The Liverpool Royal Infirmary was a hospital in Pembroke Place in Liverpool, England. The building is now used by the University of Liverpool.
History
The infirmary has its origins in a small building on Shaw's Brow which was opened by the 11th Earl of Derby on part of the site which is now occupied by St George's Hall on 25 March 1749.
The second incarnation of the infirmary was designed by John Foster in the Greek Revival style and opened on Brownlow Hill in September 1824. This building was renamed the Liverpool Royal Infirmary after a visit of Queen Victoria to Liverpool in 1851. This led to the formation of the Queen's Nursing Institute.
The foundation stone for a third incarnation of the infirmary, a much larger building, was laid by the 15th Earl of Derby in Pembroke Place on 28 October 1887. The new building, this time designed by Alfred Waterhouse in the Romanesque Revival style, opened in November 1889.
After services transferred to the new Royal Liverpool Hospital on Prescot Street, the old building (subsequently referred to as the "Waterhouse Building") closed in 1978. It was used by the BBC for filming Casualty 1907 in 2006. She also trained at The London Hospital under Matron Eva Luckes. In 1924 Margaret Cummins helped arrange what was said to be the first Nurses Service in England. It was held in the Lady Chapel of the Liverpool Cathedral on Sunday, 18 May shortly after the anniversary of the birth of Florence Nightingale.
- John Eyton-Jones (1862-1940), was latterly house surgeon at the infirmary; also an amateur footballer, played as Wales international and for Everton.
- Rosalind Paget (1855–1948), was a niece of William Rathbone VI, a resident of Liverpool and social reformer. Paget was a British Nurse and reformer who co-founded the forerunner to the Chartered Society of Physiotherapy and in the late 1870s did some experience of training at Liverpool Royal Infirmary. Between 1882 and 1884 she formally trained as a nurse at The London Hospital under Matron Eva Luckes. Paget was the first Inspector for the Queen's Nursing Institute, which her uncle was instrumental in establishing.
Notable patients
Robert Tressell, author of The Ragged-Trousered Philanthropists, died there in 1911.
Gallery
<gallery>
File:Second Liverpool Royal Infirmary (14652158422).jpg|The second incarnation of the infirmary
File:Block C, Waterhouse building.jpg|Former ward block at the third incarnation of the infirmary
File:Hospitals and Asylums of the World - Portfolio of Plans, p. 26.jpg|Ground Floor plan of the third incarnation of the infirmary
File:Hospitals and Asylums of the World - Portfolio of Plans, p. 27.jpg|First Floor plan of the third incarnation of the infirmary
</gallery>
References
External links
- E. Chambré Hardman Archive
- Aerial Photograph
