St. Davnet's Hospital | |
Org/Group: | Health Service Executive |
Map Type: | Ireland |
Region: | Monaghan, County Monaghan |
Country: | Ireland |
Healthcare: | HSE |
Type: | Specialist |
Speciality: | Psychiatric hospital |
Founded: | 1869 |
St. Davnet's Hospital (ga|Ospidéal Naomh Damhnait) is a psychiatric hospital in Monaghan, County Monaghan, Ireland.
The hospital, which was designed by John McCurdy, was opened as the Cavan and Monaghan District Lunatic Asylum in 1869.[1] [2] Two chapels were built, one for Catholic patients and the other for Protestant patients, and these were renovated by William Alphonsus Scott in 1910.[3]
The Irish republican, Peadar O'Donnell, was regarded as the first Irish person to use the term "occupation" in relation to the occupation of a workplace, when he and the staff of the hospital occupied the site in 1919. "The occupation was, in fact, the first action in Ireland to describe itself as a soviet, and the Red Flag was raised above the hospital."[4] It became Monaghan Mental Hospital in the late 1920s and St. Davnet's Hospital in the 1950s.[5]
After the introduction of deinstitutionalisation in the late 1980s the hospital went into a period of decline[6] [7] and activities became focused on Blackwater House.[8]
. Charles Brett. Buildings of Monaghan. Belfast. Ulster Architectural Heritage Society. 1970.