THE
TROY HOSPITAL
Excerpted
from the book
Troy's One Hundred Years 1789-1889
Published in 1891 by William H. Young, 7 and 9 First Street, Troy,
NY
The prevalence of fever among the immigrants who had come to Troy
during the famine in Ireland between the years 1845 and 1848,
compelled the city authorities to erect temporary buildings for
their care and treatment. Sometimes as many as two hundred sick
persons were thus sheltered. The afflicted people were mostly
Roman Catholics, and the Rev. Peter Havermans daily visited and
ministered unto them the means of physical relief and spiritual
comfort. Their distressing circumstances suggested to him the
need of a city hospital, and he undertook the collection of funds
with which to erect one.
His
efforts were successful, and a site was obtained on south-west
corner of Fifth and Washington streets. On Wednesday afternoon,
August 15th, 1848, the corner-stone of the Troy Hospital was laid
by General John E. Wool of the United States Army. The four-story
brick building, when completed in 1850, was used for the purposes
contemplated; a number of Sisters of Charity taking charge of
the institution.
After
the construction of the Union Railroad, the site became unsuitable
for a hospital. In April, 1866, the property of Ebenezer Prescott,
on the east side of Eighth Street, at the head of Fulton Street,
was purchased by the managers of the Troy Hospital, for the site
of a new building. The corner-stone of the four-story brick structure
was laid on Sunday afternoon, June 28th, 1868, by the Right Rev.
J. J. Conroy, bishop of Albany. In the fall of 1869, the old hospital
was vacated and the new one occupied. The institution is (was)
still in charge of the Sisters of Charity, who latterly have had
the care of as many as eight hundred patients within a year. The
attendance, appointments, and charges are in every way satisfactory
and advantageous.
Notes
from Bill McGrath:
Note
1: Some rooms in the Troy Hospital were used staring in 1848 for
the orphans cared for by St. Mary's Female Orphan Asylum. In 1865,
the asylum changed their name to St. Vincent Female Orphan Asylum
and in May 1872 they purchased the old Troy Hospital on Washington
and Fifth Streets.
Note
2: The Troy Hospital is mentioned in a number of the death notices
for my family members.
Note
3: The Troy Hospital building on Eighth Street later became the
home of Catholic Central High School until about 1953. I started
my Freshman year there in 1952 and later that year or early in
1953, the school relocated to the Cluett and Peabody laboratory
building in Lansingburgh where it remains today.
Note
4: The former Troy Hospital and Catholic Central High building
is now part of the Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute campus. On
the 45th reunion of the Class of 1956 in 2001, we had a cocktail
party there and a tour of our old school building.
Note
5: Rev. Peter Havermans was the first pastor of St. Mary's Church
in Troy from it's opening in 1843. When this book was published
in 1891, he was still the pastor.