Greenock Royal Infirmary Explained

Greenock Royal Infirmary
Location:Inverkip Street
Region:Greenock
Country:Scotland
Healthcare:NHS Scotland
Type:General
Emergency:No
Founded:1879
Closed:2014
Map Type:Scotland Inverclyde
Coordinates:55.9473°N -4.7649°W

Greenock Royal Infirmary was a health facility in Greenock, Scotland. Its original Hospital or Infirmary of 1809 stood in Inverkip Street, it was subsequently extended round into East Shaw Street, then in 1869 a new building on the adjacent site at 2 Duncan Street formed the main address of the Hospital and Infirmary. It was renamed the Greenock Royal Infirmary in 1922.

History

The facility had its origins in a dispensary for the sick poor which was established in 1801 in the town centre near the harbour, initially in Manse Lane, then nearby in Cathcart Street.[1] [2] This provided medicines, and a surgeon made daily visits to the poor when they were sick at home. In 1806 a contagious fever spread from the crew of a Russian prize ship in the harbour, causing many deaths, and one of the surgeons proposed a new hospital or fever-house, "where the poor would be removed from their own uncomfortable dwellings, not only for their own sakes, but for the purpose of checking infection."[3]

In 1807, funds were raised to build a Hospital or Infirmary, and a site obtained on the south edge of the town, up on the east side of Inverkip Street between the Anti-Burgher Secession Church of 1803 (called the Canister Kirk for its shape) and the 1789 cemetery. The building on Inverkip Street was designed by the local harbour engineer, John Aird, the foundation stone was laid in 1808, and the first patient was admitted in June 1809.[4] The building was erected at an expense of £1815, on a site of land given by Sir John Shaw Stewart. [5]

The infirmary was extended with wings added in 1830 after another fever epidemic,[4] [6] and an 1847 extension incorporating the site and parts of the Canister Kirk continued the hospital round into East Shaw Street.[7] A new Hospital and Infirmary building designed by Salmon and Son was added on the adjacent site at 2 Duncan Street in 1869.[4] It was renamed the Greenock Royal Infirmary in 1922 and joined the National Health Service in 1948.[1]

After services transferred to the Inverclyde Royal Hospital, the Greenock Royal Infirmary closed in 1979[8] and was subsequently demolished.[9] The site was then used for a Sheltered housing complex providing 34 flats (for seniors) with associated facilities, built in 1988, which is named John Galt House in commemoration of the novelist and entrepreneur John Galt who was buried in the adjacent Inverkip Street Cemetery in 1839.[10] [11]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Records of Greenock Royal Infirmary, Greenock, Scotland. Archives Hub. 2 February 2020.
  2. Web site: History of the Town of Greenock – originally published in 1829 . Inverclyde Council . 12 November 2019 . 10, 15. 6 February 2020. pdf
  3. Web site: R.M. Smith . The History of Greenock – Originally published in 1921 . Inverclyde Council . 12 November 2019 . 117–118, 154 . 6 February 2020 . 3 June 2021 . https://web.archive.org/web/20210603083527/https://www.inverclyde.gov.uk/community-life-and-leisure/heritage-services/watt-library/local-history/local-history-books-online/the-arran . dead . pdf
  4. Web site: Inverclyde: Greenock Royal Infirmary. Historic Hospitals. 2 February 2020.
  5. Web site: A Topographical Dictionary of Scotland. Originally published by S Lewis, London, 1846. . British History Online.
  6. Web site: John. Wood. 1835 . OS large scale town plan of Greenock. . Maps of Scotland . 6 February 2020.
  7. Web site: 1857. Ordnance Survey large scale Scottish town plans: Greenock 1:500 . Maps of Scotland . 6 February 2020.
  8. News: Official start made to £7m. hospital . The Herald . 1 September 1970 . 3 . 6 November 2016 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170307084213/https://news.google.com/newspapers?id=ypJAAAAAIBAJ&sjid=IKUMAAAAIBAJ&pg=2329%2C33029 . 7 March 2017 . live . dmy-all .
  9. Web site: Greenock, 2 Duncan Street, Greenock Royal Infirmary . Canmore . 9 February 2020.
  10. Book: Carruthers, Gerard . Hewitt . Regina . John Galt: Observations and Conjectures on Literature, History, and Society . Remembering John Galt . 2012 . Bucknell University Press . Lewisburg . 978-1-61148-434-2 . https://books.google.com/books?id=-5GHwI1U99oC&pg=PA33 . 33.
  11. Web site: Elderly Accommodation Counsel . John Galt House - 2 Duncan Street, Greenock, Renfrewshire, PA15 1PA - Sheltered housing, retirement housing, supported housing for older people . Housingcare.Org . 7 February 2020.