IN an eerie rural village walled in by beautiful country fields, spooked residents lock their doors at the first blare of warning sirens, while “not even the birds sing”;.
That’s because this creepy community exists in the dark shadow of one of the UK’s , whose grim alumni include , cannibal killer Peter Bryan, and Soham child murderer .


Since in 1912, the village of Woodbeck in rural has existed cheek by jowl alongside â one of three such high-security institutions in the UK holding patients with dangerous, violent or criminal tendencies.
Despairing residents â many of whom have themselves â claim their are stuck in a rut thanks to the prospect of living doors down from deadly criminals.
Others, in light of a recent damning watchdog report, reserve their biggest fears for the overworked staff at Rampton itself.
One former nurse, who wished to remain anonymous, told The Sun: “It’s a dangerous s**thole. It’s understaffed and morale is horrific.”;
They added: “I would say a staff member is going to get killed.”;
Around 400 patients, who have been detained under the Mental Health Act 1983, are currently housed at the site.
Originally opened as an “overspill”; for Broadmoor Asylum, it covers 190 acres and consists of 14 high-security main ward blocks and 14 secure “villas”;.
One villager, who has lived there for 20 years, described the procedures in place for locals in case any of the inmates ever managed to escape.
“If anyone got out, they’d be going somewhere,”; they eerily told a local paper. “There’s a warning system and it’d be common sense to lock your doors if that ever happens.”;
Fellow resident Julie Edwards added: “We get fire engines going by because of the nature of who’s in there, but you just expect that of an evening.”;
In recent years, Woodbeck has been voted the worst place in Nottinghamshire for community wellbeing.
The lack of shops, buses or a school mean many residents feel “stuck”; there, and they say it has become “more cut off”; over the years as facilities have been stripped bare.




The average house price in Woodbeck is £150,000, far lower than the £269,000 seen across the UK.
During The Sun’s visit, one woman who was interested in purchasing a home there said she and her partner knew it faced the hospital, but had decided to take a look anyway, tempted by the price.
However, the woman, who asked not to be named, said: “It’s the creepiest place I’ve ever been and I’m not coming back.
“There’s something really spooky about it and I don’t feel comfortable here at all.
“It’s a good price and it’s quite spacious but it feels quite surreal. I can’t even hear the birds sing.”;




Local mechanic Mark Smith told a local news outlet he fears that living so close to the secure hospital “does deduct the value of houses”;, and described how congested it can get with Rampton workers during the week.
One resident explained the houses used to be all owned by the hospital itself, but are now privately owned or rented, with many staff buying them “on the cheap”;.
Local Michael Warriner, meanwhile, said many people who move to the village to work at the hospital don’t generally stay long.
“It’s just something to secure their CV and they don’t really take pride in the area,”; he said.
‘Anxious, isolated and unsafe’
The hospital hit the headlines in May after a healthcare watchdog stated that the facility requires “urgent improvement,”; following its rating of “inadequate”; in January 2024.
The Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS trust that runs it was being probed over the care of Nottingham killer , the paranoid schizophrenic who fatally stabbed three people in 2023.
The Care Quality Commission (CQC) report said that between March 2024 and February 2025, staff submitted 777 incident forms where the reasons stated were “clinically unsafe staffing”;.
The Sun spoke to a former nurse team leader who worked there for 11 years and still lives in Woodbeck, which was once filled with NHS workers.
The man, who wished to remain anonymous, claimed there is a culture of micromanagement and backstabbing, with staff severely undervalued and given little support.
The former staff member claimed there were situations that had been “swept under the carpet”;, adding: “You have one qualified member of staff running back and forth between two or three wards.”;



Martyn Farrow, who worked as a Rampton nurse for 12 years and then as a security officer for 13 years, lives a stone’s throw from the hospital’s imposing double fence.
The grandfather-of-seven, 69, says the hospital relies heavily on agencies, adding that staff play the system for an easier life.
He said: “There is no training like there used to be. When I first started working at Rampton, staff spent 18 months on a training course â now I’d be amazed if they did two days.
“There should never be one qualified person for two or three wards.
“In the past, some wards had 34 patients and six specialist staff per ward. It’s criminal mismanagement.”;
The hospital was rated “requires improvement”; by government watchdogs following an unannounced inspection in March.
While the CQC found some “clear improvements”; had been made, it said the trust had work to do “to address staff shortages and support staff”;.
Sometimes staff were found to be working alone at night, unable to take breaks, and reported feeling “anxious, isolated and unsafe”;.
In January 2024 a coroner called for improvements at the hospital following the death of a patient who swallowed a crayon.
‘Child killer called me mum’
Villager Barry Woolley, 79, was a staff nurse at Rampton for 20 years and reminisced about the days when dances were held for patients and wards took part in football tournaments.
He said: “The patients came in and were told what they were doing, and a lot of the staff came from the forces. I think society is different now.”;
Valerie Farrow was a nursing assistant in women’s services at Rampton with her husband Martyn, where she came to know Beverley Allitt, a former nurse who killed four babies and attempted to kill three others at a hospital in Grantham, Lincolnshire, in the 1990s.
The 77-year-old said: “If I hadn’t known what she’d done, I’d never have known. She was always all right with me.
“We’d talk about all sorts, nothing to do with her crimes. If they ever wanted to tell me what they had done, I’d listen, but I never asked.
“You have to put it all to the back of your mind.”;
Valerie grew so acquainted with Carol Barratt, who murdered an 11-year-old schoolgirl at a shopping centre in Doncaster in 1991, that the killer called her “mother”; and invited her to her wedding.
“A few got married in Rampton,”; she said. “I enjoyed the work. I felt I was doing something to help, it gave me a sense of purpose.”;
Now, as troubling questions continue to be asked about the facility, residents of sleepy Woodbeck are being left with much darker memories.
Becky Sutton, Chief Operating Officer at Nottinghamshire Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, told The sun: “Our colleagues are dedicated to delivering excellent care, often in challenging circumstances.
“We actively listen to feedback from them, working in partnership to make improvements to support our colleagues and our patients, enhance safety and build a stronger learning culture.
“We know there is more to do, and we’re focused on working closely with colleagues to make further improvements so we can meet the standards our patients and colleagues deserve.”;

