Female House of Refuge

Founded: Incorporated 1866
Location
: Baker and Carey Streets, Baltimore, MD

Images

Female House of Refuge, Baltimore. Message of Frank Brown, Governor of Maryland, to the General Assembly at its Regular Session, January, 1894 (Baltimore: Wm. J.C. Dullany Company, 1894). Maryland State Archives

Female House of Refuge, Baltimore. Message of Frank Brown, Governor of Maryland, to the General Assembly at its Regular Session, January, 1894 (Baltimore: Wm. J.C. Dullany Company, 1894). Maryland State Archives

Interior, Female House of Refuge. Message of Frank Brown, Governor of Maryland, to the General Assembly at its Regular Session, January, 1894 (Baltimore: Wm. J.C. Dullany Company, 1894). Maryland State Archives

Interior, Female House of Refuge. Message of Frank Brown, Governor of Maryland, to the General Assembly at its Regular Session, January, 1894 (Baltimore: Wm. J.C. Dullany Company, 1894). Maryland State Archives

Additional Information

  • Dates: 1894
    Notes: THE FEMALE HOUSE OF REFUGE, was incorporated in 1866. It is a reformatory institution for young girls, situated at the corner of Baker and Carey streets, Baltimore. It cost about $60,000, of which amount the State gave $10,000, and the remainder was made up from private contributions from benevolent citizens of the city of Baltimore. They have had in their charge since the erection of the building 583 girls, who are taught the ordinary English branches, housework, sewing, moral and religious training, and a system of work has been adopted by which the girls are trained in woman’s industries, and they receive a large percentage of their earnings from the sales of the work, which amount is deposited in Savings Banks to their credit. They are regularly graded according to merit, and whenever deemed prudent are placed in good homes, or returned to their relatives. Some, of course, return to their former evil lives, but a large proportion are permanently reformed. The present building will accommodate something over one hundred, giving each one a separate sleeping apartment. The average number of inmates is about seventy. This institution is assisted annually by the State of Maryland, and by the city of Baltimore. The State appropriation in 1892 was $5,000 per annum.
    Source: Message of Frank Brown, Governor of Maryland, to the General Assembly at its Regular Session, January, 1894 Baltimore: Wm. J.C. Dullany Company: 89

 

U. S. General Hospital Adams House

Founded: September 13, 1861
Closed: May 1862. Patients transferred to McKim’s Mansion
Location: Adams House Hotel, southwest corner of Pratt and Hanover Streets, Baltimore, MD

Additional Information

  • Dates: 1862/02/11
    NotesNotice, Baltimore Daily Gazette, February 11, 1862 relating to admissions to the National Hotel hopital and Adams Hospital.

 

Josias D. Whittaker

Birth: ?
Death: 1876
Occupation: doctor

Associated Counties

  • Baltimore City

Directories

Date Name Occupation Address City
1868-1869 Josias D. Whittaker doctor 90 Greenmount Ave. Baltimore City
1865-1866 Josias Whittaker doctor 90 Greenmount Ave. Baltimore City

Additional Information

  • Dates: ?-1876
    Notes: M.D., University of Maryland, 1824. Died at Baltimore, 1876. See lists of 1848 and 1853.
    Source: Cordell, Eugene Fauntleroy, Medical Annals of Maryland 1799-1899 Baltimore: The Medical and Chirurgical Faculty for the State of Maryland: 620

Special Cholera Hospital No. 3

Founded: 1832
Location: Baltimore, MD

Additional Information

 

Eye and Ear Dispensary of Church Home

Closed: 1882
Location
: North Broadway, Baltimore, MD

Additional Information

  • Dates: 1882/09/19
    NotesHospital Opening and Dispensary Consolidation. The Baltimore Eye, Ear and Throat Charity Hospital, No. 186 Franklin street, opened its outpatient or dispensary department yesterday. The institution is a consolidation of the Eye and Ear Dispensary of the Church Home, North Broadway, the Baltimore Charity Eye and Ear Dispensary, Central Avenue, the eye and ear department of the Baltimore General Dispensary, Liberty street, and the Baltimore Throat Dispensary, Park avenue, all of which have been discontinued. The staff of the hospital is made up of specialists formerly connected with those institutions, as follows: Eye and ear, Drs. Samuel Theobald, S.L. Frank, Russell Murdock and I. Bermann; throat, Drs. J.H. Hartman, Samuel Johnston and John N. McKenzie; consulting surgeons, Drs. Alan P. Smith, L. McLane Tiffany, Christopher Johnson and Oscar J. Coskery; consulting physicians, Drs. Samuel C. Chew, G.W. Miltenberger, Rigin Buckler and Ferd. J. Chatard, Jr. The hospital is supported by volunteer contributions, and treatment will be supplied free of charge to the poor. The in-patient department, provided with free beds, will be opened about October 1. The officers of the institution are as follows: Hon. Geo. Wm. Brown, president; John W. McCoy, Samuel G. Wyman, vice-presidents; Clayton C. Hall, treasurer; John N. Mackenzie, M.D., secretary; finance committee, Wm. H. Perot, C. Morton Stewart, Mendes Cohen, W.S. Rayner; board of trustees, John Lee Carroll, Ernest Knabe, C. Morton Stewart, Wm. H. Perot, T. Edward Hambleton, Samuel G. Wyman, Jno. W. McCoy, W. S. Rayner, Samuel H. Lyon, T. Harrison Garrett, Mendes Cohen, S. Teackle Wallis, Wesley A. Tucker, Geo. Wm. Brown, Clayton C. Hall.
    Source: Sun (Baltimore), 19 September 1882.

 

Evening Dispensary for Working Women and Girls

Founded: Incorporated 1891
Location
: 115 West Barre Street, Baltimore, MD

Additional Information

  • Dates: 1901
    Notes: (Incorp. 1891) 115 west Barre St. Clinics held: Monday and Thursday, 3 to 5 p.m.; Tuesday, Wednesday and Friday 7 to 9 p.m. Object.–To provide treatment for womena nd children by women physicians. Management.– Board of directors, self perpetuating. 10 to 25 cents is charged those who can pay. At Wednesday evening clinic the fee is 50 cents. Two physicians reside in the Dispensary who visit sick patients in their homes. The Dispensary is supported by private subscriptions, and by the receipts from its pay patients. Patients treated 1900-1901, 6841; prescriptions filled, 13,274; visits to outside patients, 1865. Income, 1900, $2063.78; expenses, $1879.99.
    Source: Charity Organization Society, Directory of the Charitable and Beneficent Organizations of Baltimore together with Legal Suggestions, Etc. Baltimore: : 40-41

 

William Whitridge

Birth: 1840
Death: 1910, Feb. 6
Occupation: doctor

Associated Counties

  • Baltimore City

Directories

Date Name Occupation Address City
1877 William Whitridge doctor 181 N. Charles St. Baltimore City
1868-1869 William Whitridge doctor 181 N Charles Baltimore City
1865-1866 William Whitridge doctor 49 N Charles Baltimore City
1881 William Whitridge doctor 181 N. Charles Baltimore City
1863-1864 William Whitridge doctor 49 N Charles Baltimore City
1867-1868 William Whitridge doctor 181 N Charles Baltimore City

Additional Information

  • Dates: 1840-?
    Notes: Born at Baltimore, 1840. A.M., University of Maryland (School of Letters), 1859; M.D., University of Maryland, 1862. 829 North Charles Street, Baltimore.
    Source: Cordell, Eugene Fauntleroy, Medical Annals of Maryland 1799-1899 Baltimore: The Medical and Chirurgical Faculty for the State of Maryland: 620
  • Dates: 1910
    Notes: Died, Baltimore City, February 6, 1910, age 70
    Source: Arps, Walter E., Jr., Maryland Mortalities 1876-1915 from the (Baltimore) Sun Almanac Westminster: Family Line Publications: 244

South Baltimore Eye and Ear Hospital

Founded: 1901. Incorporated 1903
Location: 1017 Light Street, Baltimore, MD
Also known as: South Baltimore Eye, Ear, Nose, and Throat Hospital

Additional Information