Hampstead Child Therapy Course and Clinic
- Date:
- 1964-1976
- Reference:
- PP/ROS/C/5
- Part of:
- The Archive of Ismond Rosen (1924-1996)
- Archives and manuscripts
Collection contents
About this work
Description
This material relates to or was generated by Rosen's time with the Hampstead Course and Clinic.
For material regarding his research on the effect on the child of observing parental nudity see PP/ROS/E/3.
Publication/Creation
1964-1976
Physical description
5 files
Biographical note
In 1941 Anna Freud set up the Hampstead War Nurseries to help children who had been made homeless by the bombing in Europe. She worked with the children applying her knowledge of child development towards their care. The Nurseries provided a unique opportunity for observational research into child development and study of the impact of the war on children. Anna Freud went on to establish The Hampstead Child Therapy Course and Clinic in 1947, which provided a four year full-time course in child psychoanalysis aimed to train 'child experts'. Lectures, seminars and personal analyses were at first provided by a group of psychoanalysts who were members of the British Psychoanalytical Society and lectures and seminars were given in the teachers’ homes. In Nov 1951 premises at 12 Maresfield Gardens, London, NW3, were purchased and the Hampstead Child Therapy Course and Clinic opened to patients in February 1952. In 1982 following Anna Freud's death the clinic was renamed the Anna Freud Centre. The Centre's last students graduated in July 2009.