Finley General Hospital

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Finley General Hospital
Part of military hospitals in the United States
Washington, D.C.
Finley U.S. Gen'l. Hospital, Washington, D.C. - lith. and print by Chas. Magnus, 12 Frankfort St. , NY. LCCN96502201.jpg
Finley General Hospital looking south in 1864
Finley General Hospital is located in Washington, D.C.
Finley General Hospital
Finley General Hospital
Coordinates38°54′30″N 77°00′00″W / 38.908325°N 77.000122°W / 38.908325; -77.000122
Site information
Controlled byUnion Army
Site history
Built1862
In use1862–1865
Battles/warsAmerican Civil War

Finley General Hospital was a Union Army hospital which operated near Washington, D.C., during the Civil War. It operated from 1862 to 1865.

The hospital was set up with 1,061 beds. On December 17, 1864, 755 beds were occupied.[1]

Location[]

The precise location of the hospital has been lost over time. However, several sources mention it and it is possible to deduct it from these pieces of information.

Walt Whitman mentions it in December 1862 in the Daily Morning Chronicles:

That little town, as you might suppose it, off there on the brow of a hill, is indeed a town, but of wounds, sickness, and death. It is Finley Hospital, northeast of the city, on Kendall Green, as it used to be call'd.[2]

Gallaudet University was established on land donated by United States Postmaster General Amos Kendall and known as Kendall Green in 1856.[3]

In The War Hospitals, John wells Bulkley writes in 1902:

North of Boundary Street, on the Bladensburg Road, near Kendall Green, were a number of wards, supplemented by office and other buildings, and tents, designated as the Finley Hospital, in charge, from July, 1862, to 1865, of Drs. R. A. Bradley, Jr., and G. L. Pancoast.[4]

A clarification is needed regarding the name of the streets:

  • Bladensburg Road is not the current Bladensburg Road (known at the time as Bladensburg Pike or Turnpike). It became known as the Old Bladensburg Road and sits were Delaware Avenue crossed Boundary Street.
  • Boundary Street was renamed Florida Avenue on January 14, 1890.[5]

Cantonment Sprague (also known as Camp Sprague), occupied by 1st Regiment R.I. Detached Militia was located next to Mrs. Joseph Gales's Mansion (her husband had passed away in 1860). The Eckington General Hospital opened in 1862 and closed in April 1863 when it merged with the adjacent Finley General Hospital.[6]

The map below shows the direction to Glenmont Cemetery which still stands today along with "Bladensburg Road".

A confirmed illustration of Finley Hospital (lithography) from 1864 shows the Capitol Building and the Washington Monument.[7]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Civil War Washington - Organization of the Hospitals in the Department of Washington - Table 6: Census of the General Hospitals, Department of Washington, December 17, 1864 - http://civilwardc.org/introductions/other/hospitals.php
  2. ^ The Walt Whitman Archive - Traveling with the Wounded: Walt Whitman and Washington's Civil War Hospitals https://whitmanarchive.org/criticism/current/anc.00156.html
  3. ^ "History of Gallaudet University". Gallaudet University. Archived from the original on April 30, 2013. Retrieved July 18, 2012.
  4. ^ The War Hospitals by John wells Bulkley Surgeon in charge of Patent Office Hospital - page 157 in Washington during war time; a series of paper showing the military, political, and social phases during 1861 to 1865 edited by Marcus Benjamin
  5. ^ "Boundary Street No longer; it Will Be Known as Florida Avenue in the Future". The Washington Post. January 15, 1890. p. 8.
  6. ^ "Washington and Georgetown, D.C.," Indexes to Field Records of Hospitals, 1821-1912, Manuscript Record Group 94, National Archives. via Civil War Washington
  7. ^ Picture on Wikipedia Commons
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