Hospitals 3

 


JEWISH  HOSPITAL

  Across Burnet Ave. from General Hospital, is where the first Jewish hospital in the United States is located. Founded in 1854 in the West End at what is now Central Ave. and Bauer Streets. The hospital was to be for "the indigent poor sick of the Jewish faith." The founders also wanted to be sure that no Jew would be buried without another Jew there to say Kaddish, the prayer for the dead, and to prevent deathbed conversions to Christianity by those anxious to receive some form of religious rite. This was apparently a major problem during the cholera epidemic of 1849. It is, of course, nonsectarian and open to anyone in need of hospital care.
  In 1882, the hospital board opened the Home for the Jewish Aged and Infirm at this site, and in 1890 dedicated a new Jewish Hospital next to it. In 1892 a nursing school was opened. A nurses residence and other structures were soon erected. In 1920 it opened the first Children's Psychiatric Institute in the nation.
  The last of these old buildings were torn down in 1974 and by 1987 the new complex covered 21 acres with 664 beds. There were 19 departments with 984 physicians.

Jewish Hospital 1914.jpg (94319 bytes)
1914 Image (not a postcard)

Jewish Hospital-1.jpg (76082 bytes)            Jewish Hospital-2.jpg (66637 bytes)            Jewish Hospital-3.jpg (89114 bytes)            Jewish Hospital-4.jpg (96954 bytes)

Jewish Hospital-5.jpg (127945 bytes)            Jewish Hospital-6.jpg (92521 bytes)            Jewish Hospital-7.jpg (115265 bytes)            Jewish Hospital-8.jpg (91502 bytes)

Jewish Hospital-9-mistitled.jpg (100464 bytes)            Jewish Hospital-10.jpg (106227 bytes)            Jewish Hospital-11.jpg (92203 bytes)            Jewish Hospital-12.jpg (97015 bytes)
Titled incorrectly                                                                                                                                                                            

Jewish Hospital-13.jpg (160894 bytes)                        Jewish Hospital-14.jpg (115032 bytes)

 

LONGVIEW  HOSPITAL

  The old City (Commercial) Hospital located on the northeast corner of 12th and Central Avenue which had opened in 1823 and was the city's first public hospital had four departments. Besides the medical, surgical, and obstetrical depts., there was also the lunatic asylum. By 1853 more than 100 patients lived in a space meant for sixty and new cases were being housed in the county jail. The conditions were deplorable with the walls covered with mold, the floor was decaying, and the air was foul. Many of the neighboring counties and states often simply left their mentally-ill residents on the streets of Cincinnati to be cared for here.
  Construction of Longview Asylum was begun in the late 1850s along the Miami & Erie Canal on land than considered part of Carthage. The new asylum which could accommodate 400 (with a separate building for black patients) opened in 1860, west of present day Paddock Road.

These are not postcards
Longview Asylum 1860.jpg (911926 bytes)                Longview.jpg (226468 bytes)
Longview in 1860                                    Longview Today     

  Thirty years later there were more than 800 patients, the canal was becoming an open sewer, and the asylum was receiving insufficient funding. Construction of new wards in the 1890s increased the capacity of the institution to 955. In 1927 the state took over and purchased more land and increased the capacity by 500. The asylum extended for 3 city blocks along Paddock Road encompassing about 300 acres. In the 1940s a medical building, a nurses home, and St. Dympha Chapel were completed. By 1953 the hospital had 3,568 patients and only 1,831 beds and was understaffed by 50%. Starting in the 1950s the use of mood controlling drugs allowed many of the patients to live at home. Group homes, halfway houses, and nursing homes reduced the population to 401 in 1987. Operations have now been consolidated in the most modern portion of the complex and is now called the Pauline Warfield Lewis Center in 1984 to honor a long time advocate for the mentally ill.

State Hospital-Carthage.jpg (61066 bytes)    Hamilton County Infirmary.jpg (53192 bytes)    Carthage State Hospital-reprint.jpg (309730 bytes)    City Infirmary-1.jpg (104229 bytes)    City Infirmary-2.jpg (108198 bytes)
Reprint- Auditorium

Longview Hospital-1.jpg (116792 bytes)    Longview Hospital-2.jpg (99443 bytes)    Longview Hospital-5.jpg (90192 bytes)    Longview Hospital-3.jpg (112608 bytes)    Longview-3.jpg (299437 bytes)

Longview Hospital-6.jpg (100859 bytes)    Longview Hospital-7.jpg (74704 bytes)    Longview Hospital-8.jpg (83920 bytes)    Longview-Pinel Garden.jpg (240611 bytes)    Rush Amphitheatre-Longview.jpg (267514 bytes)

Longview Hospital-4.jpg (99669 bytes)            Longview Hospital Bridge.jpg (114075 bytes)
                                                            Bridge over the Miami Erie Canal

Longview Hospital-vert-1.jpg (86375 bytes)        Longview Hospital-vert-2.jpg (79641 bytes)        Longview courtyard.jpg (84667 bytes)        

Unknown8.jpg (124984 bytes)
250 Patient "Cottage"

   Thanks to Susan Ferster the card above has been moved from the Help page to here. This building can be seen in the first card in the second row above (bottom left side). Constructed Ca. 1900 , it was built to house 250 patients and was probably razed in the 1980's.

 

MAPLE  KNOLL  HOSPITAL

  This three story brick hospital was constructed in 1927 on 30 acres on State route 4 near Sharon Ave. It was a maternity hospital and asylum for neglected children. This was an agency of the Community Chest that was established in 1855. 

Maple Knoll Hospital-Glendale.jpg (133891 bytes)

 

ST.  FRANCIS  HOSPITAL

  Located at 1860 Queen City Avenue this hospital was started in 1886 by the Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis. It was for the incurably ill and the elderly. The building sits on 10 hillside acres that had been a cemetery. The cemetery had been placed under interdict in 1849 because of violations of canon law by its directors. The trustees of the German Catholic Cemetery Association was selling plots to persons "not in communion with the Church." They did this probably because of financial problems. Thus when Archbishop Purcell laid the cemetery under interdict it meant the land was no longer consecrated.. The graves were moved to the St. Joseph Cemetery in Price Hill and the land was donated to the Franciscan Sisters. A $25,000 bequest from Reuben Springer (1800-1884) enabled the Sisters to begin construction.
  The first patient was admitted on January 2, 1889. By 1938  the hospital had cared for 41,000 patients, 85% of whom had been unable to pay. It was the only hospital west of the Alleghenies in those days with facilities for treating cancer. By the 1970s it was obvious the hospital was becoming obsolete and it was closed in 1981. This hospital merged with St. George Hospital in Westwood. The new St. Francis-St. George Hospital open in Westwood in 1982. This building is now listed in the National Register of Historic Places and is now known as the South Fairmount Senior Center.

 St Francis Hospital-5.jpg (104452 bytes)        St Francis Hospital-1.jpg (92921 bytes)        St Francis Hospital-3.jpg (109938 bytes)        St Francis Hospital-4.jpg (112378 bytes)

 

St Francis Hospital-2.jpg (110509 bytes)        St Francis Hospital-rppc.jpg (217683 bytes)        ST Francis Hospital-3view.jpg (316964 bytes)

 

ST.  GEORGE  HOSPITAL

St. George Hospital.jpg (322863 bytes)

   Dedicated in 1968 this hospital was operated be the Dominican Sisters of St. Mary of the Springs. This "Hospital with a Heart" was in Westwood and merged with St Francis in 1974. As noted above a new hospital opened in 1982.

 

ST.  JOSEPH  MATERNITY  HOSPITAL

   Founded in 1873 this institution, located on 18 acres on the southeast corner of Reading Road and Tennessee Avenue, cared for infants of poor or unfortunate mothers.

St Joseph Maternity Hospital-1.jpg (123735 bytes)                        St Joseph Maternity Hospital-2.jpg (96657 bytes)

 

VETERANS  ADMINISTRATION  HOSPITAL

  Built between 1948 and 1954 this facility at 3200 Vine Street was built to help the massive number of military personnel needing help after WWII and the Korean War. This 500 bed hospital opened in May of 1954. The last image below is a photograph showing what it looks like today.

V A Hospital-1.jpg (93381 bytes)        V A Hospital-2.jpg (145480 bytes)        V A Hospital-3.jpg (129065 bytes)        Veterans Hospital.jpg (272934 bytes)

 

SETON  HOSPITAL

Seton Hospita 6th Stl.jpg (301692 bytes)         Seton Hospital.jpg (88444 bytes)        Seton Hospital 4.jpg (214720 bytes)
Seton Hospital. 6th St.                             Seton Hospital  617-627  Kenyon Ave           

 

Madeline-Marie Nursing Home.jpg (83911 bytes)            Marie Nursing Home Upland Place.jpg (319236 bytes)
  Madeline-Marie Nursing Home & Hospital. 2321 - 2327 Upland Pl

   I am not sure but I believe the nursing home consisted of both buildings being shown in the postcard above. The photograph shows both homes just in case.

 

Otto Epp Hospital.jpg (117497 bytes)                                O E S Hospital.jpg (96466 bytes)
Otto C. Epp Memorial Hospital                                            O. E. S. Hospital              
was only Osteopathic Hospital in                                      Order of Eastern Star            
                Cincinnati                                                  Affiliated with the Masons  

 

Langdon med center.jpg (118254 bytes)

   The Langdon Medical Office. Moved to Sharon Woods Village from original site on Eastern Ave. Dr Langdon was in practice from 1865, after serving in the Civil War, until his death in 1876.

 

Axby Hosp-Harrison.jpg (119647 bytes)                        Villa Hope.jpg (255287 bytes)
Axby Vetinary (sic) Hospital                           Villa Hope Ex. Care Facility    
  Harrison, Ohio                                             625 Probasco Ave.

 

Medicenter of America.jpg (257439 bytes)        Medicenter of America.jpg (234090 bytes)
Medicenter Of America

   Located at 2915 Clifton Ave. this facility is for patients who no longer need the intensive care of the hospital. The 2nd photograph above shows the facility today.

 

College Hill Sanitarium.jpg (114087 bytes)        College Hill Sanitarium.jpg (272531 bytes)        College Hill Sanitarium Grounds.jpg (310328 bytes)        Children's College Hill Hospital.jpg (291584 bytes)
College Hill Sanitarium

   Established in 1873 The Cincinnati Sanitarium was located in College Hill at 5642 Hamilton Ave.  It was the first private psychiatric facility in the U. S. for the treatment of nervous and mental disorders plus alcohol and opium addictions and occupied 40 acres with  four two-story cottages, an amusement hall with a billiard hall in the basement, a flower conservatory, several physical plant buildings, an ice house and even a station for the Cincinnati Northwestern railroad. One of the buildings, the administration building, occupied the site of The Ohio Female College which was founded in 1852.The sender of the first card writes, "It is a home for daffy people commonly called "nuts", it is not far from the A.?. S. Methodist Home". This probably refers to the Methodist home for the aged seen in the religious section. The second card was sent by a resident of the Sanitarium. 
   In 1913 a nearby large residence adjacent to the property was purchased. Called the �Rest Cottage�, it was used in the care of individuals with �nervous and nutritional disorders�. The buildings were situated in the middle of a 30-acre park with fruit trees, shrubs, flowers, an artificial lake, gravel walks, a highly cultivated vegetable garden and a living spring. A major change in the landscape occurred in 1927 when the lake was drained.
   In 1956, the Cincinnati Sanitarium was renamed for Emerson Arthur North, MD, a pioneer in clinical psychiatry at the University of Cincinnati. The 95-bed psychiatric hospital specialized in serving adults, adolescents and children in need of treatment for behavioral, emotional and chemical dependency problems. During the 1960s and early 70s, Emerson A. North Hospital became part of the Cincinnati Mental Health Institute, serving as the inpatient component of the community mental health centers. A new facility was built in 1988 (Phoenix International). The hospital closed in 1994 when its services moved to Providence Hospital in Mt. Airy
  The campus was occupied for six years from 1994-2000 by Phoenix International, a company that conducted clinical trails of drugs for the pharmaceutical industry. The clinic closed after it was sold to another company and operations were consolidated.
   In December 2002 the complex became the Cincinnati Children�s College Hill Campus. The Convalescent Hospital for Children generously provided the funding to purchase the Hamilton Avenue property and facility. The Cincinnati Children�s College Hill Campus  provides an extended hospitalization treatment program for children and adolescents who suffer from chronic mental illness and impaired functioning. An inpatient program also is offered at this location. The last photograph above shows this facility.