Skip to main content
Service phase: Beta

This is a new way to search our records, which we're still working on. Alternatively you can search our existing catalogue, Discovery.

Fonds

Winter Street Hospital, Sheffield

Catalogue reference: NHS13

What’s it about?

This record is about the Winter Street Hospital, Sheffield dating from 1917 - 1937.

Access information is unavailable

Sorry, information for accessing this record is currently unavailable online. Please try again later.

Full description and record details

Reference
NHS13
Title
Winter Street Hospital, Sheffield
Date
1917 - 1937
Description

Patients 1917 - 1937

NHS13/1/1 Register of admissions, 1929 - 1937

NHS13/1/2 Registers of discharges, 1917 - 1931

Related material

<span class="wrapper"><p>Admissions of patients later sent to Lodge Moor Hospital, 1898 - 1902 (NHS9/2/1/1)</p> <p>Monthly totals, from Jan 1898 to Dec 1918, of diseases (scarlet fever, diphtheria, smallpox, measles and other diseases) numbers admitted, discharged, died and remaining in hospital, average daily number of patients variously at Lodge Moor, Crimicar Lane, Winter Street, and Moor End sanatorium; including military cases at Winter Street Hospital from 1915 (NHS9/2/1/1-6)</p> <p>Winter Street and 3rd Northern General Hospital: admission and discharge books for Field Service 1916-1919 (NHS37, previously SY641/H5/1-6)</p> <p>Lodge Moor Hospital (Winter St and Crimicar Lane): register of military sick cases 1939 - 1942 (NHS37 previously SY641/H5/8); other papers 1944-1952 (NHS37 previously SY641/H5/9-11)</p> <p>Daily returns of patients: Lodge Moor, Winter Street, Crimicar Lane and Commonside Hospitals, 1935 - 1948 (NHS26 previously SY641/H6/1-4)</p> <p>Sheffield City Council Health Committee minutes, 1849 - 1973: these include summaries of Medical Officer of Health monthly reports to 1967, with statistics of infectious and notifiable diseases (CA112/1-37)</p> <p>Sheffield City Council draft Health Committee minutes, 1878 - 1968 (CA164/1-169; CA673/18-30)</p> <p>Sheffield City Council Hospitals Committee minutes, 1881 - 1927 (CA113/1-8)</p> <p>Sheffield City Council Hospitals Committee draft minutes, 1881 - 1927 (CA166/1-20)</p> <p>Sheffield Public Health Department: minutes of committees and subcommittees, papers and plans relating to extensions to Lodge Moor Hospital, proposed smallpox hospital on Crimicar Lane, and Dart Square isolation houses near Winter Street Hospital, 1887-1958 (CA39/1-128)</p> <p>Papers concerning tuberculosis in Sheffield, 1918-1925 (CA39/95-97)</p> <p>Records of Sheffield No 3 Hospital Management Committee, 1948-1974 (NHS37: formerly SY298/H1-9, SY641/H1-8)</p></span>

Held by
Sheffield City Archives
Language
English
Physical description
3 items
Access conditions

Information in patient records is subject to access restrictions under the Data Protection Act, or may be subject to exemptions from the Freedom of Information Act. For further information please refer to a member of staff.

Administrative / biographical background

Winter Street Hospital: opened 1881, closed 1976

Winter Street Hospital and sanatorium for infectious diseases (other than smallpox) and tuberculosis was built in 1881 at a cost of £20,000. It consisted of four blocks containing 80 beds in large wards and eight single-bedded wards, with airing courts on the roof. In 1892 the Nurses Home was built, followed by an isolation block of four wards. In 1898 a row of cottages adjoining the hospital in Dart Square was taken over to house more tuberculosis patients. Before the First World War the main cases taken in were scarlet fever and diphtheria.

Sheffield& apos;s Tuberculosis Scheme was discussed at meetings of the City Health Committee. In late 1913 the Council approved the principle of taking over cases of tuberculosis at that time dealt with by the Poor Law Authorities, and decided that there should be two separate sanatoria within easy reach of the city, one for men (150 beds) and one for women (c.100 beds). Approval was granted in January 1914 for the purchase of a site in the Rivelin Valley (for women); and in late 1914 it was decided that land at Buck Wood be purchased for site for male sanatorium. These were apparently not built, the onset of the First World War presumably putting an end to these plans.

The hospital was handed over to the military authorities, to be used for military wounded, in March 1915. Wards had been prepared for this since October 1914 and the patients had been transferred out to Crimicar Lane Hospital on 25 February 1915. During the Second World War the hospital was again used for the military sick.

After the war the hospital reverted to accommodating male and female tuberculosis cases, and had beds for 110 patients.

Bed places were set at 103 in 1954 when beds placed in the middle of wards were removed to reduce overcrowding. Children at the hospital were transferred to Ash House Hospital School in 1957. Closure by March 1970 was proposed in November 1968; the patients would be transferred to Lodge Moor Hospital. In 1971 spending was approved to adapt the premises to form a geriatric day hospital with 40 places. In mid 1974 the 84 beds were too many for the staff to cope with and the number was reduced to 65.

In October 1974 Trent Regional Health Authority put the upgrading of Winter St Hospital out to tender; during which works the patients were moved out elsewhere. On 10 December 1975 it was recommended that the proposal to rename the reopened hospital & apos; St George& apos;s Hospital& apos; be passed to Sheffield Area Health Health Authority.

Administration:

The hospital was administered by Hospitals Committee of Sheffield City Council, established under the Public Health Act, 1875. In 1927 this committee became a sub-committee of the Health Committee.

At the establishment of the National Health Service (NHS) in 1948 management, like other hospitals formerly administered by the Council, passed to the Sheffield No 3 Hospital Management Committee of Sheffield Regional Hospital Board.

By May 1948, Commonside Sanatorium was being run as an annexe to Winter Street Hospital, and by 1951 Dronfield Hospital was also administered in that capacity.

Following the reorganisation of the NHS in 1974 the management of Winter Street Hospital came to the newly created Central (Teaching) District of Sheffield Area Health Authority (Teaching), within Trent Regional Health Authority.

Publication note(s)
<span class="wrapper"><p>&amp; apos;Record of Municipal Affairs in Sheffield 1843 to 1893&amp; apos;, by JM Furness, 1893 (Sheffield Archives LOCAL FUR)</p> <p>&amp; apos;Hospital Survey: Sheffield and East Midlands area&amp; apos;, Ministry of Health, 1945 (Sheffield Local Studies 362 SQ)</p> <p>Sheffield No 3 Hospital Management Committee annual reports, 1957-1959 (Sheffield Local Studies 362.11 SQ)</p></span>
Record URL
https://beta.nationalarchives.gov.uk/catalogue/id/8a0f3cf9-d417-4b09-b645-fd221ebe82ee/

Catalogue hierarchy

92,302 records

This record is held at Sheffield City Archives

You are currently looking at the fonds: NHS13

Winter Street Hospital, Sheffield