Stopping Point 5

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Audio Guide

13. The Walkway, Ha-Ha and Boundary Wall

The path opens up onto a beech tree-lined lane, with the original boundary wall on your right and a raised bank on your left. This beautiful walkway must have been a favourite with patients and staff in the past, just as it is today. The raised bank is a “ha-ha” – it enabled patients standing on top of it to see over the boundary wall and take in the view of the countryside beyond. You can climb the bank and see for yourself (please take care!) although the view today is of houses and gardens! The ha-ha features in the book of the same name by Jennifer Dawson (1929-2000), based on her experiences both as a patient and as a social worker at the Warneford Hospital in the 1950s. This critically acclaimed novel was first published in 1961 and won the James Tait Black Memorial Prize.

The building behind the blue hoardings visible behind the ha-ha is the former Highfield Unit for Adolescents and Young People. The building has fallen into disrepair and has been replaced by a new, modern facility that you will see shortly.

Image: cover of Jennifer Dawson’s book, The Ha-Ha; photo of the tree-lined walkway (OHA)

  • Publisher: Scribner (November 11, 2025)
  • ISBN13: 9781668088562

The far end of the “ha-ha”, just in front of the Department of Psychiatry, visible in the gap in the original boundary wall. Credit: Oxfordshire Health Archives OHA W10 C1/7c
The far end of the “ha-ha”, just in front of the Department of Psychiatry, visible in the gap in the original boundary wall. Credit: Oxfordshire Health Archives OHA W10 C1/7c
This novel, The Ha-Ha by Jennifer Dawson, was based on the author’s experiences at the Warneford in the 1950s. The main character would seek ‘time out’ by the ha-ha.
This novel, The Ha-Ha by Jennifer Dawson, was based on the author’s experiences at the Warneford in the 1950s. The main character would seek ‘time out’ by the ha-ha. Credit: Design and illustration by Faber. Adapted from an original photograph by Amor Burakova / Stocksy.
This novel, The Ha-Ha by Jennifer Dawson, was based on the author’s experiences at the Warneford in the 1950s. The main character would seek ‘time out’ by the ha-ha. Credit: Design and illustration by Faber. Adapted from an original photograph by Amor Burakova / Stocksy.
Original plan for the “ha-ha” dated 1837.
Credit: Oxfordshire Health Archives OHA W P 17Credit: Design and illustration by Faber. Adapted from an original photograph by Amor Burakova / Stocksy.
Original plan for the “ha-ha” dated 1837.
Credit: Oxfordshire Health Archives OHA W P 17
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We would like to thank Donald Insall Associates for their research input into creation of the Warneford Walk.