University of Oregon School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Portland, OR)

 - Class of 1940

Page 58 of 92

 

University of Oregon School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 58 of 92
Page 58 of 92



University of Oregon School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 57
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University of Oregon School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 59
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Page 58 text:

Q 4 M15 A K ' . ' J 'il 2352 .J .A Niki 1 1 5 A '-1f' ' 1 vu LIBRARY AND AUDITORIUM, 1939 , passed away in 1921, he bequeathed 3200,000 to his son and daughter to be used for charitable purposes as they saw fit. His daughter, Mrs. E. W. Morse, had been active in the children's work of the original People's Institute, and this probably more than anything else influenced them to give the money for construction of a chi1dren's hospital. Other individuals gave additional gifts totaling more than 3l25,000 to enlarge and equip it. When completed it was an eighty-bed hospital, and stood as a separate unit to augment the medical school group. Speakers at the dedication ceremony in july, 1926, were Mayor Baker, Dr. Dillehunt, Dr. Bilderback and Miss Grace Phelps. In 1931, our patient began to notice pain in the lower region of? the Portland Free Dispensary, still located downtown on jefferson street. The flood of patients was again overflowing the facilities which by this time had grown to a valuation of over 350,000. This was augmented by a gift secured from the General Educa- tion Board of New York to build a new half-million-dollar Out-Patient Clinic on Marquam I-Iill. The new clinic was built, connecting the Doernbecher and the County l-lospitals, and in addition to its out-patient service, unified the hospitals by providing a common record department, X-Ray laboratory service for all clin- ical departments. This relieved our patient of the pressure for a time, but there are now over six hundred patients a day coming to the Out-Patient Clinic for care. The .year 1939 found our patient growing still larger. The State Legislature appropriated 3110,000 and the Federal Government 3130,000 forthe construction v 3 293 ages' 122 ux0' 1541

Page 57 text:

plele the course with a high school diploma as prerequisite. .Xfter a shower ol criticism in the newspapers, confirmed by a grand jury investigation. the County tloinniissioners in 1919 accepted nine acres from the inetiical school upon which to construct a new hospital. The original plan was to build an ll shaped building of 500 patient capacity at an estimated cost of a million dollars. By WZ? the southern half of the l-ll' had been completed at a cost ol' one and a quarter million dollars. There still remained the task of moving the patients up from the old hospital. On August 29, after treatments, the moving started at S200 A. M. and by some miracle of planning and organization, was com- pleted without incident by noon, which the nurses celebrated with a picnic lunch on the lawn. The patients were all housed in the east wing. Third floor West was used as a nurses' home until l927 when the new nurses' hom-e was built, and the patients occupied both wings. The wards of the hospital were now open and convenient for clerkship training during the clinical years of the school curriculum. ln 192-l. our patient spread out with the addition of eighty-eight acres to its campus. The land, part of judge lVlarquam's old property, was the gift of Mrs. C. S. jackson and her son, Mr. Philip jackson, in memory of their late husband and father, and is named after him, Sam jackson Park. ln 1926, our patient again grew by the addition of the Doernbecher Memorial I-lospital for Children. Frank S. Doernbecher was a Portland pioneer furniture manufacturer. When he TUBERCULOSIS HOSPITAL, 1939 ' ' ' ! 2 ui ,-5' if li! 44522 nav' E531 ...... .. - 1-e 1-



Page 59 text:

ol' a surgical tuberculosis hospital. The 'family of tl1e late julius Meier gave 550,000 more for the addition ol' an out-patient service to the hospital. The build- ing was constructed across the draw from the school group and was dedicated to provide modern treatment 'lor patients suffering from tuberculosisg to promote scientific research into the cause of disease, and to train a limited number of future physicians and nurses in 'the field of tuberculosis. The hospital was opened in the fall and its eighty beds were soon full, and its out-patient department busy. A hnal attempt at the cure of our patient was made with the following pre- scription: S E JOSEPI-ll K. A. j. MACKENZIE R. B. DILLEHUNT ' 15587-1912 1912-1920 1920-- U T -43 if cus? lilly IIKN l55l

Suggestions in the University of Oregon School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Portland, OR) collection:

University of Oregon School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1970 Edition, Page 1

1970

University of Oregon School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 32

1940, pg 32

University of Oregon School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 53

1940, pg 53

University of Oregon School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 80

1940, pg 80

University of Oregon School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 56

1940, pg 56

University of Oregon School of Nursing - Lamp Yearbook (Portland, OR) online collection, 1940 Edition, Page 9

1940, pg 9


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