HEAL AND CHALLENGE

From 1840 onwards, there was growing criticism of the placement of patients in detention centres and penitentiaries. The idea that »madness« and »insanity« could be cured as diseases of the brain gradually gained acceptance. From the 1890s onwards, institutions were planned and founded in which the sick enjoyed freedom for the first time and were cured of their illnesses. The institutions were built in the pavilion style and were largely self-sufficient thanks to their own operations.

It is a yellowed paper. The text is handwritten in neat cursive script. It can be read that it is a confidential copy. In the centre of the paper, the proposed resolution on the establishment of a fourth institution in the Province of Hanover is pasted on as a scrap of paper. The proposed resolution is printed in Fraktur font. The minutes continue in handwriting below the proposed resolution.

Resolution in the minutes of the 8th session of the Diet of 11 February 1896.

NLA Hannover Hann. 150 Nr. 260.

In 1896, the state parliament decided to establish a fourth institution in the province of Hanover. With 1,500 beds, it was to accommodate almost as many patients as the existing institutions in Göttingen (370), Hildesheim (775) and Osnabrück (482) put together. 300,000 Reichsmarks were made available for the purchase of the site of the future large facility.

No items were found matching your selection.
It is a black and white photo. It shows the "warden's settlement" in a long shot; twelve half-timbered houses and a brick house, the head warden's house, can be seen. In the foreground is a park with newly laid paths and freshly planted trees.

ArEGL 18.

OTTO SNELL (1859 – 1939)

It is a black and white photo. Anna and Otto Snell are standing next to each other and are pictured up to their chests. Anna Snell is on the left, looking past the camera. She is wearing a high-necked dress with piping. Otto Snell is looking directly into the camera. He is wearing a dark suit with a shirt and bow tie. His hair is loosely combed back and he is wearing glasses with round metal frames. Both are in their mid-thirties.
It is a black and white photo of Otto Snell. He is wearing a dark suit with a dark waistcoat, light-coloured shirt and striped tie. tie. He has a full white beard with a moustache and is bald. The few remaining hairs are cut short and he wears glasses with round metal frames. The photo shows him shortly before his retirement.
It is a notebook with a leather spine and leather corners. The cover is made of marbled cardboard. Pages 16 and 17 are open.
It is a notebook with a leather spine and leather corners. The cover is made of marbled cardboard. Pages 16 and 17 are open.
It is a yellowed page of paper. It is the second page from a set of house rules. It is written in Fraktur script. Many passages are crossed out in ink, e.g. the order that the sick were to be woken at five o'clock in summer and six o'clock in winter to ring the bell. The sentence stating that means of restraint may be used on a doctor's orders has also been deleted. There are handwritten improvements in the text and in the margins. These are mitigations of the draft. They are written in ink and are the handwriting of Otto Snell.

NLA Hannover Hann. 155 Lüneburg Nr. 8.

It is a black and white photo in a wooden picture frame. It is a half-length shot of guard Ernst Bünger, so that he can only be recognised up to his knees. He is wearing his uniform with peaked cap and starched shirt. He stands upright with his hands clasped behind his back. He looks directly into the camera with a serious expression. He has a moustache.

ArEGL 102.

It is a black and white photo in a golden picture frame. It shows twelve carers. Three carers are sitting in wicker chairs. Two are sitting on the floor in front of them and the others are grouped behind them. The carers are wearing their work uniforms. It is a striped, long-sleeved dress with a white apron and white cap. Most of them wear a nurse's brooch on their collar.

ArEGL 101.

It is a yellowed form in DIN A5 format. It is a telegram from the German Reich. In the centre of the form is the imperial eagle and a reference to the Lüneburg office. The telegram is filled in with a blue coloured pencil. Among other things, it says: "Sick people arrive in Lüneburg tomorrow at 10.30. Lunatic asylum.

ArEGL 206.

The special edition of the Zeitschrift für Architektur und Ingenieurswesen from 1901 and 1902 is a hard cover with the title printed on it and a special size larger than DIN A4. The journal comprises 51 pages. Each page contains two columns, floor plans, plan drawings and photographic illustrations of hospital pavilions and functional buildings at the Lüneburg sanatorium and nursing home. Detailed drawings of patterns, moulds and individual fittings, e.g. windows, doors, banisters, are also included. All buildings and fittings are precisely described.

ArEGL 97.

The institution in Lüneburg was an expression of the mindset of the modern meritocracy. The judgement that »those who don’t work are worth nothing« prevailed. From then on, a person’s worth was measured by their work. »Labour therapy« was intended to keep patients occupied and heal them. At the same time, »ability to work« became the hallmark of successful treatment. The introduction of »work therapy« was modelled on penitentiaries.

It is a black and white photo. Six sick people of different ages stand in work clothes in front of a brick wall of the infirmary pavilion on the Wienebüttel estate. Except for one, they are wearing various caps and hats and rough boots. One of them is sitting cross-legged with a pipe in his mouth behind a small rhododendron bush in front of the men. A guard stands behind him. He is wearing a light-coloured uniform jacket and his warder's cap. Some of them are smiling at the camera.

ArEGL 125.

It is a black and white photo of two older women peeling potatoes. They have tied their greying hair back in a knot. The women are seated and each has a large basket of potatoes and the peeled skin on her lap. They are wearing aprons. The woman on the right is focussed on peeling, the other woman looks wearily to the side.

ArEGL 158-3.

It is a black and white photo. It shows a sick, middle-aged man weaving a basket. The man is wearing work clothes and is standing at a table on which the unfinished basket is placed. The basket is roughly the shape and size of a laundry basket. The man is weaving the sides upwards.

ArEGL 125.

It is a black and white photo. It shows the view of the administration building of the Lüneburg sanatorium and nursing home. The photo was taken in a long shot, presumably from a considerable height from the water tower. In the lower section of the picture is a bed of perennials, planted as an ornament so that the park resembles a castle park. The bed is enclosed by a wide, curved path. Behind it stretches an avenue of trees that ends at the top of the picture. The main building of the institution forms the end. It is a two-winged brick building in neoclassical style. To the right and left of the avenue are the hospital pavilions.

ArEGL.

The photo album is bound in linen. The cover is made of cardboard. It is in landscape format and has dark grey pages with black and white photos glued in. The photos show the buildings of the sanatorium and nursing home from different perspectives. The buildings in question are labelled in ink in beautiful handwriting underneath the pictures. There are also numerous photos of occupational therapy and the various workshops, the kitchen and the laundry. There are also photos from the field and gardening column. There are also group photos.

With the brine baths (1820), the municipal hospital (1900) and the spa gardens (1907), Lüneburg developed sustainable structures for a healthy lifestyle. As the saltworks became less important, the health and recreation industry became the region’s mainstay. To this day, thousands of people are employed in the health and recreation industry.

It is a postcard with a black and white photo. It is the front view of the municipal hospital. It is a wide brick building. The outer wings are three storeys high, the wings facing inwards are two storeys high. A wide street with pavements on both sides leads to the main entrance of the building. Trees have been freshly planted in front of the building.

StadtALg, BS, Druck-8134.

This is a black and white photo of the walkway in Lüneburg's Kurpark. The walkway consists of a visible half-timbered structure with large lattice windows. The roof consists of an open beam construction. There are white-painted benches where park visitors can sit and enjoy the sun. A group of children are sitting on one of the benches. They are wearing school uniforms and have rolled-up blankets in their hands. There is a drinks bar in the background. Middle-aged men and women stand in a row with glass jugs, some of them also carrying blankets. The park visitors are dressed in their Sunday best and look towards the camera.

StadtALg BS, Glas-40669.

It is a historical postcard in landscape format with a coloured pencil drawing of the Lüneburg sanatorium and nursing home. The drawing forms the upper half of the postcard. The drawing shows the administration building and part of the "warders' housing estate". The water tower is in the background. Below the drawing is written in blue lettering: Lüneburg, Heil- u. Pflege-Anstalt. A message is handwritten in black ink on the bottom half of the postcard. The author expresses his thanks for a picture that has come into his possession. The message is signed "A. Oberheide".

ArEGL 223-1 | Private collection Rüdiger Schulz.

No items were found matching your selection.

From the 1930s onwards, carers no longer saw themselves as warders, but developed a self-image as healthcare professionals.

There are four shiny round brooches in the display case. All the brooches have the same motif: a red cross against a yellow background. The cross is very wide and decorated on the inside with a white horse jumping to the left.

ArEGL 5.

There are six keys in the display case. The keys have a classic shape and are positioned three next to each other. They have round handles at the top and a short bit at the bottom.

ArEGL 6.

The accommodation of patients was not always voluntary. Not all patients enjoyed freedom of movement. The carers also had the task of preventing escapes.

In the display case is a warmer's cap made of dark green felt fabric. The cap has a black peak.

ArEGL 4.

It is a black and white photo of a guard in service uniform. He is sitting in a wicker chair. The jacket is a high-cut jacket, his guard's cap has a brooch. He is sitting with his legs crossed and looking into the camera with a smile.

Private ownership Harm Köpke.

Heinrich Köpke (1904 – 1945) was a carer at the institution in Lüneburg from 1927 to 1939. During this time, he was also employed at the Oerrel (Gifhorn district) and Trauen (near Munster) outposts, where he cared for patients in »work therapy« in forestry and livestock farming.

back