When is a hospital not a hospital?

In the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries a hospital was more likely to be an almshouse or school than a hospital in the modern, medical sense. Christ’s Hospital, for example was one of the five royal hospitals founded in the sixteenth century to house and educate the poor children in the City of London. In Scotland, Heriot’s Hospital in Edinburgh was founded as a school in the seventeenth century. This short post looks at another example – Hutcheson’s Hospital in Glasgow.

Hutcheson’s Hall, Glasgow ©️ <P&P> photo from Flickr

Recently I was sent an enquiry about the listing of someone’s address in 1921 as 133 Hospital Street, Glasgow. They wanted to know what that meant. At first I thought it was rather a daft question, Hospital Street is just the address where the person lived. I think perhaps they actually meant why was it called Hospital Street. There are quite a few Hospital Streets and Hospital Roads in Britain, as well as Workhouse and Union Roads – named very simply because they led to a hospital or workhouse. The name ‘Spittal’ Street also suggests that there was once a hospital in the locality, probably of monastic origins.

Hospital Street, Gorbals Ward, on the large-scale OS map surveyed in 1952 CC-BY (NLS)

Hospital Street in Glasgow no longer exists. It was in the Gorbals, and I was not aware that there had never been a hospital in the vicinity, so why was it called Hospital Street? The reason will be obvious to anyone who knows Glasgow well, but for those who, like me, are not so familiar with the city and its history, I thought it was worth explaining. Thanks to the National Library of Scotland’s online maps collection, it was an easy enough question to answer. They have digitised many Town Plans, including Flemings map of Glasgow of 1807. This showed that the area here belonged to Hutcheson’s Hospital.

Fleming’s map of Glasgow, 1807, showing an area shaded pink marked as ‘The property of Hutcheson’s Hospital’. CC-BY (NLS)

Hutcheson’s Hospital was not a hospital in the modern sense, but an almshouse and school, named after its founders Thomas and George Hutcheson, and established in 1641 in the Trongate. It moved to new premises in 1805. This handsome building in Ingram Street was designed by David Hamilton, and is now called Hutcheson’s Hall. Initially this housed both the elderly men and the school pupils, but as the school grew, a larger building was needed. A new, separate school was built in Crown Street, south of the Clyde in the Gorbals area, in 1841 designed by Robert Craig. The Hospital owned a large tract of land there, as marked on Fleming’s map. They may well have owned more, and had partly funded the construction of the bridge over the Clyde there.

Hospital Street is on the left in this extract from the OS Town Plan surveyed in 1856-8, towards the bottom in the centre is Hutcheson’s Hospital School. CC-BY (NLS)

When the school moved here the area was just beginning to be developed southwards, providing the workforce for the industries nearer the river. The map shows the many factories, cotton mills, and ironworks located along the grandly named Adelphi Terrace to the east of Hutcheson (later Hutchesontown) Bridge. The bridge shown on the map below was the new stone bridge built in 1829-34 replacing earlier wooden bridges.

Gorbals area on the OS Town Plan of 1857 CC-BY (NLS)

Hospital Street had been built up with tenements by the 1850s, along with three substantial churches. This being an area dominated by industry and business premises, it was mapped by the Goad Fire Insurance Company. Only the west side of the road was covered, where it backed on to the railway lines. The extract from the map below shows the stables, garages and small businesses that occupied the railway arches in the mid-1930s.

Goad Fire Insurance plan, 1935, CC-BY (NLS)

Hospital Street was within the Gorbals Comprehensive Development Area. The area of Hutchesontown was rebuilt with high-rise tower blocks designed by Robert Matthew and Basil Spence alongside low-rise development, the first to be built and completed in the late 1950s. In the 1960s the development was highly acclaimed for its brutalist architecture, but a combination of factors meant that by the 1980s the towers were in a poor condition. The Hutchesontown tower blocks were demolished in the early 1990s.

A broader section of the Goad Fire Insurance map of 1935 showing the south side of the River Clyde, with Hospital Street on the right of the image, CC-BY (NLS)

Sources: National Library for Scotland online maps collection; Canmore; University of Glasgow, Hutchesontown development; Hutcheson’s Grammar School ‘our history’.

Marvellous Maps – updating the Scottish Hospitals Survey

Probably the best source that I have been using for updating the Scottish Hospitals Survey is the National Library of Scotland’s map images. Maps are always key to charting the history and development of buildings, settlements and indeed the landscape. And the best thing of all is that the NLS is freely available to all. It is a wonderful resource.

Athole & Breadalbane Union Poorhouse (see Perth & Kinross). Extract from the 1st Edition OS Map, surveyed in 1863. Reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland

Many of the maps, and for me particularly the first edition Ordinance Survey maps and large scale town plans, are things of beauty as well as mines of information. Being so used to the grey tones of most nineteenth-century OS maps, the vibrant pinks and reds of the buildings, buff or ochre paths and roads, and the blues of river and sea, are also a joy.

Kelso dispensary, Roxburgh Street, founded in 1777 (see Borders).  Extract from the 1st edition OS map, surveyed in 1858. Reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland

For anyone interested in public buildings these maps are especially useful as they give ground plans, and often room uses as well.

Barony or Barnhill Poorhouse was completed in 1853, so this map was produced just a few years after it opened (see Glasgow). Extract from 1857 Town Plan of Glasgow, reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland
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Detail of the OS large-scale Town Plans, showing the central part of Barony Poorhouse.

I have never been sure about how to interpret the mapping of gardens, some seem too generic to be completely accurate representations, although the general layouts, or features such as embankments, paths, ditches etc. are more likely to be as existing. If anyone knows more, please do enlighten me. Looking at the detail of Barony Poorhouse above, the arrangement in the airing yard with diagonal paths leading up to a viewing area with seats seems too unusual not to be an accurate depiction of an actual feature.

The former Crichton Royal Asylum (see Dumfries & Galloway). Extract from the 1st edition OS map, surveyed in 1856. Reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland

The Crichton Royal  – what at first site might look like elaborately laid out formal gardens around the cruciform building are in fact the earthworks of the different airing grounds.

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Detail of the former Crichton Royal Asylum. Extract from the 1st edition OS map, surveyed in 1856. Reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland

Zooming in it becomes clearer. The airing grounds were walled enclosures, to prevent escape, but in order to allow the patients to see over the confining walls the ground within was built up to form a flat-topped mound. Bowling greens are shown close by the Crichton Royal and the Royal Edinburgh Asylum (below).

Royal Edinburgh Asylum (see Edinburgh). Extract from the large-scale town plans, sheet 50, surveyed in 1852. Reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland

Comparing different editions of the maps show how an institution was added to and changed. Between 1852 (above) and 1876 (below) wings were added to the main asylum building to the west, extending into the walled airing grounds.

Royal Edinburgh Asylum. Extract from the OS Large-scale Town Plans 1876. Reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland

The grounds of the East Division of the Royal Edinburgh Asylum not only have a bowling green, but what appears to be an orchard with paths crossing it, a formal flower bed (on the west side), shelter belts of mixed trees, and, on the east side, a cruciform feature which, on zooming in, is marked as a bower.

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Detail of the 1852 map, showing the Bower in the asylum grounds, with a cage marked at the centre where the paths cross. 

The cage presumably was an aviary. Caged birds were recommended for lunatic asylum patients in the mid-nineteenth century, along with potted plants and pictures, to provide objects of interest and an air of domesticity.

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Perth poorhouse (see Perth & Kinross), later Rosslyn House, council offices. From the OS large-scale town plans, 1860. Reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland

Perth poorhouse can be seen in splendid isolation, the wrong side of the railway tracks and very much on the outskirts of the city. The map was produced in 1860, the year after the poorhouse was built.

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Perth Poorhouse, detail. OS large-scale town plans, 1860. Reproduced by permission of the National Library of Scotland

The National Library of Scotland site allows you to zoom right in. The plan of the poorhouse above shows the room uses, positions of doors, windows and stairs. It shows the divisions within the poorhouse – women on one side and men on the other – and the separation of the aged and children from the able-bodied adults. You can also see that the managers had grander rooms, placed either side of the main entrance, which had bay windows (the Board Room and the Governor’s Office).

Finally, a note for anyone not of a Scottish persuasion. The NLS has maps of Northern Ireland, Wales, and, dare I say it, even England.