Bryn Mawr Historic District [Edgewater Presbyterian Church]

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Wednesday, September 9, 2009

Former St. Luke's Hospital

Posted on 6:42 AM by babli panday




Former St. Luke's Hospital ..
Now Trevi Square
Address: 1439 S. Michigan
Completed: 1908
Architect: Charles Frost
National Register of historic places ...

A marker reads ..
"St. Lukes Hospital ..
20th Century Healthcare ..
The extraordinary history of hospitals in the modern world is founded in the needs of the poor. Prior to modern times or the "the period of Enlightenment" [1800 to present] hospital care was driven by the need to separate the afflicted indigent from the wealthy. Patients of means were kept at home and those in the practice of medicine would conduct all the necessary tasks at the patient's bedside. Even operations were done in the family home. Poor patients were kept in a separate facilities often run by charitable organizations that could only administer nominal care. Often these institutions were overcrowded places for the homeless, mentally diminished and incapacitated. They were not what people today would call a hospital. During times of plague, patients were separated from the community or locked into their homes. Outbreaks of Chorela, small-pox and scarlet fever were common in large cities with inadequate housing. The threat of an uncontrolled epidemic prompted Chicago officials to provide various facilities on the edges of the city. But advances in medicine and technology quickly turned the tide of warehousing the sick, to healing in a controlled germ-free environment with the use of modern instruments and surgical units.

Grace Episcopal Church was a Chicago institution that saw its mission to provide a place to heal the sick. Reverend Dewitte Clinton Locke led the congregation to start a hospital. In 1864, they hired Dr. Walter Hay to organize St. Luke's Hospital in a small frame structure at the 8th and State Streets. Walter Hay's primary interest was neurology. private Sanatoriums for "nervous patients" were built not only to provide care outside the home, but also to study the patients. These private institutions catered to those who could afford the best of care and modern medical advances. The medical needs of these patients went outside of the practice of neurology prompting specialized and general care for hospital clientele. Embracing this need, St. Lukes evolved into a large institution and relocated in this area. Eventually, architect Charles Frost was engaged to design a first class facility. Known primarily for his railroad commissions of depots and office buildings, Frost seemed an odd choice. In 1908, the building was completed just beyond the backyards of the wealthy homes lining Prairie and Indiana Avenues. The heavy facade of the first level is reminiscent of 19th century architecture of England sans the beautiful arched windows. The double towers are joined by a setback with a massive masonry and wrought iron frontgate that seem to engulf the public parkway. Natural light poured in from the large windows illuminating wards and the eighteen-foot ceiling height of the operating room on the top floor. The chapel was gifted with stained glass windows, wood benches and a peaceful elegance of material and decorative finished.

In 1996, the structure went through a major conversion into residential living. Current residents enjoy the original beauty, grandeur of the structure, but can now enjoy the sunlight from their courtyard balconies in the renamed site Trevi Square ..
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