(Here's the text, but it's worth watching the video for pictures of puffins)
The Mental Health Act has
been evolving over many decades. Indeed, the Victorian Lunacy Acts in the
1800’s contained recognisable germs of the current MHA.
The Mental Treatment Act 1930
first introduced the idea of treatment for people with mental disorder, while
the 1959 Act introduced the concept of the Mental Welfare Officer, whose role
provided an independent check on doctors having complete control of the
detention process.
The 1983 Act further refined
this process of legal protection for people being detained against their will
in psychiatric hospitals, and the 2007 Act enshrined subsequent changes in
human rights legislation into mental health law. The 2022 Draft Mental Health
Act will make further changes, if it ever reaches the statute books.
These Acts, and accompanying
regulations and statutory instruments, tended to amend, consolidate or even
abolish previous legislation. Sometimes, however, anomalies survived.
The smaller islands of the
British Isles are a case in point. The Isle of Man, for instance, with a
population of around 81,000, has its own Mental Health Act, which still has Approved
Social Workers rather than AMHPs, and Jersey in the Channel Islands has a
Mental Health Law going back to 1969.
What is almost unknown,
however, is the existence of regulations relating to mentally disordered
persons in the Farne Islands. This piece of legislation appears to have been
forgotten by legislators, with the result that The Farne Islands (Removal of
Lunatics to England & Wales) Regulations 1927 was never repealed.
The Farne Islands are a group
of small islands off the coast of Northumberland in Northern England. They are
now owned by the National Trust.
Mainly inhabited by a vast
range of seabirds, including puffins, as well as a large colony of seals, in
the early part of the century there was still a community of people living
permanently on the islands.
This small but tight-knitted group,
known disparagingly as “Fannies” by the mainlanders, eked a precarious living
by farming seaweed, milking seals to make seal cheese, and taking eggs and any
seabirds they could catch using finely woven nets thrown off the top of the
guano covered cliffs.
The Farne Island regulations
were created as a result of a notorious incident in 1927 known in the press of
the time as the Wellington King.
An aristocrat known as the
Honourable Petrus Wimple-Burgoyne developed the delusion that the Farne Islands
were the remains of the lost continent of Atlantis, and that as his family
originated from Atlantis, he was the rightful king. He started to petition King
George VI, challenging him to the throne of the Farne Islands, and demanding
that he be invested in Westminster Abbey.
He became such a nuisance
that he was eventually committed to a lunatic asylum under the Lunacy Act 1890.
However, he got wind of this, and before the ambulance arrived, he fled to the
Northumberland coast, where he hired a boat at Seahouses and just after dawn on
1st April 1927 he reached the Farne Islands.
He was able to convince the
rather credulous and inbred “Fannies” that he was their rightful king, and in a
ceremony involving the smearing of the rather oily seal cheese over his entire
upper body, an India rubber wellington boot was forced over his head, crowning
him the “Wellington King” of the Farne Islands.
When it was discovered where
he was, efforts were immediately commenced to recover him to the mainland. It
was at this point that it was realised that there was no legal instrument that
could be invoked to lawfully remove him.
An emergency session of
Parliament was convened, and so was born the Farne Islands (Removal of Lunatics
to England & Wales) Regulations.
Within days, a Naval Frigate sailed to the Farne Islands and a dozen sailors alighted on the island of Inner Farne to apprehend him. Despite the sailors being pelted mercilessly with puffin eggs and foul-smelling lumps of seal cheese by the loyal “Fannies”, the so-called “Wellington King” was seized, and returned to England, where he was placed in St Bernard’s Hospital in Southall, Middlesex.
To this day, the Honourable Petrus Wimple-Burgoyne is the only person for whom this regulation has been used.
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