The Cassel Hospital was founded and endowed by Ernest Cassel in England in 1919 initially for the treatment of "shell shock" victims. Originally in Penshurst, Kent, it moved to Stoke-on-Trent during World War II before moving to Ham in 1948.
The Hospital building was originally a late 18th-century house known as Morgan House after its owner, philanthropist and writer, John Minter Morgan. In 1863 it became home to the newly-married Prince Robert of Orléans, Duc de Chartres. In 1879 it became the West Heath School for young ladies. The school moved to Sevenoaks, Kent in the 1930s, and the building became the Lawrence Hall Hotel until its purchase by the Cassel Foundation in 1947.
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