Sigismund Goldwater

Sigismund Schulz Goldwater (February 7, 1873 – October 22, 1942)[1][2] was a physician and hospital administrator.

Biography

Goldwater earned his medical degree in 1901, was appointed superintendent of Mount Sinai Hospital in 1903, and later its director in 1917.[1] He also was named Commissioner of Health in New York City in 1914 by Mayor John Mitchel,[3] and during his term he was criticized for trying to enact public health measures that, during the backdrop of World War I, were considered too closely related to German philosophies.[4][5]

Dr. Goldwater consulted on hospital administration and construction, and was instrumental in the founding of the hospital complex on Roosevelt Island (known then as Welfare Island). The Welfare Hospital for Chronic Disease was renamed Goldwater Memorial Hospital shortly after he died in 1942. It merged with Bird S. Coler Hospital in 1996 to form Coler-Goldwater Specialty Hospital.[6] The Goldwater Campus closed in 2010 to make way for the Cornell Tech campus, and the remainder of the facility was renamed NYC Health + Hospitals/Coler.

Awards

  • Fellow, New York Academy of Medicine (1908)[1]

References

  1. ^ a b c Deaths of Fellows (1943) Bulletin of the New York Academy of Medicine. 19(3), 224.
  2. ^ "Dr. S.S. Goldwater is Dead Here at 69 - Ex-Commissioner of Hospitals World Authority on Building and Administration - Overhauled CIty System - Sponsor of '3-Cents-a-Day Plan' to Insure Care - An Ex-Health Department Chief". New York Times. October 23, 1942. p. 21. Retrieved 22 December 2015.
  3. ^ "Goldwater Heads Board of Health". New York Times. January 20, 1914. p. 6. Retrieved 7 October 2015.
  4. ^ Dr. Goldwater and the Dogs (1914) Life, October 1, 1914.
  5. ^ Sigismund Schulz Goldwater (1914) Life, December 17, 1914.
  6. ^ Berdy, Judy; Roosevelt Island Historical Society (2003). Images of America - Roosevelt Island. Charleston, S.C.: Arcadia Publishing. pp. 83 and 101. ISBN 0-7385-1238-9.