Physical description
AS/1993/232
References
- Ararat Asylum (1867–1905) Hospital for the Insane (1905–34) (Mental Hospital 1934–97) (Training Centre 1966–93) The following text is scoured from Finding Records In 1863, Ararat and Beechworth were chosen as sites for country asylums. In 1867, the Ararat Asylum officially opened. Since its establishment, the title of the institution at Ararat has been altered several times, reflecting both the community's changing attitude towards mental illness and the Victorian Government’s approach to the treatment of mental illness. Despite these changes, the function and structure of the agency did not significantly alter and the institution has been registered as one continuous agency. In 1886, the old Ararat gaol was proclaimed J Ward of the asylum. J Ward housed ‘criminal and dangerous’ male patients under maximum security. J Ward was intended as a temporary solution, but it nonetheless continued for more than 100 years. In the 1970s, J Ward still housed more than 40 very disturbed and sometimes dangerous patients. From 1905, the asylum was re-named Ararat Hospital for the Insane. In 1934, it became Ararat Mental Hospital. In 1958, a local community competition resulted in the Mental Health Authority adopting the name Aradale, but this name was never formalised. In 1966, parts of Ararat Mental Hospital became Ararat Training centre. Mental hospital residents continued as patients. Patients identified as having an intellectual disability were reclassified as trainees. This situation continued for another 25 years until around 1991 when J Ward closed and, in its place, the Ararat Forensic Psychiatry Centre opened – a medium security facility with 20 beds. By 1993, all hospital patients and centre trainees were relocated to various community-based housing facilities. In April 1994, the Ararat/Aradale Mental Hospital and Training Centre were decommissioned. Only the Forensic Psychiatry Centre remained. In 1997, the Ararat Forensic Psychiatry Centre closed and the remaining patients were transferred to the Rosanna Forensic Centre at Mont Park in Melbourne.