St. Joseph Hospital (Fort Wayne, Indiana)
Proceeds from the sale went to establish St. Joseph Community Health Foundation which provides financial support to healthcare programs in the Fort Wayne area.
History
Rockhill House Hotel was built in 1838 by William Rockhill, as a luxury hotel. Rockhill died in 1865 and the hotel closed two years later. The need for a hospital in Fort Wayne became clear when a smallpox epidemic struck the town in 1865. Bishop John Luers of the Diocese of Fort Wayne offered to buy the abandoned Rockhill House for a hospital if the county and the city would contribute to the necessary repairs and outfitting the building for hospital purposes. The mayor and the county commissioners saddled with debt, declined. Luers bought the property and formed the St. Joseph’s Benevolent Association to raise money to renovate the 65-room former hotel and open a hospital. In 1868, due to the large German-speaking population in the diocese, Bishop John Luers invited the Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ (PHJC) of Dernbach / Westerwald, a German religious order, to come to the diocese to staff the hospital. St. Joe's also served as the motherhouse of the congregation until it moved to Donaldson, Indiana in the 1920s.
In 1870, "the hospital initiated a program that enabled all poor residents of Allen County to be treated there rather than being placed in the 'poorhouse', as was the custom. For this service, the city and township trustees paid the hospital $3 per week for each patient."
Over the years St Joseph Hospital developed into a 9-story facility with over 400 beds, providing care to thousands each year. The facility was once known for the St. Joseph Regional Burn center that was the only one of its kind in Northeast Indiana. In 1918 St. Joseph School of Nursing opened across the street from the hospital. Student nurses attended the three-year program during the day, and worked at the hospital in the evenings.
The Poor Handmaids owned and operated St. Joseph Hospital until the 1998 when they sold the hospital to Quorum Health Group. The proceeds from the sale went to the St. Joseph Community Health Foundation. The foundation funds organizations such as "Matthew 25", a nonprofit, healthcare center located in Fort Wayne, Indiana serving the underinsured, the poor, and homeless.
St.Joseph Hospital closed at 5:59 a.m. on Nov. 13, 2021 after staff and patients were transferred to the newly completed Lutheran Downtown Hospital at the corner of Van Buren and Main Streets.
In May 2022 old St. Joe's caught fire, sparked by contractors working to demolish the building which is currently undergoing demolition as the new Lutheran Downtown Hospital opened up across the street off of Van Buren Street.
Lutheran Downtown Hospital is a member of the Lutheran Health Network, a subsidiary of Community Health Systems.
Services
- Behavioral Health
- Intensive Care Unit
- Cardiac and Vascular Services
- ER
- Hyperbaric Medicine
- Inpatient and Outpatient Surgery
- Lake Avenue Outpatient Center
- Lutheran Health Network Diabetes Services
- Nationally Verified Burn Center(Lost accreditation in July 2018)
- Orthopaedic Center
- Pain Management Center
- Radiology and Lab Services
- Rehabilitation
- Senior Circle Program
- Senior Health Services
- Sleep Disorders Center
- Transitional Care Unit
- Wound Care Center
- Anthony Medical Center
References
- ^ Gates, Mary Anne. "A brief history of St. Joseph Hospital", Business Weekly, November 12, 2021
- ^ Secunda, Mother Mary. "Poor Handmaids of Jesus Christ." The Catholic Encyclopedia Vol. 12. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1911. 10 October 2022 This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
- ^ Eber, Mary. "The Spirit of St. Joe: Legacy of St. Joseph Hospital in Fort Wayne", 21 Alive News, November 12, 2021
- ^ Hawfield, Michael. "City hospital was once a hotel", News-Sentinel, August 15, 1994
- ^ Matthew 25 Health and Care
- ^ Smith, Rex and Ivanson, Alyssa. "‘Stay away’: Old St. Joseph Hospital in danger of collapse", WANE15 News, June 1, 2022
External links
41°4′40.3″N 85°8′57″W / 41.077861°N 85.14917°W