St Vincent’s Hospital, Kingussie

St Vincent’s Hospital, photographed in August 2022 © H. Blakeman

Perched high above Kingussie sits the former St Vincent’s Hospital, empty and vulnerable to the attentions of vandals since it closed in 2021. It was replaced by the new Badenoch and Strathspey Community Hospital at Aviemore.

St Vincent’s Hospital, photographed in August 2022 © H. Blakeman

The history of the hospital spans more than a century. It first opened in 1901 as the Grampian Sanatorium, founded by Dr Walter de Watteville who had already begun treating patients on the open-air principle in 1898 at his home ‘Sonnhalde’. De Watteville initially added a wing to his house, with separate entrance. This has some claim to being the first privately instituted TB sanatorium in Scotland. 

St Vincent’s Hospital, photographed in August 2022 © H. Blakeman

There was sufficient demand for treatment that de Watteville was able to build a larger sanatorium in 1900 which was opened in June 1901. It occupied a large site, of ten acres, laid out with walks – gentle exercise being part of the ‘treatment’ for TB. Patients were also thought to benefit from inhaling the scent of pine trees – of which there were many in the surrounding woods. 

St Vincent’s Hospital, photographed in August 2022 © H. Blakeman

The new sanatorium was designed by the local architect A. Mackenzie, with Alexander Cattanach as the mason. It has a south-easterly aspect, the original bedrooms for the patients all on this side of the building with corridors behind. Their rooms had stained and polished wood floors, walls painted with ‘duresco’ (a water-based paint) and had rounded angles. The furniture was also specially designed. At the ends of the building on the ground floor were larger rooms used as dining and day-rooms. The kitchens were in a service wing at the rear, along with staff accommodation. 

St Vincent’s Hospital, photographed in August 2022 © H. Blakeman

The distinctive round-arched windows no longer have their original glazing which were sash windows with a ‘rounded revolving fanlight’ above. Some of the rooms at the centre of the building gave out onto a veranda or balcony, via French doors. The engraved view published in Walters’ Sanatoria for Consumptives (below) shows patients lying on camp beds on the uncovered veranda in front of the hospital. The nature of the revolving fanlights can also be seen: they tilted on side pivots.

Grampian Sanatorium (later St Vincent’s Hospital) from F. R. Walters, Sanatoria for Consumptives, published in 1905.

The sanatorium was heated by open fires, lighting was by electricity. Dr de Watteville acted as the medical superintendent and his wife as matron, helped by a medical assistant, two nurses and domestic staff. [F. R. Walters, Sanatoria for Consumptives, 3rd edn. 1905, pp.189-90.]

Dr Walther’s Nordrach Sanatorium, from F. R. Walters, Sanatoria for Consumptives, published in 1905.

The inspiration behind the design of the sanatorium, and the treatment conducted within it, was Nordrach Sanatorium in the Black Forest of Germany run by Dr Otto Walther. A small clutch of sanatoria were named after the German hospital in Britain – including Nordrach on Dee, Banchory (later Glen-o-Dee Hospital), and Nordrach upon Mendip, near Bristol.  

St Vincent’s Hospital, rear wing, photographed in August 2022 © H. Blakeman

In 1917 de Watteville sold the sanatorium to Dr Felix Savy, who increased the capacity of the hospital slightly – from 18 to 27 beds by 1926. Artificial pneumothorax was made available from around 1926, Dr Savy being a pioneer of this surgical technique to collapse the infected lung. He also introduced X-ray equipment, UV light and laboratory facilities.

St Vincent’s Hospital, photographed in August 2022 © H. Blakeman

In 1934 the sanatorium was purchased by the Sisters of the Order of the Daughters of Charity of St Vincent de Paul, although Dr Savy remained as the physician in charge. The Sisters had the rear extension built as living quarters, and created a chapel above the main entrance. The photographer, Oscar Marzaroli, was a patient in the 1940s. The sanatorium was not transferred to the NHS in 1948, although it was used for NHS patients for a few years until the demand for beds for TB cases declined. By the mid-1950s the decline in TB led to many former sanatoria being adapted to new uses. St Vincent’s became a home for the elderly in 1956. As the residents increasingly required nursing care, by the early 1970s the Order planned to create wards for geriatric patients (this may relate to work by J. G. Quigley and Partners, architects, Glasgow noted on the Dictionary of Scottish Architects for 1969-71 for the Sisters.). The interior was remodelled in 1973-4 to convert the ground floor into a geriatric hospital unit, run by Grampian Health Board, while the upper floor remained a residential home run by Highland Regional Council. As part of the works, a large new day room was created at the west side, the old fireplaces and chimneys removed. It was still run by the Sisters of the Order, but finding staff was proving increasingly difficult and in 1986 the home hospital was bought by the NHS. The upper floor was converted to provide a psychogeriatric unit in 1988-9. [J. C. Leslie adn S. J. Leslie, The Hospitals of Badenoch & Strathspey, 2022.]

Midhurst Sanatorium revisited

It was back in June 1992 that Colin Thom and I visited King Edward VII Hospital, as it then was, as part of the RCHME Hospitals Project. The project involved site visits to as many pre-1948 hospitals throughout England as we could identify and manage within the three years allotted for the project. For the most interesting of these sites we requested professional photography from the Commission’s pool of excellent photographers, and those are now a part of the Historic England archives. We also took colour slides and black-and-white snaps for ourselves. I have been scanning some of these and have posted some of the slides already, but thought I would share the black-and-white snaps here. They are only snaps, and of mixed quality, but I think they provide an interesting record of how the hospital looked 30 years ago.

a hospital231
Central range, south front of King Edward VII Hospital, June 1992

You can just spot someone sitting in the alcove on the far left. The gardens around the sanatorium were designed by the architects Adams & Holden and the planting plans were drawn up by Gertrude Jekyll. Jekyll produced some forty plans in about 1905, which detail the planting for the formal gardens, the areas just behind the main south block and between it and the chapel, and also the Medical Superintendent’s garden. The light and sandy soil lent itself to Mediterranean plants, and ‘in the case of the Sanatorium walls, the planting was carefully considered for colour effect, masses of plants of related or harmonious colouring being kept near together’.¹

a hospital232
West wing of the hospital, looking westwards towards the chapel garden.

A raised basement provided a terrace in front of the ground-floor rooms, while the balcony in front of the first-floor rooms created a degree of shelter, as do the deep eaves for the upper-floor rooms. Shutters allowed the inward-opening doors to be left open over-night, to ensure that there was still plentiful fresh air entering the rooms.

a hospital233
The chapel from the north, showing the eastern nave and the tower.

The sanatorium was largely surrounded by woodland, in particular pine woods. Pines, and the ‘terebinthine’ vapours they exuded were considered particularly beneficial to those suffering from tuberculosis.

a hospital246
View along the western nave of the chapel

The chapel was most unusual, being V-shaped in plan with twin naves, one for male the other for female patients, each focussed on the central chancel.

Screen Shot 2016-01-30 at 13.43.35

The plan of the chapel above marks the entrances (no.54); open cloisters (57); altar (58); vestry (59); organ space (60); pulpit (61); lectern (62), nave for men (63); nave for women (64); courtyard (65); store room (66) and the mortuary chapel (67). It was produced for the Tuberculosis Year Book, and reproduced in F. R. Walters, Sanatoria for the Tuberculous, 1913. The south side of the chapel was originally open, the arcade was only glazed during the 1950s.

a hospital249

Above is a view of the western nave of the chapel showing the south wall with its glazed arcade. Although the glazing was added in the 1950s, its elegant design is very pleasing, and adds rather than detracts from the architectural effect of the building. It is also an indication of the changes in the way that tuberculosis was treated, following the discovery and widespread use of antibiotics, and the rather slower uptake of the BCG vaccine, which finally lead to the decline in TB and the redundancy of the sanatoria.

a hospital248
Detail of the clerestory windows and, just visible, the plaster frieze above.

Above the clerestory windows in the chapel a deep frieze is just-about visible on the photograph above, featuring vine leaves and bunches of grapes. It is an Arts & Crafts detail, inspired by later seventeenth century plasterwork.

Western nave, looking north-east

Midhurst Sanatorium was one of the most architecturally ambitious, and expensively fitted out anywhere in Britain. It was designed to represent best-practice at the time, and provide a model for future sanatoria in this country, also encouraging the establishment of sanatoria in Britain to bring open-air treatment within the reach of a wider section of society.

a hospital225
The main corridor at the centre of the hospital lead directly from the main entrance on the north side to the gardens on the south. 
a hospital224
One of the patients’ sitting-rooms.
a hospital223
The same room looking the other way
a hospital226
Staff dining room
a hospital239
Entrance Hall
a hospital240
North elevation, Administration block
a hospital222
Rainwater head.

References

  1. Country Life, 1909