Winnipeg General Hospital

Summary

Winnipeg General Hospital is a hospital that was founded in 1872 in Winnipeg, Manitoba. It was built on the estate of Andrew McDermot. The driving force behind the hospital was McDermott's son-in-law Andrew Bannatyne. The hospital is part of the Health Sciences Centre, one of the largest hospitals in Canada.

Winnipeg General Hospital
Health Sciences Centre
Map
Geography
Location700 William Ave, Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada
Coordinates49°54′14.4″N 97°9′31.68″W / 49.904000°N 97.1588000°W / 49.904000; -97.1588000
Organization
FundingProvince of Manitoba
TypeDistrict, General, Teaching
Services
Emergency departmentyes
Helipadyes
History
Opened1872

History edit

In 1882, a 20-bed hospital was built on land donated by Andrew McDermot. It was later exchanged for a larger site and the first building were constructed in 1884.[1] The site grew and Henry Sandham Griffith designed a major addition to the hospital in 1903.[2]

In 1937, contractor William Arthur Irish added another building costing $25,000.[1]

The hospital merged Winnipeg Children's Hospital and Winnipeg Rehabilitation Hospitals in 1972 to become the Health Sciences Centre.[1]

Dr. Edward Benson edit

One of the founders of Winnipeg General Hospital was Dr. Edward Benson (1843–1904).

Born in Peterborough, Ontario, son of Colonel J. R. Benson and Catherine Lee, he studied medicine at Louisville, Kentucky during the United States Civil War. Later he went to New York's Bellevue Hospital where he passed his final examinations before he was 21 years old. Returning to Canada he received a Canadian medical diploma at Toronto, and practised at Peterborough and Lindsay, Ontario.

Benson came to Winnipeg in 1874 following his brothers (Lieutenant James Benson) who was with the Wolseley Expedition. James Lee Benson (1849–1926) He was also an early Dentist practitioner. Born at Peterborough, Ontario in March 1849, he returned to Winnipeg around 1881 and began a dental practice. He was the first elected President of the Manitoba Dental Association. He went to the Yukon during the Klondike Gold Rush and remained at Dawson City for seven years. He died at Winnipeg on 3 July 1926, survived by a son and three daughters. He was buried in Old Kildonan Cemetery. Sources:[3]

In addition to private practice Dr. Benson was city jail surgeon for 25 years, Coroner for Winnipeg, medical officer for the Deaf and Dumb Institute, and one of the founders of Winnipeg General Hospital. He was a member of the School Board for more than a decade. He was a Conservative, a Mason, an Odd Fellow, and a member of the board of trustees of Grace Church from its inception. In 1877, he was a member of the First Convocation of the University of Manitoba.

He married Annie Campbell in 1874, and had three sons: John Robinson Benson (1876-?), Edward Campbell Benson (1878-?), and Henry Lorne Benson (1879-?).

He died at Winnipeg on 26 August 1904. He is commemorated by Benson Avenue in Winnipeg.

Notes edit

  1. ^ a b c "Winnipeg General Hospital, Health Sciences Centre (Bannatyne Avenue, Winnipeg)". Manitoba Historical Society. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  2. ^ "Henry Sandham Griffith". Biographical Dictionary of Architects in Canada. Retrieved 31 May 2023.
  3. ^ "Pioneer dentist of city dies aged 77" Manitoba Free Press, 5 July 1926 [Manitoba Legislative Library, Biographical Scrapbook B8]

Sources edit

  • The Story of Manitoba by F. H. Schofield, Winnipeg: The S. J. Clarke Publishing Company, 1913
  • Pioneers and Early Citizens of Manitoba, Winnipeg: Manitoba Library Association, 1971

49°54′14″N 97°09′32″W / 49.9040°N 97.1588°W / 49.9040; -97.1588