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‘For the Convenience and Comfort of the Persons Employed by them’: The Lowell Corporation Hospital, 1840–1930

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 February 2013

Janet Greenlees*
Affiliation:
Centre for the Social History of Health and Healthcare, Glasgow Caledonian University, Cowcaddens Rd, Glasgow G4 0BA, UK
*
*Email address for correspondence: Janet.Greenlees@gcu.ac.uk
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Abstract

The first industrial hospital in America opened in 1840 in Lowell, Massachusetts. The Lowell Corporation Hospital was sponsored by the town’s textile employers for ninety years. This article analyses the contextual complications surrounding the employers’ sustained funding of the hospital. Motivations for sustained sponsorship included paternalism, clinical excellence, business custom, the labour situation in Lowell, civic duty and the political advantages of paternalism. By analysing the changing local context of the hospital, this article argues that a broader, more integrated approach to healthcare histories and institution histories is needed if we are to fully understand the myriad of healthcare providers and their local and national importance.

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Articles
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2013. Published by Cambridge University Press.
Figure 0

Figure 1: Dr Gilman Kimball, c. 1875. Image courtesy of the Lowell Historical Society, Lowell, Massachusetts.

Figure 1

Table 1: Reasons for admittance to the Lowell Corporation Hospital, 1840–9. Kimball classified a total of seventy-one different diseases admitted to the hospital during these years. Only the most prevalent are listed above. Source: Kimball, Report, 1849, 4 and UML, CLH: Lowell Hospital Association, Registry of Patients, 1840–87.

Figure 2

Table 2: Income sources for the Lowell Corporation Hospital, 1903 and 1914. Source: Annual Reports, 1903 and 1914. The remaining income was from X-rays and the sale of medicines – primarily the latter.

Figure 3

Table 3: Comparison of the costs for room and board at three Lowell hospitals and two Boston hospitals. Sources: Report of the Lowell General Hospital for the Year Ending 1 May, 1911, 55; Annual Report of the Lowell Corporation Hospital for the Year 1914 (Lowell, 1915), 5; Annual Report of the Fiftieth Year of St John’s Hospital (Lowell, 1916), 10. Vogel, Invention of Modern Hospital, 122; Vogel, ‘Transformation of the American Hospital’, 112.