightingale
Sender LocationNot named
RecipientDr Dunn
Recipient LocationNot given
Archive CreatorChristopher Blencowe Noble Dunn of Crich (1836-1892), medical doctor
Florence Nightingale of Lea Hurst, Derbyshire and Embley, Hampshire (1820-1910), nurse and social reformer
Administrative History- William Shore Smith (1831-1894) was Florence Nightingale's cousin
- Jane Alison/Allison born about 1840, a needle worker living in Holloway
- Mrs Stone is Hannah Stone (nee Allison), born about 1839, living at Gregory Tunnel. She married William Stone in 1849
- Thomas Allison, born about 1803, lived in Holloway and died in 1878
- Arthur Collie: not identified
Sources: Civil registration indexes, 1871 and 1881 census

Mickleover was the location of the County Lunatic Asylum, and Gregory Tunnel takes the Cromford canal under high ground near Lea Hurst, the Nightingale family residence
Access CategoryOpen
FormatDocument
CopiesA digital copy can also be viewed on the public computers at the record office.
This letter has been digitised and can be viewed on The Florence Nightingale Digitization Project website at http://archives.bu.edu/web/florence-nightingale
Transcript or Index28/8/78
My dear Sir
If, after seeing Mr Shore Smith's ancle [sic] you think he ought not to go to-morrow, would you kindly tell me as well as him? 
2.  Jane Alison is a second tIme in state of religious mania.  She is with her Sister (Mrs Stone) on Gregory Tunnel.  She is very "bad" at times. 
Will you be so good as to see her? 
When you come, she knows that you are watching her & she keeps quiet while you are there.  But there is no doubt that she has religious despondency. 
The first thing is: if you can certify that she is a fit person for an Asylum - where she has been once before.  Out of respect to her father, Thomas Alison, I would gladly pay for her for few months wherever you thought she had a good chance of cure, whether at Mickleover or elsewhere. 
3.  I hope that you will think well of your Patient, Arthur Collie. 
Yrs sincerely
F. Nightingale
C.B.N. Dunn Esq.
AcknowledgementsTranscription completed by catalogue volunteer RJ, 2020
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