Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal

Royal Victoria Hospital
Hôpital Royal Victoria
McGill University Health Centre
Location in Montreal (Glen site)
Geography
Location Montreal, Quebec, Canada
Coordinates 45°28′19″N 73°36′10″W / 45.471851°N 73.602716°W / 45.471851; -73.602716Coordinates: 45°28′19″N 73°36′10″W / 45.471851°N 73.602716°W / 45.471851; -73.602716
Organization
Care system RAMQ (Quebec medicare)
Hospital type Teaching
Affiliated university McGill University Faculty of Medicine
Services
Emergency department Yes
Beds 517
Speciality General medicine, Surgery, Organ Transplantation
History
Founded 1893
Links
Website http://muhc.ca/royalvic/
Lists Hospitals in Canada

The Royal Victoria Hospital (French: Hôpital Royal Victoria), popularly known, the "Royal Vic" or "The Vic", is a hospital, forming part of the McGill University Health Centre, affiliated with McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Since 2015, it has been housed at the Glen Site, named for the former Glen railway yards.

History

Surgeons Norman Bethune, Arthur Vineberg & Perron assisting Edward William Archibald in an operation at the Royal Victoria Hospital, 1933

The Royal Victoria Hospital was established in 1893 in the historic Golden Square Mile through donations by two public-spirited Scottish immigrants, the cousins Donald Smith, 1st Lord Strathcona, and George Stephen, 1st Lord Mount Stephen. In 1887, they announced a joint gift of C$1,000,000 for the construction of a free hospital in Montreal and purchased a site on Mount Royal for a further C$86,000.[1] The site they bought was the old Frothingham estate that covered ten acres of land.[2] During 1897 and 1898, Smith and Stephen gave another C$1,000,000 between them in Great Northern Railroad securities to establish an endowment fund to maintain the hospital.[3] Stephen and Smith attached one caveat to their generous contribution to the City of Montreal: the hospital's land and its buildings must only ever be used for healing.[4]

The founders intended the Royal Vic "to be for the use of the sick and ailing without distinction of race or creed," and when it opened in 1893 it was hailed as the "finest and most perfectly equipped (hospital) on the great American continent".[5] The hospital originally had 150 employees, including 14 medical doctors.[6]

Over the years, the philanthropy and business acumen of many of the residents of the Golden Square Mile - the prominent members of Montreal's English speaking community - brought the hospital global recognition as a major centre of healthcare and learning. Major contributors included James Ross, Richard Angus, Sir Vincent Meredith and Sir Montagu Allan.

In 1920, the hospital became a medical research institute through the McGill University Faculty of Medicine. In 1929, Dr. Wilder Penfield established the Montreal Neurological Institute adjacent to the hospital. Among the list of medical achievements at the Royal Victoria was the first successful kidney transplant in the Commonwealth in 1958. It was achieved by a team led by nephrologist John Dossetor and surgeons Joe Luke and Ken MacKinnon. Today, the Royal Victoria Hospital is part of the McGill University Health Centre.

Original site

Original Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal
Location in Montreal
General information
Type hospital
Architectural style Scottish baronial
Address 687 Pine Avenue
Town or city Montreal
Country Canada
Coordinates 45°30′30″N 73°34′53″W / 45.50826°N 73.58145°W / 45.50826; -73.58145
Completed 1893
Relocated 2015
Technical details
Material Montreal limestone
Design and construction
Architect Saxon Snell
The Royal Victoria Hospital, 1893
Main entrance of the Royal Vic, 2011
The Royal Vic from McGill College Avenue
The Hersey Pavilion was designed by Edward & William Sutherland Maxwell, 1905. It was designated a National Historic Site of Canada, 1997
Royal Vic entrance from Pine Avenue

The hospital was previously housed in a building complex at 687 Pine Avenue on the slope of Mount Royal in the borough of Ville-Marie. Hospital operations moved to the new Glen site of the McGill University Health Centre on April 26, 2015, except for the McGill Reproductive Centre and the Dialysis Clinic, which remained at the original site as of 2015. Of its nine pavilions, three date from the original 1893 hospital and were designed by Henry Saxon Snell in the Scottish baronial style. The nearby Allan Memorial Institute continues to house the psychiatry department. The post-2015 future of the 122-year-old Royal Vic building is yet to be determined. McGill University has unveiled an idea to repurpose the hospital for academic purposes, but also add community and green space.[7][8]

The original hospital was designed by the Scottish architect Henry Saxon Snell, who from the 1860s had made a name for himself in England and Scotland as a leading specialist in the design of hospitals, particularly in London. Constructed of Montreal limestone, the original Royal Vic is distinguished by its crenelated structures and romantic turrets framing generous sun porches at the corners of its imposing medical and surgical wards. Snell's aesthetic plans for the Royal Vic were inspired by the Scottish baronial style of the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh. From a medical perspective, his design of the Royal Vic was influenced by the ideas of Florence Nightingale as a Pavilion Hospital, in which the separation and isolation of both patients and diseases were thought to discourage the spread of infection.[9] The original part of the building was completed in 1893.

The hospital was later enlarged by the addition of new wings of the same architectural style. The H pavilion opened in 1905 as the nurses' residence). The 1920s saw the addition of the Women's and Ross Memorial pavilions. Another expansion was completed in the early 1950s giving the hospital its M and S pavilions; a portion of the original hospital was demolished to accomplish this. Lastly the C pavilion, housing the emergency room, birthing centre, and a large modern ICU opened in 1993. A time capsule is located in the wall facing the C pavilion's elevators on the ground floor.

Hersey Pavilion

The Hersey Pavilion, also known as the H Pavilion, was one of the first purpose-built nurses' residences in Canada. It is located on the hospital campus, and was constructed in 1905. It was designed by the well-known Montreal architects Edward & William Sutherland Maxwell. It was designated a National Historic Site of Canada in 1997 in recognition of the important role the building played in the training and professionalism of nurses in Canada.[10][11]

Pool

The hospital had an outdoor pool and patio located between the Hersey pavilion and Allan Memorial Institute. As of 2014, the pool is closed until further notice.[12]

Notable surgeons

See also

References

  1. "Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal". Dictionary of Canadian Biography (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. 1979–2016.
  2. Montreal Gazette March 5, 2013: Whats next for the Royal Victoria Hospital? Who decides?
  3. "Royal Victoria Hospital, Montreal". Dictionary of Canadian Biography (online ed.). University of Toronto Press. 1979–2016.
  4. Elspeth Angus interviewed by the Montreal Gazette
  5. The Royal Victoria Hospital Site
  6. Neville, Terry (1994). The Royal Vic: The story of Montreal's Royal Victoria Hospital. Montreal: McGill-Queens University Press. ISBN 0-7735-1170-9.
  7. Royal Victoria Hospital
  8. "McGill unveils plan to revitalize Royal Victoria Hospital". CTV Montreal News. April 25, 2014.
  9. Restoring Women's History Through Historic Preservation. By Gail Lee Dubrow & Jennifer B. Goodman (2003)
  10. "Hersey Pavilion". Directory of Designations of National Historic Significance of Canada. Parks Canada. Retrieved July 31, 2011.
  11. Hersey Pavilion. Canadian Register of Historic Places. Retrieved July 31, 2011.
  12. Michelle Lalonde (June 26, 2014). "'Hidden gem' pool behind Royal Vic sits empty". Montreal Gazette. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014.
  13. "Wilder Penfield". PBS. Retrieved 2010-02-07. Wilder Penfield was born in Spokane, Washington, and spent much of his youth in Hudson, Wisconsin. ... During his life he was called "the greatest living Canadian."
  14. Order of Canada citation
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