The Broadmoor Siren [Peer Review version]
Created | Updated Apr 2, 2007
Ten o’clock, Broadmoor siren,
Driving me mad,
Won’t leave me alone.
– The Members, 'Sound of the Suburbs'
Every Monday morning at ten o’clock the deafening sound of an air-raid siren
disturbs the peace over a large area of the leafy commuter belt that is Berkshire,
UK. The signal sounds the familiar alternating high-low note, followed by a constant
all-clear note five minutes later.
It’s not a re-enactment of the Blitz; it’s a test of the escape alarm at the local
mental hospital, Broadmoor.
Broadmoor Hospital lies on the edge of the small town of Crowthorne, in an area of
heathland known as Bracknell Forest. Escapees could presumably run in any direction,
and there is a network of 13 sirens covering the surrounding towns of Sandhurst,
Camberley, Bagshot, Bracknell and Wokingham. Many units are mounted on high masts,
and could easily be overlooked as mobile phone masts. The sirens are connected to
the hospital by telephone lines, and it has been known for BT engineers to
inadvertently set them off. Many are located in the vicinity of schools, although
there is a separate system to alert all local schools should an inmate escape. In
this event, each school has a set procedure to follow, which consists of locking the
children inside until parents can come and collect them.
A Notorious History
Broadmoor Hospital was the country’s first purpose-built asylum for the criminally insane, completed in 1863, and it currently houses 500 men and 120 women inmates. It was built under an act of Parliament to reform the poor conditions in institutions such as Bethlehem Hospital, aka Bedlam. Its imposing classical Victorian architecture was the work of Major
General Joshua Jebb, a military engineer who is said to have based the building on
two other hospitals - Wakefield and Turkey's Scutari Hospital.
One of four maximum security hospitals in the UK1, Broadmoor has housed some of the UK’s
most notorious criminals and lunatics, including:
Artist Richard Dadd, best known for his painting The Fairy Feller’s Master
Stroke, which was immortalised in a song by Queen, and which inspired Terry
Pratchett’s Discworld novel The Wee Free Men.'Stockwell Strangler', Kenneth Erskine, who in 1986 murdered 11 elderly people
in their homes in Stockwell, South London.Cannibalistic murderer Robert Mawdsley, the English Hannibal Lecter.
'The Surgeon of Crowthorne' and Oxford English
Dictionary contributor, William Chester Minor.London nail bomber David Copeland, who in 1999 targeted ethnic minorities with
devices in Brixton and the East End, and another which targeted the gay community in
the Admiral Duncan pub in Soho.'Yorkshire Ripper' Peter Sutcliffe, the lorry driver who murdered 13 women
between 1975 and 1980.Notorious London gangsters Ronnie and Reggie Kray.
Ian Ball, who attempted to kidnap Princess Anne in
1974.Daniel McNaughton, who murdered prime minister Sir Robert Peel’s private
secretary Edward Drummond in 1843, a case which led to the McNaughton rules on criminal insanity.Thallium poisoner, Graham Frederick
Young.Moors murderer Ian Brady, who between 1963 and 1965 with his girlfriend Myra Hindley tortured and murdered five children from Manchester, burying four of them on Saddleworth Moor.
The Escape of JT Straffen
The siren was installed following a public outcry at the escape of child-murderer
John Thomas Straffen in April 1952. Straffen had a history of mental illness and was
sent to Broadmoor after he strangled two young girls in Bath in 1951. Six months
later, Straffen went over the wall, with little difficulty, and walked away. In the
nearby village of Arborfield he strangled five-year-old Linda Bowyer, who had been
out for a ride on her bicycle. He was recaptured by police shortly afterwards.
Straffen was controversially tried, found guilty and initially sentenced to hang, but was reprieved by
the Home Secretary, and sent instead to a series of maximum security prisons. At the
age of 75 in 2005, he has the distinction of being Britain’s longest-serving
prisoner. He continues to protest his innocence of the Bowyer murder.
Could it happen again?
Thankfully, escapes from Broadmoor have been very rare. The last major incident
was the escape of child rapist James Saunders, nicknamed the Wolfman, who went on
the run for the second time in 1991. Saunders sawed through a one inch thick steel
bar and squeezed out of the window of a shower room on the third floor. He was
recaptured two days afterwards.
The alarm was also sounded in 1993 after a stabbing incident inside the hospital,
but it has not been sounded in anger since.
For all of this, Broadmoor’s security track record is seen to be a good one, and
security measures are being constantly improved, including the recent addition of a
second perimeter fence. Local residents however will always be reminded on Monday
morning at 10 o’clock that every parent’s worst nightmare could one day happen
again.
Related BBC Links
See what BBCi have to say about Broadmoor Hospital.