Making the Rounds: Stories of Workhouse Nurses Told in Textiles

Norfolk

Explore over 150 years of workhouse nursing through new textile art by Connie Flynn, alongside the stories of nurses who worked there.

Between 1777 and 1948, Mitford and Launditch Union Workhouse – now Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse – was home to some of the most vulnerable people in rural Norfolk. Its purpose was to provide accommodation, food and work for ‘paupers’ who did not have enough money provide for themselves. The NHS had not yet been created, and many people turned to the workhouse because of illness, old age, disability, mental illness, or as a safe place to give birth. The day-to-day care of the sick and vulnerable inmates fell to just a handful of nurses. They were often overworked, undertrained, and isolated. This exhibition is the result of a year-long collaboration between Norfolk-based artist Connie Flynn and volunteer researchers at Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse. Drawing on over 60 new nurse biographies and 150 years of welfare history, this captivating exhibition interweaves beautiful textile art pieces and the archival sources that inspired them.

Content warning: please be aware that parts of this exhibition mention death in childbirth and suicide.

Location: Gressenhall Farm and Workhouse, Gressenhall, Dereham, NR20 4DR