Queen Alexandra Hospital, Hobart

Queen Alexandra Hospital, Hobart
Map
Geography
LocationBattery Point, Hobart, Tasmania, Australia
Organisation
Care systemDHHS
TypeMaternity, neonatal care
Affiliated universityNone
Services
Emergency departmentYes, Neonatal Intensive care
Beds11
History
Opened1902
Closed1980
Links

The Queen Alexandra Hospital for Women was a maternity hospital and children's hospital established at Hobart, Tasmania in 1905 to commemorate the coronation of King Edward VII and Queen Alexandra in 1902 on a site in Hampden Road, Battery Point.[1]

The hospital was primarily designed to care for women who were pregnant, in need of natal and neonatal care, and as a training hospital for midwives and nurses.[1]

It was originally operated by a private board of management, but in 1950 it came under the control of the Government of Tasmania, who increasingly affiliated its services with those of the Royal Hobart Hospital. In 1980, the building in Battery Point which was becoming too antiquated for modern health care services, was closed, and the Queen Alexandra hospital was moved to a new wing attached to the Royal. In 1999, the Queen Alexandra wing was leased to a private hospital organisation, which re-opened the site as the Hobart Private Hospital.

Hollywood actor Errol Flynn was born at the hospital in 1909.[2] Martin Bryant, the perpetrator of the Port Arthur massacre, was born at the hospital in May 1967.[3] Queen Mary, the current Queen consort of Denmark, was born as Mary Elizabeth Donaldson at Queen Alexandra Hospital on 5 February 1972.[4]

  1. ^ a b Agency Details: Queen Alexandra Hospital for Women, Archives Office of Tasmania.
  2. ^ Tierney, Judy: Seeking out Flynn, The 7.30 Report (Australian Broadcasting Corporation), 1 October 2002.
  3. ^ Wainwright, Robert (26 April 2009). "A dangerous mind: what turned Martin Bryant into a mass murderer?". The Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved 7 June 2024.
  4. ^ Palshoj, Karin; Redder, Gitte; Mallett, Zanne Jappe (1 November 2005). Mary, Crown Princess of Denmark. Allen & Unwin. ISBN 978-1-74115-887-8.