New York Nursery and Child's Hospital explained

New York Nursery and Child's Hospital
Location:New York City
Country:US
Former-Names:The Nursery for the Children of Poor Women
Opened:1854
Closed:1934

New York Nursery and Child's Hospital was an obstetrics and pediatrics hospital founded on May 2, 1854 by Mary Ann Delafield DuBois and Ana R. Emmit in New York City.[1] [2] Initially the Hospital served as a foundling home and provided care for New York's working women and their children. It was a pioneer in treating infants under the age of two.[3] [4] __TOC__

History

Forerunners to the Hospital included the Marion Street Maternity Hospital, which was organized in 1823 and then incorporated in 1827 as “The New York Female Asylum for Lying-In Women."[5] Its stated mission was:

To furnish comfortable conditions and skillful attendance to respectable married women who require an asylum during the period of their confinement, and also to supply competent medical care to deserving married women at their homes under similar circumstances.

In 1854, a hospital was founded under the name, "The Nursery for the Children of Poor Women," by DuBois and Emmit. It provided care for the children of wet nurses while they were at work. Later, its scope was broadened and it became known as the Nursery and Child's Hospital. DuBois served as its director for more than 30 years.

In 1899, the New York Infant Asylum consolidated with the Marion Street Maternity Hospital. Those combined institutions were then joined with the Nursery and Child's Hospital to become the New York Nursery and Child's Hospital in 1910. According to an Annual Report, its work consisted of:

  1. A Lying-in Hospital;
  2. A Hospital for sick children;
  3. A Boarding-out Department, supplanting the nursery in the Building. The foundling children are placed in suitable homes and their general welfare supervised by visitors from the hospital;
  4. An Outside Obstetrical Department, continuing the work begun by the Old Marion Street Maternity Hospital. Physicians connected with the staff are sent to the homes of those who apply for aid;
  5. The training of nursery maids, who, after a systematic course in the care of young children, are open to employment in private families.

During the 1930s the hospital was in financial trouble and on November 21, 1934 it was absorbed by the New York Hospital-Cornell Medical Center.[6] Its specialty departments were discontinued and their services were taken on by other New York City institutions. The hospital's foster home became the New York Child's Foster Home Service.

References

  1. Web site: Nursery and Child's Hospital Records 1854-1934 . 2011 . New-York Historical Society . 2020-03-04.
  2. Ada Calhoun, St. Marks is Dead: The Many Lives of America's Hippest Street (W. W. Norton & Company 2015).
  3. Julie Miller, Abandoned: Foundlings in Nineteenth-century New York City (New York University Press 2008).
  4. Virginia A. Metaxas Quiroga, "Female Lay Managers and Scientific Pediatrics at Nursery and Child's Hospital, 1854-1910" Bulletin of the History of Medicine 60(2)(Summer 1986): 194-208. via JStor
  5. Book: New York Nursery and Child's Hospital Annual Report . New York Nursery and Child's Hospital . 1910 . New York City . 59–63.
  6. Web site: New York Nursery and Child's Hospital . Weill Cornell Medicine Samuel J. Wood Library . 2020-03-04.