USA
The Lunacy Act 1845 or the Lunatics Act 1845 and the County Asylums Act 1845 formed mental health law in England and Wales from 1845 to 1890. The Lunacy Act's most important provision was a change in the status of mentally ill people to patients.
Under the Lunacy Act 1845 and the County Asylums Act of the same year, county lunatic asylums became compulsory and the Lunacy Commission was established to take responsibility, among other things, to regulate them.
The two acts were dependent on each other. The Lunacy Act established the Lunacy Commission and the County Asylums Act set forth most of the provisions as to what was to be monitored within the asylums and helped establish the public network of the county asylums.
Records of lunatic asylums are not held in any one place and often not all their records have survived. Many records of asylums, prisons and houses of correction are kept in local archives and especially those of the patients and inmates. However, most patient files have been destroyed.
The records held by The National Archives relate mainly to the administration of the institutions, though some of these records may include the names of inmates.
1839. The Ontario government (then known as the Province of Upper Canada) passes "An Act to Authorise the Erection of an Asylum within this Province for the Reception of Insane and Lunatic Persons."
This legislation resulted in the opening of the "Provincial Lunatic Asylum" in Toronto, Ontario, on January 26, 1850 (www.archivescanada.ca
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