Originally posted by Gideon Fell
According to the 1889 annual report of the London Hospital [LH/A/15], the Davis ward was on the second floor. It comprised of 4 small wards for men and two for women these wards being known by numbers.
’50, Currie Wards’, the return address of D’Onston letter to police, was situated on the second floor of the Grocer’s Company wing of the Hospital suggesting 50 wards but the Currie ward at the time did not have such arrangements as the smaller Davis wards. I think that it would indicate a bed number in a traditional hall-type hospital ward as shown in contemporary photographs and as Currie ward is known to be a large arrangement.
The crossing out of D’Onston’s ward placement during 1888 from Currie to Davis wards in red was Victorian hospital best practice for the transfer of patients from general to recuperative wards. This is consistent with D’Onston’s recorded diagnosis of Neurasthenia requiring eventual rest in a smaller ward arrangement. It is also consistent with the mistakes that are made by researchers taking D’Onston’s word on his hospital administrative statements found in his police file. That is, his claim of Davis as a ‘private’ ward, which did exist, but was not private in a modern sense. London Hospital wards during the Victorian period were not private arrangements but a free public hospital in a slum area of the East End with private paying patients not introduced until the 1930’s.
Here is a small diagram of the layout of the hospital as a guideline. It is not the best but simply to give an idea of its wards in Victorian times.
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