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Nursery and Child’s Hospital manuscript collection

 Collection
Identifier: MS 3180

Abstract

This collection contains the records of the Nursery and Child’s Hospital, including Board of Directors meeting minutes, patient rosters, and financial documents.

Dates

  • 1879-1970
  • Majority of material found in 1915-1969

Creator

Conditions Governing Access

Box 5 is restricted from public use due to water and mold damage. Photocopies of all information can be found in Box 3 Folder 39.

Conditions Governing Use

The reproduction of materials in this collection may be subject to copyright restrictions. It is the responsibility of the researcher to determine and satisfy copyright clearances or other case restrictions when publishing or otherwise distributing materials found in the collections. For more information visit the MCHC’s Rights and Permissions page.

Historical Note

The Nursery and Child’s Hospital was founded in 1875 as the Protestant Infant Asylum of Baltimore City. A group of the city’s women, led by Mrs. William H. Brune, were concerned by the lack of Protestant orphanages. They founded the nondenominational asylum to care for orphaned and abandoned babies and find them adoptive families which would operate on charitable donations. The asylum was given two rooms at the Maternité Hospital at 113 West Lombard Street in Baltimore, and doctors and nurses from the College of Physicians and Surgeons attended to the medical needs of the children. The institution took sixty-six infants in its first year. It was decided to move to a new location at Gilmor and Presstman Streets to accommodate the large number of wards. The asylum was able to find families for eleven children in its first year, but the early years also were plagued by very high mortality rates because of illness and malnutrition. The Board was forced to purchase a lot in Loudon Park Cemetery.

The asylum moved once again in 1879 to the former Schroeder mansion at 400-410 North Schroeder Street, which had previously housed the Union Orphan Asylum. The asylum became the Nursery and Child’s Hospital and added additional services. The mansion was expanded during the 1880s to create a separate hospital wing. The nursery provided care for orphaned children up to age four. The hospital provided medical services free of charge to impoverished children up to fifteen years old, and a free dispensary was opened in the 1890s. The hospital also began to receive financial support from the city and state for its work. Beginning in 1925, a significant portion of the funding came from Baltimore’s Community Fund.

The organization also moved away from taking babies under six months and began to focus on children two to six years old. The wards could be housed at the facility or placed with foster homes. In some instances, parents would temporarily admit their children to the orphanage, because they could not afford to care for them. Oftentimes, when their circumstances improved, they were able to take their children back. They received schooling at the facility. If a child had not been fostered or adopted by the time he or she reached the age limit, he or she would be placed with another city agency.

In 1932, the Nursery and Child’s Hospital moved to 420-422 North Fulton Street, because the Schroeder Street buildings had become antiquated and unusable. This was only a temporary space for the institution, because the following year, property was purchased on Woodbourne Avenue to build a tailored facility. The move also led to the end of the organization’s hospital work. The new building at 721 Woodbourne Avenue opened in 1938 and the institution once again changed its name and took on a new identity.

The Nursery and Child Study Home of Maryland, Inc. became a group home which cared for children who struggled to find a place elsewhere. The new admittances ranged in age from four to fourteen. These children faced different challenges and often had severe emotional and behavioral issues which required close supervision and psychiatric care. This included chronic truants, those who had difficulties adjusting to foster care, and some juvenile court cases. The home employed an on-site psychiatrist, an on-call medical doctor, and nurses as well as housemothers and fathers to care for the children. This change in mission also necessitated another name change in 1943 to the Child Study Center of Maryland which reflected its new services. The center’s goal was to rehabilitate the children in its care, so they could return to society. The study center continued in this vein for many years and evolved its practices and policies as the field of child psychiatry changed and grew. In 1964, the center became affiliated with the Children’s Psychiatric Services of Johns Hopkins Hospital.

The Woodbourne property was eventually sold to the Baltimore City Department of Juvenile Services. The center became the Woodbourne Center which still operates as a residential treatment center for boys with severe mental health issues.

Extent

2.1 Linear Feet (5 boxes)

Language of Materials

English

Arrangement

The collection is divided into eight series which reflect the nature of the contents. These series are History; Administration; Finances; Board of Directors; Committee of Management; Patients; Miscellaneous; and Ledgers. The documents are arranged chronologically within these series.

Immediate Source of Acquisition

Gift of the Woodbourne Center in May 2015.

Separated Materials

Photographs from this collection were removed to form the collection:

PP 0308, Nursery and Child's Hospital photograph collection, 1880-1960

Scope and Contents

The collection contains the records of the Nursery and Child’s Hospital, including Board of Directors meeting minutes, patient rosters, and financial documents. The records show the evolution of the hospital’s function and treatment styles over the years. The Committee of Management and Board of Directors documents discuss at length not only the practical matters of the running of the institution but the philosophy of working with the patients and wards in its care. The studies and reports done both by staff and external agencies held in the collection also show the shift in mission and practices of the Nursery and Child’s Hospital from a hospital to a treatment center for emotionally disturbed and/or developmentally disabled children.

Of particular interest are the patient/ward rosters which provide in-depth information about each child in the institution’s care, including reasons for admission, health issues, and disposition after leaving. Several studies were also conducted on these children, the results of which are included in the collection, and provide insight into their experiences at the institution. The rosters also provide a wealth of genealogical information. Adoptive parents, circumstances of their placement at the center, and health data are included in the registers.

Creator

Title
Guide to the Nursery and Child’s Hospital manuscript collection
Status
Under Revision
Author
Lara Westwood
Date
2016-02
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
Undetermined
Script of description
Code for undetermined script

Revision Statements

  • 2020-03-05: Manually entered into ArchivesSpace by Sandra Glascock

Repository Details

Part of the H. Furlong Baldwin Library Repository

Contact:
H. Furlong Baldwin Library
Maryland Center for History and Culture
610 Park Avenue
Baltimore MD 21201 United States
4106853750