Defunct Manhattan hospital
Hospital in New York, United States
Lying-In Hospital ,[ 1] [ 2] which was chartered in 1799, was given a strong boost in 1897 with "the magnificent gift of $1,000,000" from J. Pierpont Morgan .[ 3] [ 4]
It relocated[ 5] more than once, both before and after Morgan's donation. Their focus was expectant women.[ 6] Lying-In Hospital merged in 1932 with New York Hospital ,[ 5] and the original name was dropped.[ 7]
Their "Second Avenue, between 17th and 18th Streets" location "was redeveloped as an apartment building in the 1980s."[ 8]
^ "Lying-In Hospital Prepares to Move - 134-Year-Old Institution Will Be Part of 3-Unit Merger on East River Front - Once An Almshouse Ward - Famous Maternity Centre to Go On With Graduate and Nurse Training Courses" . The New York Times . August 7, 1932. Retrieved October 12, 2015 .
^ "Hospital Moves 52 To Its New Home - Manhattan General Patients Are Taken Safely to Former Lying-In Building - Shift Is Made In Four Hours - Four Ambulances Make 10 Trips Each Between East 90th St. and Stuyvesant Square" . The New York Times . July 27, 1936. Retrieved October 12, 2015 .
^ "MR. MORGAN'S BENEFICENCE; WHAT THE LYING-IN HOSPITAL WILL DO WITH $1,000,000. The Managers Had Planned a Fine Institution, but Had Not Expected So Speedy Fruition of Their Hopes" . The New York Times . January 15, 1897.
^ Nadine Brozan (January 22, 2006). "A Chance to Return to Your Roots" . The New York Times .
^ a b "CANCER CLINIC BUYS LYING-IN PROPERTY; Announces $5,000,000 Drive to Remodel, Equip and Endow Stuyvesant Park Site. REMOVAL IS SET FOR 1931 Purchase Made Possible by Sale of 5th Av. Realty and Lying-In Merger With New York Hospital. Lack of Space Cited. $5,000,000 Needs Listed" . The New York Times . September 12, 1929.
^ "LOCAL INTELLIGENCE.; DEATH AT A PRIVATE LYING-IN HOSPITAL. An Unknown Woman the Victim of Malpractice The Body to be Seen in Hudson-street" . The New York Times . July 21, 1865.
^ "The Record of the Society of the Lying-In Hospital of the City of New York" (PDF) . 1799-1989, 1390.75 Linear Inches (318 Volumes, 34 Boxes)
^ Ronnie Koenig (May 12, 2017). "When Home Was a Hospital" . The New York Times .