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22 Stops
Along a Panoramic View
of Nearly 200 Years of Mass General History
Introduction < Begin
the Tour >
In 1810, the United States could boast of only two general hospitals,
the Pennsylvania Hospital (founded in 1756) and the New York Hospital
(founded in 1791). Locally, the marine hospital in Charlestown
tended to the needs of sailors and
the Boston Dispensary addressed the ambulatory care of paupers,
but no New England facility in the early nineteenth century provided
round the clock medical care to members of the general public.
Rev. John Bartlett, Chaplain of the
Almshouse in Boston, dreamed of establishing such a hospital,
which would make state-of-the-art medical care available to the
physically or mentally ill while affording improved opportunities
for practical medical education. He joined with like-minded doctors
and leading citizens to organize a fund-raising campaign.
Dr. James Jackson and Dr. John Collins
Warren were among the foremost proponents of this plan. In 1811
the Massachusetts legislature granted a charter for the incorporation
of the MGH and fund raising proceeded, donations ranging from
$.25 to $20,000, and including also such unusual gifts as a 273
pound sow. In 1816 the Trustees bought and renovated an estate
in Charlestown (in an area later absorbed by Somerville) for use
as the mental illness facility of the MGH. This became McLean
Asylum (now McLean Hospital in Belmont).
Soon thereafter a four-acre field in
Boston’s West End known as Prince’s Pasture was acquired
for construction of the General Hospital. The original building,
The Bulfinch, opened its doors on September 3, 1821, for admission
of the first MGH patient, a sailor with syphilis, which, the records
carefully note, he had contracted in New York.
The MGH in its first year of operation
became the first teaching hospital of Harvard
Medical School. It has since been the scene of many changes,
much expansion, and more advances in medicine than can easily
be enumerated.
Among
the highlights have been: the first public demonstration of surgical
anesthesia by William T.G. Morton and John Collins Warren (1846),
the identification of appendicitis by Reginald Fitz (1886), the
establishment of the first medical social service by Richard Cabot
and Ida Cannon (1905), and the first replantation of a severed
arm by a surgical team led by Ronald Malt (1962).
< Begin
the Tour >
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