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General Hospital Birmingham

Anna
Cannot help with the endowment documents, but don't jnow if these cuttings may give some background as to where the endowment came from. Apparentlyhe owned a fair bit of property including a pub I've not come across called The Mogul. All are from the Birmingham gazette. The dayes are in the file name.


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In the words of the amazing Peter Walker "In pre-reformation days, the care of the sick had been handled by the monasteries and convents, and some institutions such as St Bartholomew's Hospital in London, survived the Dissolution of the Monasteries under Henry VIII. In Birmingham the General Hospital was our first dedicated hospital, although an infirmary was attached to the Birmingham Workhouse from 1766.

The story of the General starts in 1765 when a local public-spirited physician, Dr John Ash, called a meeting to consider forming a General Hospital in the town. As a result, £2000 was soon collected, and subscriptions of £600 a year were promised.

A site on the corner of Summer Lane and Lower Loveday Street (later occupied by the power station) was acquired for under £1000, and building work commenced, but funds were soon exhausted. In 1768 a music festival was held, which raised £300. It is sometimes said that spare money was short because people had invested in building canals in the vicinity, but money was soon found for rebuilding the burned-out Birmingham Theatre at that time. So the building stood an empty shell from 1769 to 1776, and Taylor and Lloyd's Bank were owed nearly £3000.

Something had to be done - meetings were arranged, house-to-house collections were made and a second music festival was held in 1779. The building was finished, and finally opened at Michaelmas that year. According to William Hutton, whose 'History of Birmingham' was published soon after, in the first nine months of activity, 529 patients were admitted, of which 303 were cured, 93 relieved, 112 remained on the books, five died, and one was dismissed as incurable. In 1790 two new wings were built and in 1792 thirty more beds were endowed by Samuel Galton.

As Birmingham grew in size, the hospital could not grow fast enough. By 1842 it had 222 beds, and from 1857 fetes were held at Aston Hall, which raised funds for two more wings. Another important source of revenue was the Hospital Saturday Fund, initiated by Dr Miller, Rector of St Martin's Church, which brought in about £5000 every three years.

Meanwhile the Queens Hospital and medical school in Broad Street had opened in 1840, again as a result of public subscription and donations. Other specialist hospitals opened - the Orthopaedic Hospital in Great Charles Street (1817), the Eye Hospital (1824), a Lying-in Hospital (1842), the Ear and Throat Hospital (1844), the Dental Hospital (1857), the Children's Hospital (1862). and the Women's Hospital (1871). Together Birmingham's hospitals treated over 46 000 patients (including 3800 in-patients) per annum in the 1860s.

By the end of the 19th century, conditions at the old General Hospitals must have been cramped, and it was decided to build new premises on the present site, then a slum-clearance area at the corner of Steelhouse Lane and Loveday Street. A competition was held for the design of the new Birmingham General Hospital in 1892, which was won by William Hensman. Often known as the Terracotta Palace, this impressive building in rich red brick and terracotta was opened in 1897, in a style echoing that of the Victoria Law Courts, which had just been built opposite. The wealthy philanthropist Louisa Ann Ryland contributed £200 000 to its construction.

And this 'new' General Hospital is still with us, but now it is a Children's Hospital....



General Hospital Summer Lane map.jpgGeneral Hospital old.jpgGeneral Hospital map 1830.jpgGeneral Hospital 1830.jpgGen Hospital Summer Lane.jpgfile.jpgfile-2.jpg31444845_2141703792729047_5206219855673425920_o copy.jpg
 
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First time I had to visit the hospitalwas in1948.with a broken wrist after I fell over at Happy Valleyby the Canal

up Kings Heath way while minnow fishing.
 
Hi, I am trying to find some information about a James Scragg that died in the Birmingham General Hospital in 1854. Does anybody know of any patient records for that period please? I grew up in birmingham but now live in Somerset so not easy to 'pop in' to the Central Library. Any information would be much appreciated. Thank you
 
Do you have his death certificate? There are a lot of James Scraggs showing on Ancestry. Do you want any other information, if so do you know his date of birth, or parent's names?
 
One of my ancestors passed away in Birmingham General hospital in 1839 and i was able to view his patient records which were held in the Archives department at Birmingham Central Library.

I did have to arrange a prior appointment in order for them to have the records available for me upon arrival.

Maybe you could write to them first to check if they hold the records for that year and for the person you are looking for.

William.
 
I hope someone on the Forum can help with this question...….when I used to visit the Hospital for an injury or something, there were nuns there with a really (or seemed that that way) tall habit. Does anyone recall them and would you know what order they might be?
 
A habit is an item of clothing worn over the shoulders, rather like a long tabard. It is an 'apron', for want of a better description, used when at work which keeps other clothing clean. In cloister or chapel they are not usually worn.
There are a few items which consist a headdress for enclosed nuns, coif, wimple and veil are the three traditional parts. Many women today are non enclosed and work in many areas without the usual associated style of clothing and headdresses. Nurses uniforms, until recent years were based on those of religious orders.
 
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My mom was the cleaning supervisor at the general in the fifties the matron use to come round to check that all the work was done if it wasn't they had to do it again with no extra wages they should try that today
i remember them cleaning. what a nice clean hospital. the smell, of carbolic and surgical sprits. last tIme i went in there was 1994 when a dentist in KINGHURST broke my jaw.
Birmingham General Hospital - Wikipedia
 
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I was in the new General over Christmas 1963 - there weren't any nuns there then as far as I know. The nurses wore starched aprons and caps and were incredibly kind.
Thank you Lady Penelope, this would have been in the 50's so maybe the old hospital. in Radiorails post, the portion that intrigued me was their head ware or gear as we would say now. It was tall & high very starched.
 
The Sisters of Charity were said, in 1969, to have run the Warwickshire Orthopaedic Hospital, St Gerards, for many years. But this was a Catholic based hospital. Did they, or any other nuns, have involvement in the General Hospital other than for religious purposes? The training of nurses in 1964 had been taking over to the Queen Elizabeth.
 
So I should wear my wrist watch on my right wrist ?. As I am left handed.
All nurses are right handed ?...........Its not a wrist watch is it
its optional they put it opposite the pen pocket.and its upside down so they dont have to touch it. thats what yahoo says.
 
It’s always struck me as a well equipped and staffed hospital, at least I like to think of it that way. My grandad passed away there in April 1929 of pneumonia - probably due to flu at that time. Hopefully he had the best care, although there’s no sure way of me knowing.

I recently found this about the Hospital: A large archive of memorabilia from Birmingham General Hospital was reported uncovered in a loft in 2021. Some artefacts are dated 1898 with others through to 1965. It’s possible they may have originally belonged to a barber who worked in the hospital from the mid-1920s to 1941.

The archive contains items from the earlier Summer Lane Hospital too. The items were to be given to. Birmingham Museums.

The images below of some items are from this nhs link: https://bwc.nhs.uk/news/hospital-hi...-to-be-preserved-for-future-generations-3823/

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