Battersea General Hospital

Hospital in England
51°28′30″N 0°09′50″W / 51.4751°N 0.1640°W / 51.4751; -0.1640HistoryOpened1902Closed1972LinksListsHospitals in England

Battersea General Hospital (founded as The National Anti-Vivisection Hospital) known locally as the "Antiviv" or the "Old Anti," was a hospital in Battersea, London.

History

The hospital was founded by Mrs Theodore Russell Monroe, secretary of the Anti-Vivisection Society as The National Anti-Vivisection Hospital in 1896.[1] The hospital was notable for not allowing animal experiments to take place in its facilities, and for refusing to employ physicians who were involved in or approved of animal research.[2]

Based at 33 Prince of Wales Drive, Battersea Park, it first opened for in-patients in 1903, with 11 beds for adults and 4 for children. It faced opposition from the medical establishment, who regarded the hospital's existence as "a great slur upon the profession."[3] In 1908, Herbert Snow was appointed surgeon to the hospital.[4] Because of difficulties attracting funding – its stance made it ineligible for grants from the King Edward's Hospital Fund – it lost its anti-vivisection charter in 1935. It joined the new National Health Service (NHS) in 1948, was closed by the NHS in 1972, and its building was demolished in 1974.[2]

See also

  • Brown Dog affair

Notes

  1. ^ Bates, A. W. H. (2017). "The National Anti-Vivisection Hospital, 1902–1935". In Anti-Vivisection and the Profession of Medicine in Britain: A Social History. Palgrave. ISBN 978-1137556967
  2. ^ a b "Battersea General Hospital". Lost hospitals of London. Retrieved 4 November 2020.
  3. ^ Kean, Hilda. "The 'Smooth Cool Men of Science': The Feminist and Socialist Response to Vivisection", History Workshop Journal, 1995, 40, p. 22.
  4. ^ Neuhaus, Susan J. (2004). "Dr. Herbert Lumley Snow, MD, MRCS (1847–1930): The Original Champion of Elective Lymph Node Dissection in Melanoma". Annals of Surgical Oncology. 11 (9): 875–878. doi:10.1245/ASO.2004.02.031. PMID 15342349. S2CID 29746326.

Further reading

  • Lansbury, Coral. The Old Brown Dog: Women, Workers, and Vivisection in Edwardian England. University of Wisconsin Press, 1985.
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