London Fever Hospital
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The London Fever Hospital was a voluntary hospital financed from public donations in Liverpool Road in London. It was one of the first fever hospitals in the country.


History

Originally established with 15 beds in 1802 in Gray's Inn Road, it moved in 1815 to the west wing of the Smallpox Hospital at Battle Bridge where it had 120 beds. After the Northern Railway bought the original site for Kings Cross station the compensation money paid enabled the charity to commission a new Hospital on Kettle Field, a 4-acre site in Liverpool Road, Islington with 200 beds. The new hospital, which was designed by Charles Fowler, opened in 1848. By 1924 it had about 150 beds. A new wing was opened by the Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother, Duchess of York in 1928 and a new isolation block was opened by the Prince George, Duke of Kent, Duke of Kent in 1938. In 1948, the hospital joined the National Health Service under the same management as the Royal Free Hospital. After services had been transferred to the Royal Free Hospital, the hospital closed in 1975.


See also

*Grove Hospital, Grove Fever Hospital


References


Further reading

*The London Fever Hospital. Lancet, 1848, ii, p 483 *The London Encyclopaedia; Ben Weinreb, Christopher Hibbert. Macmillan 1995. {{ISBN, 978-0-333-57688-5, p 476, 692


External links


NHS History: Fever Hospitals
1802 establishments in England Defunct hospitals in London History of the London Borough of Camden History of the London Borough of Islington Voluntary hospitals Fever hospitals