Summary
Pruning shears made and used by a patient at a Victorian psychiatric hospital circa 1849 - 1950. Hand-assembled from available scrap material. The length and shape of the blades leads to the deduction that it was used for pruning branches. This is an example of gardening equipment used at Victorian psychiatric hospital. It is also an example of equipment made by patients at Victorian psychiatric hospitals and the sorts of activities that they carried out.
Physical Description
The long thin body is composed of 2 flat pieces of wood rivetted together. 2 small moon-shaped metal blades poke out one end and are operated by a simple lever system which runs through the centre of the wooden handle to a lever-handle at the other end, which is pulled outward, at right angles to the body of the instrument, to open the blades. This item appears to have been hand-assembled from available scrap material.
More Information
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Collection Names
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Collecting Areas
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Acquisition Information
Donation from Office of Psychiatric Services, May 1985
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Place & Date Made
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Place & Date Used
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Classification
Medicine & health, Mental health - occupational therapy, Gardening tools
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Category
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Discipline
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Type of item
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overall dimensions
15 cm (Length), 2.5 cm (Width), 115 cm (Height)
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References
Oral history
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Keywords
Gardening, Occupational Therapy, Psychiatric Hospitals, Making History - Psych Services