Yahoo Web Search

Search results

      • Her health continued to decline and she found herself making a poor living as a seamstress and was eventually put into a mental hospital. She would suffer from mental illness for the rest of her life.
      www.charliechaplin.com/en/biography/articles/216-Charlie-s-Mother-Hannah-Chaplin
  1. People also ask

  2. Her health continued to decline and she found herself making a poor living as a seamstress and was eventually put into a mental hospital. She would suffer from mental illness for the rest of her life.

    • W. Dryden

      The son of Hannah Chaplin and Leo Dryden, Wheeler Dryden was...

  3. [3] [4] As a result of mental illness, now thought to have been caused by syphilis, she was unable to continue performing from the mid-1890s. In 1921, she was relocated by her son Charlie to California , where she was cared for in a house in the San Fernando Valley until her death in August 1928.

  4. Sep 19, 2018 · She was released, but readmitted in 1903 and 1905. Hannah began to suffer from hallucinations and, at periods in her incarceration, she was held in a padded room.

    • Emma Jolly
  5. Hannah Chaplin, Charlie Chaplin's mother, was admitted to the hospital on multiple occasions suffering the effects of syphilis and the negative effects of her husband's death, Charles Chaplin Sr. [ 25 ] [ 26 ] [ 27 ] [ 28 ]

  6. As a result of mental illness, now thought to have been caused by syphilis, she was unable to continue performing from the mid-1890s. In 1921, she was relocated by her son Charlie to California, where she was cared for in a house in the San Fernando Valley until her death in August 1928. Early life.

  7. During Charlie's and Sydney's childhood, Hannah suffered from mental illness and had to live under care for many years. Charlie and Sydney lived in many different homes, schools and workhouses during this time, but the home they remember most was the one at 3 Pownall Terrace.

  8. surviving transfer records from Hannah's two sub-sequent Cane Hill admissions in 1903 and 1905 mentions any other diagnosis which could account for her rapidly deteriorating mental condition. We also know that as her mental illness rapidly progressed from an acute to a chronic phase (ca. 1903-05), she began having intermittentvisual