Home
Browse All
Log in
|
Help
Search
Advanced Search
Find results with:
error div
Add another field
Search by date
from
after
before
on
to
Searching collections:
Alison Jackson
Add or remove collections
Home
Alison Jackson
Rundle Lodge (second Calgary General Hospital).
Reference URL
Share
Add tags
Comment
Rate
To link to this object, paste this link in email, IM or document
To embed this object, paste this HTML in website
Rundle Lodge (second Calgary General Hospital).
View Description
Download
small (250x250 max)
medium (500x500 max)
large ( > 500x500)
Full Resolution
Image
Text
Loading content ...
Description
Rating
Title
Rundle
Lodge
(second
Calgary
General
Hospital)
.
Identifier
aj_0144
Subject
Calgary
(Alta.)
--
History
Location
Calgary, Alberta
Time Coverage
22-May-61
Photographer
Alison Jackson
Donor
Alison Jackson Estate
Type
Still Image
Repository
Calgary Public Library, Central Library, Local History Room
Collection
Alison Jackson Photograph Collection
Rights
Copyright Calgary Public Library. 616 Macleod Trail SE, Calgary AB, T2G 2M2, 1+(403)260-2785 hum1@calgarypubliclibrary.com
Date Photo
22-May-61
Format Photo
6cm
x
6cm
negative
Width Digital
5293
Height Digital
5345
File Size
27653.883 KB
File type
TIF
Notes
“Cornerstones”
were
articles
that
appeared
in the
Sunday
edition
of the
Calgary
Herald
between
1997
and
2000
. The
following
article
appeared
May
24
,
1998
.
•
Bullet
holes
in the
doors
, a
dining
area
that
doubled
as an
operating
room
and
donated
bottles
of
whisky
stored
away
in the
kitchen
.
It
doesn't
sound
like
your
typical
hospital
, but
over
a
century
the
Calgary
General
Hospital
--
which
underwent
four
relocations
as
it
grew
to
keep
pace
with the
city's
burgeoning
population
--
adapted
to the
times
in its
fight
to
survive
. By the
time
it
settled
in its
final
spot
in
Bridgeland
, the
hospital
had
become
an
integral
part
of the
community
.
Last
spring
, the
General
lost
that
fight
,
when
it
was
officially
closed
as
part
of the
Calgary
Regional
Health
Authority's
hospital
restructuring
plan
. By
fall
of this
year
,
most
of the
physical
evidence
of the
General
will be
wiped
out
,
when
demolition
experts
complete
the
implosion
of the
CGH
#4
buildings
constructed
between
1949
and
1977
.
Still
, for
many
Calgarians
, the
memories
will
live
on. The
General
remains
an
important
part
of
our
city's
history
,
whether
it
was the
hospital's
first
incarnation
--
a
two-storey
frame
house
which
held
only
four
beds
--
or the
big
hospital
at the
base
of
Memorial
Drive
N.E
. In
honor
of the
venerable
hospital's
past
glory
,
here's
a
look
back
at the
different
lives
of the
General
.
Calgarians
first
recognized
the
need
for a
public
hospital
in the
late
1880s
when
it
became
apparent
that the
North
West
Mounted
Police
Fort
infirmary
wasn't
equipped
to
handle
the
needs
of the
newly
incorporated
town
. On
July
2
,
1884
the
Calgary
Herald
reported
, "
Benevolence
is
the
handmaid
of
religion
. A
public
hospital
is
a
necessity
where
the
majority
of a
community
are
single
men
.
Lacking
the
care
bestowed
on the
sick
at
home
, an
institution
is
needed
that will as
nearly
as
possible
supply
this. At
present
the
only
place
for the
sick
is
the
Police
Hospital
.
Kindly
have
patients
been
cared
for
while
there, but
we
know
not how
soon
an
order
may
be
issued
by the
authorities
in
Ottawa
for the
non-admission
of
civilians
.
It
is
well
to
prepare
for
such
an
emergency.
" The
Hospital
Committee
,
formed
in
1886
,
obtained
a
4.5-acre
land
grant
from the
territorial
government
on the
current
demolition
site
of
Calgary
General
Hospital
#4
in
Bridgeland
. The
land
was not
within
Calgary
town
limits
and
couldn't
be
used
for a
municipally-supported
hospital
.
Instead
, a "
cottage
hospital
" was
opened
in a
7th
Avenue
S.W
.
residence
. In
November
1890
,
Calgary
General
Hospital
was
incorporated
by
order-in-council
of the
lieutenant-governor
and the
council
of the
North
West
Territories
.
It
was
initially
funded
by a
$300
grant
from the
territorial
government
,
private
subscriptions
and
patients
'
fees
.
Financial
difficulties
plagued
the
early
years
and
donations
of
vegetable
,
wine
and
whisky
were
gratefully
accepted
. In
spite
of the
fact
that the
Women's
Hospital
Aid
Society
,
organized
by
Mrs
.
Pinkham
,
raised
most
of the
funds
to
establish
and
maintain
the
hospital
,
subscribers
didn't
elect
any
women
to the
board
.
Many
of
Calgary's
businessmen
and
politicians
were
among
the
charter
board
members
:
Daniel
Webster
Marsh
,
George
Clift
King
,
James
Walker
,
Charles
B
.
Rouleau
,
Cyprian
Pinkham
and
James
A.
Lougheed
.
Thirteen
men
were
appointed
to the
first
board
of
directors
in
1890
including
William
Pearce
,
Amos
Rowe
,
Thomas
Underwood
and
Alfred
E
Cross
.
All
four
main
buildings
or
complexes
which
have
accommodated
Calgary
General
Hospital
--
from its
opening
in
1890
to the
closure
of
CGH
#4
in
1997
--
have been
demolished
.
Calgary
General
Hospital
#1
:
7th
Street
and
7th
Avenue
S.W
.
•
The
first
Calgary
General
Hospital
opened
in
October
1890
in a
two-storey
frame
house
under
the
direction
of
superintendent
Amos
Rowe
and the
first
matron
and
cook
,
Mrs
.
Nelson
Hoad
.
•
In
1891
,
127
patients
were
treated
for
colds
,
alcoholism
,
pneumonia
and
typhoid
.
Miss
Marion
Moodie
,
Calgary
General's
first
student
nurse
,
arrived
at the "
cottage
hospital
" in the
spring
of
1895
,
just
weeks
before
it
was
abandoned
for
more
substantial
quarters
. She
wrote
: "The
building
had
seen
the
earlier
and
rougher
days
of the
town
, and
when
taken
over
as a
hospital
had
bullet
holes
through
some
of the
doors
. On the
ground
floor
there was
one
ward
holding
four
beds
, an
office
and a
dining
room
which
was
converted
into an
operating
room
when
necessary
, and a
kitchen
.
•
"
Upstairs
there were
four
small
rooms
,
each
holding
one
bed
, and
over
the
kitchen
two
small
rooms
for the
staff
and the
cook
.
I
occupied
the
cook's
room
by
day
while
the
cook
had
it
at
night.
"
•
The
house
eventually
reverted
to
residential
use
and was
demolished
in the
late
1960s
.
Calgary
General
Hospital
#2
("Rundle
Ruins")
:
6th
Street
and
12th
Avenue
S.E
.
•
Built
:
1894-1895
•
Demolished
:
1973
•
The
cornerstone
of the
new
sandstone
hospital
,
designed
by
Calgary
architects
Child
and
Wilson
and
built
by
Thomas
Underwood
, was
laid
September
1
,
1894
, by the
Hon
.
T
.
Mayne
Daly
,
Minister
of the
Interior
. The
35-bed
hospital
officially
opened
May
22
,
1895
.
•
The
Women's
Hospital
Aid
Society
furnished
the
beds
,
linen
,
furniture
and
even
outfitted
the
operating
room
. The
modern
new
facility
had
five
private
wards
, a
signal
bell
system
,
electric
lights
and
one
telephone
.
•
A
nurses
'
training
school
was
established
and the
first
student
,
Miss
Marion
Moodie
,
graduated
in
1898
.
•
Maternity
wings
were
added
in
1899
and
1905
and a
second
two-
storey
ward
in
1903
.
When
CGH
#3
was
opened
north
of the
Bow
River
in
1910
, the
old
sandstone
quarters
became
an
Isolation
Hospital
. In
July
1954
,
when
the
Isolation
Ward
of
CGH
#4
opened
, the
residents
were
transferred
to the
new
facility
in a
move
dubbed
"
Operation
Measles.
"
Between
1954
and
1971
the
former
hospital
housed
the
United
Church's
seniors
home
,
called
Rundle
Lodge
.
•
The
building
was
demolished
in
1973
and a
portion
of the
structure
incorporated
into a
park
scheme
which
was
dedicated
in
1974
as "
Rundle
Ruins
" by
Premier
Peter
Lougheed
.
Calgary
General
Hospital
#3
:
841
Centre
Avenue
S.E
.
•
Built
:
1908-1910
•
Demolished
:
1959
•
On
February
1
,
1910
,
Calgary
General
Hospital
north
of the
Bow
River
was
officially
opened
by
Alberta
Lieutenant-Governor
Bulyea
. The
$150,000
,
four-storey
brick
and
sandstone
building
with a
bed
capacity
of
160
had a
large
central
unit
with
east
and
west
wings
. The "
most
modern
hospital
in
Alberta
"
included
all
the
conveniences
:
elevator
,
telephones
,
patient
call
bells
and
running
water
.
Daily
rates
:
$1
in
general
ward
,
$1.50
for
maternity
and
$3
to
$5
for
private
ward
.
•
Almost
as
soon
as
Calgary
General
Hospital
#3
opened
in
1910
, there were
complaints
that
it
was
too
small
and
obsolete
. By
1939
Calgary's
population
had
reached
83,000
and the
situation
was
critical
.
Numerous
additions
were
built
as the
hospital
tried
to
keep
pace
with
community
need
.
Nurses
'
residences
were
built
in
1919
,
1939
and
1943
.
Building
throughout
the
1940s
included
a
lecture
hall
, a
practice
ward
for
students
and a
maternity
wing
.
•
Although
a
firm
of
architects
was
hired
to
study
alternate
sites
,
including
the
Lougheed
Mansion
property
on
13th
Avenue
, the
public
supported
the
construction
of a
new
$4.5-million
facility
to be
built
immediately
west
of the
1910
hospital
.
•
CGH
#3
was
razed
in
1959
to
make
way
for the
Convalescent-
Rehabilitation
Building
,
built
in
1962
.
Calgary
General
Hospital
#4
:
841
Centre
Avenue
S
.
E
.
•
Built
:
1949-1953
•
Demolished
:
1998
•
Calgary
General
Hospital
#4
opened
May
3
,
1953
, with
626
beds
and
110
bassinets
.
Expansion
of the
facility
began
almost
immediately
with a
building
program
: the
psychiatric
ward
(1954)
;
nurses
'
residence
(1956)
; a
north
wing
including
radiology
and
administration
and a
south
wing
including
the
pediatric
unit
(1958)
; the
eight-storey
rehabilitation
wing
(1962)
; the
service
wing
(1967)
; the
Gertrude
M
.
Hall
education
wing
, to
accommodate
the
General's
role
as a
teaching
hospital
for the
University
of
Calgary's
Faculty
of
Medicine
(1970)
; a
three-storey
addition
to the
service
wing
(1973)
; and the
Centennial
Wing
,
which
included
Canada's
first
forensic
psychiatric
unit
in a
general
hospital
(1977)
.
•
In
July
1988
, the
new
500-bed
Peter
Lougheed
Centre
opened
in
northeast
Calgary
.
CGH
#
4
,
renamed
the
Bow
Valley
Centre
,
officially
closed
in
April
1997
as
part
of the
Calgary
Regional
Health
Authority's
hospital
restructuring
plan
"to
build
a
better
system
at a
lower
cost.
"
•
Many
of the
programs
,
functions
and
staff
of the
107-year-old
institution
known
as the
Calgary
General
Hospital
were
integrated
into
newer
hospital
facilities
.
•
Demolition
of
CGH
#4
buildings
constructed
between
1949
and
1977
will be
completed
in the
fall
of
1998
.
“Then
&
Now”
columns
appeared
weekly
in the
Calgary
Herald
between
2002
and
2005
. The
following
article
appeared
August
27
,
2003
.
Then:
Calgary
General
Hospital
#2
•
The
new
35-bed
sandstone
hospital
,
designed
by
Calgary
architects
Child
and
Wilson
, was
built
in
1895
by
Thomas
Underwood
to
replace
the
city's
eight-room
cottage
hospital
. The
Women's
Hospital
Aid
Society
donated
beds
,
linen
,
furniture
and
outfitted
the
operating
room
. The
new
facility
had
five
private
wards
, a
signal
bell
system
,
electric
lights
and
one
telephone
. A
nurses
'
training
school
was
established
and the
first
student
,
Marion
Moodie
,
graduated
in
1898
.
Maternity
wings
were
added
in
1899
and
1905
and a
second
two-storey
ward
in
1903
. With the
1910
opening
of
Calgary
General
north
of the
Bow
River
, the
facility
became
an
isolation
hospital
.
Between
1954
and
1971
, the
former
hospital
housed
Rundle
Lodge
, a
seniors
home
operated
by the
United
Church
.
Now
:
Rundle
Ruins
•
Although
most
of the
historic
hospital
building
was
demolished
in
1973
,
some
of the
sandstone
walls
were
left
standing
and
incorporated
into
Rundle
Ruins
park
. In
1974
,
then-premier
Peter
Lougheed
dedicated
the
site
. His
grandfather
,
Senator
James
Alexander
Lougheed
, had been a
member
of the
General's
board
when
the
cornerstone
for the
building
was
laid
in
1894
.
Despite
urban
development
, the
park
still
stands
as a
monument
.
CONTENTdm file name
526.tif
CONTENTdm number
525
Tags
Add tags
for Rundle Lodge (second Calgary General Hospital).
View as list
|
View as tag cloud
|
report abuse
Comments
Post a Comment
for
Rundle Lodge (second Calgary General Hospital).
Your rating was saved.
you wish to report:
Your comment:
Your Name:
Submit
Cancel
...
Back to top
Select the collections to add or remove from your search
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Z
Select All Collections
A
Alison Jackson
C
Calgary Public Library Archives—Our Story in Pictures
Century Homes
H
Historic Maps of Calgary and Alberta
J
Judith Umbach
P
Postcards From the Past
500
You have selected:
1
OK
Cancel