Broadmoor alerts
Image courtesy Wikimedia CommonsBroadmoor Hospital is one of three NHS high security psychiatric hospitals in the UK. We live half a mile away from it. It houses about 230 men, aged eighteen and above. Not all the inmates are criminals. Some are hospitalised under the Mental Health Act because of mental illness or personality disorders which, untreated, could lead to them harming themselves or others.
In 1952, following a breakout by a dangerous individual who then murdered a young girl, a network of thirteen sirens was established to warn residents of nearby towns and villages in case of further escapes.
The sirens used to be sounded every Monday morning at 10.00 and could be heard across a radius of two miles. People would set their clocks by them. One Monday, when they went off, people realised their timepieces were slow. They muttered and reset their watches only to discover later that an escape had been effected, just moments before the alarm was due to be tested.
If the sirens sounded while children were at school, the doors were locked and the children retained until their parents or carers could come to collect them. Once, an inmate escaped and was so terrified by the noise and freedom that he went into a police station and gave himself up. Another time, the escapee hid in a local resident’s shed.
Overall, there have been few escapes.
In 2018, the wailing sirens were decommissioned, to be replaced by a digital alert system, which can relay through television, social media, and messaging services. The hospital, now in new premises, relies on double perimeter fencing, more than three hundred cameras and special coordination with Thames Valley Police.
Occasionally, we meet some of the staff when we’re out with the dogs. They are tough, interesting individuals with many a tale to tell. Broadmoor is not a workplace for the inattentive or faint of heart.
My daughter-in-law’s mother was a psychiatric social worker who used to visit Broadmoor from time to time.
I miss
the sirens.
That’s interesting. I had an uncle who had Schizophrenia. I remember in the early 60’s my parents visiting him while we sat in the car in the parking lot. (Times were different back then) With the onslaught of better medications and management he eventually was able to live a normal life outside about 20 years later.
ReplyDeleteAt one time, anyone who was different in a noticeable way was shut away, out of sight, for fear of upsetting the rest of the population. Very sad.
DeleteI'm surprised that there is still a facility like tis.
ReplyDeleteSeriously ill psychiatric patients have to be held in secure accommodation and medicated accordingly for their own and others' safety.
DeleteI'd happily give up the sirens. We can hear the volunteer fire brigade siren i Havelock on a calm day even though its about 16miles away in a straight line. I did wonder as I started teading what happens if someone escapes o a Monday morning.🙄
ReplyDeleteMad, bad and dangerous to know, but not stupid . . .
DeleteIt sounds a bit scary and I don't think I would like to live close to such a place, although the many security features do give some peace of mind.
ReplyDeleteThere have only been two escapes since we've lived here and it doesn't affect house prices.
DeleteI know about Broadmoor from my love of British mysteries but I did not know about the sirens.
ReplyDeleteThe sirens were a marker for the week - it's a shame we don't still have them, in my opinion.
DeleteBroadmoor has had a few DOC videos about it and they are all like a little slice of hell pizza. We lived very near the only prison in the state but felt safe because if there was an escape the prisoner would bolt out of town quickly!
ReplyDeleteI don't think anyone thinks about it, really.
DeleteI feel like I've read this before. Never mind, it is interesting. The debate goes on here in small country towns, siren or no siren. With the ability to send mass messages in many forms, people still feel reassured by having a siren.
ReplyDeleteI'm getting repetitive in my old age . . . 😟
DeleteI'd always thought of Broadmoor as being situated somewhere bkeak and remote. I think I was confusing it with Dartmoor.
ReplyDeleteThat's always a problem should an emergency coincide with a routine test!
Quite so!
DeleteI remember it well as I taught not that far away and every Monday at 10am, I would hear the siren.
ReplyDeleteTalking of alerts…we have one this afternoon…what a racket that will be if you are somewhere that’s very crowded! 😁
We've just had the alert - it would be quite noticeable in a crowd.
DeleteHi Janice - it's interesting those regular 'warnings' that happen ... our family home was just down the road from the Gordon Boys Home, West End ... I just remember being warned about the boys ... it has an interesting history. This afternoon we'll be having one - you and me - not sure what I'd do if one happened in real life ... no school desk to hide under! A school outside Maidstone recently has found their WW2 air-raid shelters - fascinating to read about that time. Broadmoor reigned in our lives about 10 miles away too ... great post - thank you ... cheers Hilary
ReplyDeleteI've just read about the Gordon Boys Home, which is now the Gordon School. What an interesting history it has.
DeleteYour story captures how the sirens became more than a warning system. They were part of the community’s rhythm, and their absence leaves a strangely quiet gap in local life
ReplyDeleteI'm sure I'm not the only person who rather misses them.
DeleteThe good side is there are places like this for people who need help and unfortunately also need to be confined. It is sad that there are these situations.
ReplyDeleteIt is a sad necessity. The medical staff who work there are stalwart souls.
DeleteI wonder if it was a well planned escape or just coincidence that it happened so close to the scheduled time for the sirens to go off.
ReplyDeleteI suspect it was well-timed. The inmates may be ill but some are highly intelligent.
DeleteAn interesting read, and talking of alerts, (here in the UK) we have one scheduled for this afternoon!
ReplyDeleteAll the best Jan
It's been and gone, now (3:25!)
DeleteI don't know that I'd ever get used to the sirens, no matter how regularly they sounded.
ReplyDeleteIt was part of life's tapestry.
DeleteA good piece on the history of the sirens. Scary to live so close to the facility.
ReplyDeleteIt's only scary is someone escapes and that has happened so rarely.
DeleteWe no longer have the local fire whistle, and I'm very grateful for the peace. The firefighters loved it though, despite having instant electronic alarms. I think the drama appealed to them, letting us know how often they were called out. I used to live near the firehouse and my dog went mad when it sounded.
ReplyDeleteThe uncertainty of the fire whistle would make it difficult to accommodate in daily life.
DeleteAfterthought: good plan to break out at the time of the regular alarm, then people would disregard it thinking it was just a test.
ReplyDeleteThat was exactly the plan!
DeleteWhen I hear 'Broadmoor' I think of serial killers. I didn't realise it was a psychiatric hospital, for serial killers. Fascinating. I certainly wouldn't want to live anywhere nearby
ReplyDeleteIt's not only serial killers who are treated there. There are others who suffer serious mental illness, who require confinement and close monitoring of their medication.
DeleteI never knew about the sirens marking time for locals. The digital system makes sense today, but I can see why you’d miss that eerie routine.
ReplyDeleteIts obviously such a Fascinating glimpse into Broadmoor’s history
The old Broadmoor hospital building looks quite forbidding. The new hospital is much friendlier.
DeleteInteresting to use the siren to notify people of escapes. I don't think that's done at our mental facilities. My town fire department tests the fire horn at noon on Wednesdays. While there are a handful of paid fire personnel in my rural town, most of the firefighters are volunteer. The fire horn is used to call them to duty.
ReplyDeleteOur local fire service is a volunteer service, too. They're alerted by 'phone, I think.
Deleteas a child, age 4 to 10, we lived only half a mile from a prisons camp in Georgia, that was in 1948 to 1953 and prisoners escaped a lot, they were work camps, they took them out with dogs and armed guards on horses to clean the roads and fields... they had a siren, but nothing like yours and if it went off it meant watch out they are on the loose. In fact once of them ran through our back yard, I saw him with my own eyes
ReplyDeleteThat was a bit too exciting for you!
Delete"I miss the sirens" seems to me a very 2025 slogan. We all do. (With anxiety) who knows what's coming next?
ReplyDeleteI would feel rather differently in a wartime setting, I know. I think anxiety is rife in the world right now.
DeleteIt's good there's a siren to warn people of escapes.
ReplyDeleteMost of the time we don't even think about Broadmoor.
DeleteGlad that you all have some kind of warnings even though the sirens have been disengaged.
ReplyDeleteBetter than nothing, but the sirens were impossible to ignore.
Delete"I miss the sirens"... I bet the Greek sailors of antiquity wished that they could have missed them!
ReplyDeleteThere are sirens and sirens . . .
DeleteThat is fascinating about living near Broodmoor and how they keep residents in the area safe with phone alerts.
ReplyDeleteAt least we're not kept in ignorance!
DeleteI do get that you miss the sirens. I think I'd prefer them to digital alerts. xxx
ReplyDelete