Victoria Cottage Hospital Guernsey was a healthcare facility in Guernsey and opened in 1888. [1] It closed in 1940 during the German occupation of the Channel Islands. [2] The hospital was not reopened after liberation. [2]
On 1 May 1888 a cottage hospital was opened by the Bailiff, Sir Edgar MacCulloch for the sick needy poor in Cambridge Park, Guernsey. [2] The hospital was the idea of Dr Ernest Laurie Robinson, who had also established a local branch of the St John Ambulance and a Voluntary Nursing Corps in the two years previously. [3] Donations were made to fund the hospital by the local community. [4]
The Victoria Cottage Hospital was intitally staffed by volunteer nurses and a trained superintendent. [3] It was smaller than the general hospital, and when it first opened, it had just five beds and a childs cot in two wards. [2] Patients paid to have a bed (around 4 shillings in 1888). [3] Only a few months after the hospital opened, a patient with bladder stones underwent successful experimental surgery that was written up in The Lancet . [5]
The Victoria Cottage Hospital soon expanded and in 1891 it moved to larger premises and had 13 beds. [1] During the First World War, it became an auxiliary military hospital. [6] During the Second World War, the Victoria Hospital was converted to an emergency hospital to deal with casualties of the conflict. [7] It closed in 1940 during the German occupation of the Channel Islands. [2] Matron Hall of the hospital went with other staff to the country hospital, where they continued to provide care throughout the occupation. [8]
In 1949, the new purpose-built Princess Elizabeth Hospital was opened.