LOST HOSPITALS OF LONDON
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Albert Dock (Seamen's) HospitalAlnwick Road, Custom House, E16 3EZ |
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Medical dates: Medical character:
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1890 - 1991 Acute, for merchant seamen. |
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The foundation stone for a new hospital for the care of merchant seamen was laid on 15th July 1889 by the Prince of Wales (later King George V). The Royal Albert Dock Hospital was officially opened on 24th June 1890 by the Prince of Wales (later Edward VII). It was a branch of the Dreadnought Seamen's Hospital in Greenwich. The Hospital had two general wards of 5 beds each, a 2-bedded isolation ward and 2 single rooms, an Out-Patient Department, dispensary, kitchen, post-mortem room and an ambulance house. Located in Connaught Road, near the western
entrance to
the Royal Albert Docks, it was managed by the Seamen's Hospital
Society and was open to the general public. However, it dealt
mainly with injuries acquired
by dock workers. The new Hospital had 55 beds and an Out-Patients Department, including a fracture clinic, a rehabilitation centre and a VD unit. A Nurses' Home had also been built. In 1948 it joined the NHS and became known as
the Albert Dock Seamen's
Hospital. |
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In Alnwick Road the gates of the Hospital are still preserved. The newly built Sally Sherman Nursing Home is seen on the left.
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The foundation stones of the Hospital are mounted on the wall of the right-hand gate. |
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The foundation stones of the Seamen's Hospital. The one on the left is dated 1889 and the one on the right 1937. The Sally Sherman Nursing Home has been built on the northern part of the Hospital site. New housing in Felsted Road, built on the southern part of the Hospital site. |
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References Cook GC, Webb AJ 1990 Early history of tropical medicine in London. Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine 83, 38-41. Cook GC, Webb AJ 2001 The
Albert Dock Hospital, London: the original site (in 1899) of
tropical medicine as a new discipline. Acta Tropica 79,
249-255. |