Monday, May 21, 2012

United States Marine Hospital of Louisville



The United States Marine Hospital in Louisville, Kentucky, in the Portland neighborhood was built in 1845, and is considered the best remaining antebellum hospital in the United States. Of the seven hospitals built in the mid-19th century by the Marine Hospital Service “for the benefit of sick seamen, boatmen, and other navigators on the western rivers and lakes.” It is the only one still standing, even after surviving two tornadoes. The building has been extensively restored to match its appearance in 1899.

The U.S. Marine Hospital opened in 1852. The patients at the Louisville Marine Hospital were usually victims of disease, temperature extremes, and mechanical deficiencies of the era's naval technology. During the American Civil War, along with Jefferson General Hospital, it formed the foundation of Louisville health care for wounded soldiers, both Union and captured Confederates. It is believed that a third of the total patients were black. During World War I the hospital cared for many amputees injured in the war. During the 1930s, it served as housing for nurses and doctors of nearby hospitals. The hospital closed in 1933.


The city of Louisville purchased the building in 1950 for $25,000 and used it for a short time as a hospital for the chronically ill.

In the late 1950s, it housed medical residents working in the newer hospital directly behind it, which replaced the Marine Hospital and today is known as Family Health Center Portland. The building was vacant from 1976 until 2007. It was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1997.

Source: Wikipedia



News events from the period concerning Marine Hospitals of the United States of America during the 1800s.

Newspaper Clippings:

27 May 1870

Courier-Journal

At present there are 32 white and 58 colored patients in the U.S. Marine Hospital on High street, a larger number than ever before at any one time.



Louisville Commercial

1 January 1871

United States Marine Hospital

It may not be known to many who are entitled to the benefits of the United States Marine Hospital in this city, that the law provides that all persons who find a livelihood on the river, lakes, or seas, from the captain to the stoker and roustabout (all classed as seamen), when sick or disabled, are entitled to care and treatment in the hospital free of charge. To gain admission into the hospital a certificate from the officer of the boat, or any other reasonable proof of the man’s occupation, presented at the office of Mr. Luse, the surveyor of the port, will insure his card of admission. During the year 1,466 patients were admitted, 27 of whom died.


The following is the official report of the surgeon of the hospital for December (1870):

NUMBER OF PATIENTS REMAINING LAST DAY OF NOVEMBER (1870)

Whites………………………51

Colored……………………..44

Total………………...95



ADMITTED DURING THE MONTH

Whites………………………84

Colored……………………..46

Total………………...130

No. patients remaining and admitted….225



DISCHARGED DURING THE MONTH

Whites………………………60

Colored……………………..33

Total………………...93



DIED DURING THE MONTH

Whites………………………3

Colored……………………..2

Total………………...5



REMAINING THE LAST DAY OF THE MONTH

Whites……………………..77

Colored……………………50

Total……………….127



T.J. Griffith Surgeon in charge, 363 West Jefferson Street, between Ninth and Tenth



Louisville Commercial

1 January 1871

Wm. Trice, a colored deck-hand on the steamer United States, had his knee crushed with a hogshead of tobacco yesterday, while assisting in loading He was taken to the Marine Hospital. The limb will probably have to be amputated.

Louisville Commercial

8 January 1871

George C. Smith, formerly a roustabout on the steamer N. J. Bigler, was taken to the United States Marine Hospital on Friday, suffering from mania-a-potu and exposure, and died yesterday. John Moss, a river man, formerly on the Tarascon, was taken to the same hospital with frozen feet. The stoppage of the boats on the river has thrown a number of men out of employment who take no care of themselves, and drink to stupor, when they lie down on the streets, and before they are picked up are half frozen, and receive injuries from which they die.

Louisville Commercial

10 January 1871

Barry Tallman, formerly of the steamer Mary Huston, had his foot crushed yesterday, and was sent to the United States Marine Hospital.

Louisville Commercial

25 January 1871

Henry Thompson had his feet terribly scalded by the playfulness of the cook on the steamer Shannon. George Winn, while rolling a hogshead of tobacco on the Morning Star, had his leg crushed. Both Thompson and Winn were sent to the United States Marine Hospital.

Louisville Commercial

31 January 1871

Wm. Fuller, who has run as a pilot on the Western rivers for a quarter of a century, and who was for many years past a pilot between Cincinnati and Maysville, died at the Marine Hospital yesterday of dropsy. He had been operated upon three times, each time feeling great relief, but the disease finally caused his death.

Louisville Commercial

13 August 1871

The U.S. Marine Hospital A religious order of the Catholic Church, known as the Sisters of Mercy, has had the management of the United States Marine Hospital, in this city, for more than two years, and have again re-leased it for a term of years. Dr. Thomas J. Griffiths remaining as surgeon in charge. When the Sisters took the hospital they started with eight patients, and now it averages nearly one hundred marine patients, besides a number of private patients. The management of the hospital has been such that sick marines from the Western rivers and lakes have been sent to it for treatment. The discipline in the hospital has been equal to any naval hospital in the country, and has met with the favorable notice of the Treasury Department. The duties of the surgeon in charge have been so largely increased that Dr. Griffiths has been authorized by the department to employ an assistant, and has appointed Dr. Oliver H. Luse, a young gentleman of great promise, who graduated last winter at one of the medical schools of this city.


We congratulate Dr. Luse on his rapid progress in his profession, and believe that Dr. Griffiths will find in him a faithful, energetic and capable assistant. Seventeen Sisters of Mercy now comprise the force, performing all the duties of the management of the hospital, which has become in two years the most prominent Government hospital west of the mountains. To accommodate the large increase of patients, additions will be made to the hospital, and water-pipes will be extended through the building. We are justly proud of this institution in our midst, and feel that it can take rank with any naval hospital in the country.


17 February 1872

Courier-Journal

Woman in the Marine Hospital Mary Jane Grant, a colored chamber-maid, was admitted yesterday to the United States Marine Hospital from the steamer Camelia. She is the only female that has applied for admission to that institution within three years. The managers, however, extend a welcome to all “marines,” whether they are black or white, foreign or domestic, Federal or Confederate. The Sisters of Mercy have charge there and are ever ready and willing to nurse suffering humanity, wheresoever and in whomsoever they find it.


4 February 1876

Courier-Journal

The U.S. Marine Hospital With the 1st of January the lease of the Sisters of Mercy on the United States Marine Hospital, in this city, expired, and the Government took charge of the building, turning it into a class one of marine hospitals. It had belonged to class two, which is composed of all hospitals leased by the Government. The Sisters of Mercy have been in charge of the Marine Hospital in this city since 1869, and have conducted it in an excellent manner. Hereafter it will be under the control of Dr. Tom Griffiths, the surgeon and his assistant, Dr. W. H. Long, who will, through Col. Luse, surveyor of customs, furnish all the supplies and employ the persons necessary to the establishment. Three of the Sisters of Mercy have been retained for nurses and other purposes. The Marine Hospital is one of the largest in the country and adds many thousand dollars per year to the coffers of Louisville people. The surgeon and his assistant are gentlemen well known in the community, and thoroughly able to take care of the establishment. Louisville City Hospital Preston and Chestnut Streets.


REPORT ON LOUISVILLE’S PUBLIC HEALTH:

Two Hospitals Serve More than 100,000 citizens In 1870, the population of Louisville, Kentucky reached 101,000 for the first time. Despite this large population, only two medical facilities existed. The U.S. Marine Hospital (located in the Portland community) served boatmen and federal employees. The Louisville City Hospital (originally known as the Louisville Marine Hospital) cared for the general public. Located at Preston and Chestnut streets, the City Hospital admitted only white patients. Then, as now, the building also served as a teaching hospital and was associated with the University of Louisville School of Medicine.


Mortuary Report

The following is the mortuary report for the Week ending December 31, 1870:


LOUISVILLE, KY. HEALTH OFFICE

December 31, 1870

Accident ...2

Bronchitis ...1

Consumption ...5

Congestion of brain ...1

Convulsions ...2

Colic ...1

Croup ...2

Delirium Tremens ...1

Fever, puerperal ...1

Fever, typhoid ...1

Gun-shot wound ...1

Knife wound ...1

Old age ...2

Paralysis ...1

Pneumonia ...2

Premature birth ...1

Rheumatism ...2

Scrofula ...1

Still born ...5

Teething ...1

Trismus ...1

Unknown ...

TOTAL ...37



SEX

Male ...24

Female ...13



COLOR

White ...23

Black ...14



AGE

Under 3 years ...15

3-6 years ...1

6-10 years ...0

10-20 years ...3

20-30 years ...5

30-40 years ...3

40-50 years ...4

50-60 years ...3

60-70 years ...0

70 and over ...3


NATIVITY America, 27; Ireland, 5; Germany, 3; England, 1; Scotland, 1

Eastern District ...23

Western District ...14

Without medical attention ...7



C.B. Blackburn, M.D.

Secretary, Board of Health


Coroner’s Report

Sept. 5 through December 31, 1870

Suicide from poison, male 1, female 1 ...2

Suicide from hanging ...1

Bursting blood-vessel ...3

Crushed to death in clay-bank, white 1, colored 1 ...2

Drowned, male 4, female 1, white 4, colored 1 ...5

Run over by wagon ...1

Run over by street-car, white 1, colored 1 ...2

Heart disease, males 5, females 3, whites, 7, colored 1 ...8

Old age, males 1, females 1 ...2

Intemperance, males 2, females 1, white 2, colored 1 ...3

Infanticide, males 3, females 2; white 1, colored 4 ...5

Murdered, males 7, white 5, colored 2 ...7

Skull fractured while blasting rock ...2

Falling in pit ...1

Burning, females 2, white 1, colored 1 ...2

Falling and breaking neck ...2

Concussion of brain ...2

Kicked by mule ...1

Causes known, white 1, colored 2 ...3

By explosion of boiler ...1

Total ...55


LOUISVILLE CITY HOSPITAL

Report of pay and charity patients admitted, discharged, died and born at Louisville City Hospital during the month of December 1870:

No. patients remaining November 30, 1870 ..118

No. patients admitted during December, 1870 ...94

TOTAL ...212

No. patients discharged ...60

No. patients died ...8

No. patients remaining December 31, 1871 ...144

TOTAL ...212

No. dispensary patients prescribed for and medicines furnished ...100

No. children born ...4



Mrs. E. H. Geary, Superintendent


Source: http://www.marinehospital.org/historypages.htm