Mercer's Hospital Explained

Mercer's Hospital
Org/Group:Health Service Executive
Region:Dublin
Country:Ireland
Coordinates:53.3407°N -6.2635°W
Healthcare:HSE
Type:General Hospital
Founded:1734
Closed:1983
Map Type:Ireland Central Dublin

Mercer's Hospital (Irish: Ospidéal Mercer) was a hospital in Dublin, Ireland. It was converted into a clinical centre and medical library for the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland in 1991.[1]

History

Medieval leper house

The hospital has its origins in a leper house and church named St. Stephen's which was established on the site pre-1230 AD and which had come under the jurisdiction of an unnamed religious brotherhood by the late 14th century.[2] Both St Stephen's Green and Stephen Street were named after the site. The charitable offerings of the citizens of Dublin to the institution diminished during the Elizabethan era and an entry in the Assembly Rolls of the Corporation of 1590-91 describes how "the poor lazares (lepers) of St. Stephen's complaineth that they are in distress and wante".[2]

By 1665 the old hospital, chapel and graveyard of St. Stephen's lay derelict and the site was walled in. This followed the uniting of the parishes of St. Stephen with that of St Michael Le Pole and St. Bride's in 1682 when a new dedicated church was constructed on Bride Street.[3]

Somewhat of an effort was made between 1697 and 1698 to revive the hospital in some form, and permission was granted by the Churchwardens to "build a house containing four rooms for poor decayed Christians" on ground "adjoining the gate of St. Stephen's Churchyard which is now walled in and made parte of the said churchyard, but on which ground, or thereabouts, there was formerly a poore house built."[2]

The house for "poor decayed Christians" was never built and the site lay vacant until February 1724 when Mary Mercer began leasing part of St Stephen's churchyard for the purposes of establishing a charity house thereon.[1]

1724 building

Mercer began leasing the site from a committee consisting of 'the Minister, Church Wardens and Parishioners of the Parish of St. Peter's, Dublin' with the aim of assisting 'twenty poor girls or other poor persons' there.[2] Within a decade she had built a facility to help these people on the site. In May 1734, with the advice, direction & consent of the aforementioned St. Peter's committee, Mercer assigned unto a number of eminent surgeons the running of the facility who subsequently converted it into a hospital for patients suffering from "diseases of tedious and hazardous cure, such as falling-sickness, lunacy, leprosy, and the like".[2] Mary Mercer passed away at her home in Great Ship Street on 4 March 1735.[4]

Before Mercer had opened her hospital fully, Sir William Fownes, a wealthy landowner and MP for Wicklow, had petitioned Dublin Corporation in 1734 (alongside a group of doctors and clergymen) seeking money to turn Mercer's former school and almshouse into a designated hospital for 'lunatics, or such other poor people whose distempers are of tedious or doubtful cure, such as persons affected with cancers, king's evil, leprosy, falling sickness, etc'. They particularly wanted the money to make 'provision for cells for raging lunatics' in the house, as Dublin was lacking in such facilities. In the end, Jonathan Swift's St. Patrick's Hospital for Imbeciles, opened in 1757, fulfilled this need.

To support funding for the fledgling hospital a number of concerts were arranged over the following years. The most significant of these was the first performance of Handel's Messiah, which took place in Neale's Musick Hall in Fishamble Street on 13 April 1742. To provide room for a large audience, ladies were requested to lay aside their hoops and gentlemen their swords. By this means an audience of 700 was crowded into the space, and the concert realised £400.[5]

1745 school relocation

From 1743-45, a new dedicated school was constructed in Rathcoole on the outskirts of Dublin to house and educate the girls who were removed from the central Dublin building which was deemed an unsuitable location. The building was designed by an architect by the name of Cummins.[6]

1759 building

The hospital was entirely rebuilt in the Georgian style in 1759 and much of this facade still exists as of 2024 facing North East. It was later incorporated into the newer Victorian building around 1884 with the main door left stranded of its split staircase.[7]

1884 building

The hospital was mostly rebuilt to a design by J.H. Brett in 1884.[8] In the late 19th century Mercer's was one of the chief teaching hospitals in Dublin; it was located close to several schools of medicine, including Kirby's and the Ledwich school (run by Thomas Ledwich) in Peter Street. Ledwich's brother, Edward, became surgeon and lecturer at the hospital. Among other surgeons who practised there in the latter half of the 19th century were Edward Stamer O'Grady.[9]

In the late 1880s trouble broke out among the staff, leading to charges being brought against Dr. O'Grady, senior surgeon at the hospital. In October 1887 he was accused of insulting his professional colleagues to such an extent that they were unable to work with him. He had also charged one of the members of the board with loitering in the female ward for immodest purposes.[10] Some of the staff left. Lectures were disrupted and the numbers of students fell. The row continued into the 1890s until finally he and most of the staff were dismissed by the governors, and he refused to seek re-election. O'Grady died at home on 18 October 1897.[11] A new management team was appointed under the rule of Dr. ("Bull") Elliott in 1898: among them was Sir John Lumsden.[12]

The hospital closed in 1983 and was acquired by the Royal College of Surgeons in Ireland who converted it into a clinical centre and medical library in 1991 keeping on the original front granite facade of the Georgian and Victorian buildings.[1]

Notable physicians

Among the notable physicians who have been associated with Mercer's Hospital are:

At the bi-centennial anniversary of the hospital in 1934 the staff included: Charles B. Maunsell, Seton Pringle, Bethel Solomons, William de Courcy Wheeler and Gibbon Fitzgibbon. House physicians were Dr. Wentworth Taylor and Dr. Muriel Smiddy.[18]

Sources

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. http://www.mercersmedicalcentre.com/page.php?intPageID=16 Mercer's Medical Centre
  2. Ronan. Myles V.. St. Stephen's Hospital, Dublin. Dublin Historical Record. 4. 4. 141–148. Old Dublin Society. Dublin. June 1942.
  3. Web site: Four Courts Press The Churchwardens’ Accounts of the Parishes of St Bride, St Michael Le Pole and St Stephen, Dublin, 1663–1702 . www.fourcourtspress.ie . 27 May 2024.
  4. Lyons, p.21
  5. Web site: Mercer's Hospital. https://web.archive.org/web/20061023081806/http://www.ucd.ie/archives/isa/newsletter/isa-newsletter0609_mercer.html. dead. 23 October 2006. Irish Society for Archives. 1 September 2006. 5 May 2019.
  6. Web site: Dictionary of Irish Architects . www.dia.ie . 16 May 2024.
  7. Web site: Mercer's Medical Centre, Mercer Street, Johnson Place, Dublin 2, DUBLIN . Buildings of Ireland . 7 May 2024.
  8. Fleetwood, 1983
  9. Fealy, p. 33
  10. Irish Times, October 1887
  11. British Medical Journal, 23 October 1897
  12. Lumsden. John. Personal Reminiscences of Mercer's Hospital. Irish Journal of Medical Science. 10. 1. 19–21. Springer . London. January 1935. 10.1007/BF02957321. 70914252.
  13. Book: Conroy, Pauline. A Bit Different: Disability in Ireland. Orpen Press. 2018. 978-1786050601.
  14. http://www.stjohndublin.ie/1673/ History of The St John Ambulance Brigade in Ireland
  15. Irish Journal of Medical Science,Issue Volume 177, Number 2 / June 2008
  16. [Dublin Journal of Medical Science]
  17. "Death of Dr. R.J. Rowlette" Irish Times 14 October 1944, p 1
  18. Irish Times, Bicentenary of Mercer's Hospital, 5 December 1934, p. 5