Nottingham General Hospital was a major hospital in Nottingham, England. It was founded in 1781 and closed in 1992.
History
The hospital was the result of a legacy from John Key, a wealthy banker, who had left money in his will for hospitals to be built in Nottingham and York.[1] The site selected for the hospital in Nottingham was part of the area known as Nottingham Park, immediately to the north of Nottingham Castle and near the wharves: one half of the land was given by Thomas Pelham-Clinton, 3rd Duke of Newcastle for the purpose and the other half by the town corporation.[2]
The foundation stone for the first building, which had been designed by John Simpson, was laid on 12 February 1781 and the hospital opened with 44 beds in September 1782.[2][3]John Wesley, the theologian, was an early visitor to the hospital.[4]
The hospital was extended with the Derbyshire wing, financed by a large donation from Henry Cavendish,[5][6] which opened in 1787.[3]
In 1844 the hospital had to respond to a major disaster when 12 people were killed and over a hundred injured when a stand collapsed at a public hanging on Garner's Hill.[7]
A design for a third storey for the original building was developed by Thomas Chambers Hine and the works completed in 1855.[3][7] Another new wing on the Park Row frontage opened in 1879, and the Jubilee Wing, designed by Alfred Waterhouse in a circular shape to celebrate Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee, opened in 1900.[3][8]
During the First World War 102 beds were made available to the Government for wounded soldiers.[9]
In 1948, at the formation of the National Health Service, the hospital came under the Sheffield Regional Hospital Board.[3] The hospital comprised 423 beds at that time.[3] The Intensive Care Unit was completed in 1963 and the Trent Wing was opened by Sir Keith Joseph in 1972.[3][14] After services had transferred to the Queen's Medical Centre, the hospital closed in 1992.[3] The main hospital block is now home to the offices of Nottingham City Clinical Commissioning Group and Nottingham CityCare Partnership.[15]