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This is a list of U.S. Marine Hospitals and Public Health Service Hospitals that operated during the system's existence from 1798 to 1981. The primary beneficiary of the hospitals were civilian mariners known as the Merchant Marine, although they had other beneficiaries at various times; the system was unrelated to the U.S. Marine Corps.

The Marine Hospital Fund was founded in 1798; it was reorganized into the Marine Hospital Service in 1871 and renamed the U.S. Public Health Service in 1912. The hospital system became part of the Public Health Service's Bureau of Medical Services when it was created in 1943. The number of major hospitals peaked at thirty in 1943, and declined to nine in 1970. The system was abolished in 1981. Many of the hospitals were transferred to other organizations and are still in use as a variety of purposes, including as hospitals, offices, apartments, and historical sites.

History

A map of the United States with locations marked
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Locations of Marine Hospitals opened prior to 1872. The hospitals still operating in 1872 are marked in blue. [1]
A map of the United States with locations marked
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
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List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
List of U.S. Marine Hospitals
Locations of major PHS hospitals in 1936. The cities that retained PHS hospitals after 1953 are marked in yellow, and those that retained them after 1970 are marked in blue. [2] [3] [4]

The Marine Hospital Fund was founded in 1798. Although the system was funded and largely operated by the federal government, they were locally managed with little centralized oversight, and with many positions filled through political patronage. In 1871, it was reorganized into a centralized administration, the Marine Hospital Service, led by the Surgeon General and staffed by a Commissioned Corps of officers. [5]

As of 1873, 31 Marine Hospitals had been built by the government, of which 10 remained in operation: Chelsea, Chicago, Cleveland, Detroit, Louisville, Mobile, Pittsburgh, Portland, St. Louis, and Key West. Of the rest, fourteen were sold, one was transferred to the War Department, one abandoned, one burned, one destroyed by a flood, one by a hurricane, one was damaged by an earthquake and abandoned; one remained unfinished due to its completion being impracticable. [6]

Over the late nineteenth century, the Marine Hospital Service was given authority over domestic and foreign quarantine functions, and expanded into other public health activities. In 1899 it formed internal divisions for the first time, with the Division of Hospitals administering the hospital system. The Marine Hospital Service changed its name to the Public Health Service (PHS) in 1912. [7]

At the end of World War I, PHS instituted a numbering system for hospitals, with numbers 1–23 assigned alphabetically to major Marine Hospitals that were operating or recently closed, with higher numbers going to a large number of new Public Health Service Hospitals at facilities transferred from the U.S. Army. [8] Many of these new hospitals were transferred in 1922 [7] to the newly created Veterans Bureau, which assumed responsibility for veterans' health benefits from the PHS. [9] [10]

Beginning in the late 1920s and continuing through the New Deal era, a significant building campaign upgraded several hospitals into large, monumental buildings, in contrast with the smaller buildings common for the 19th-century buildings. [10] By 1936, hospitals were divided into first-class Marine Hospitals, plus second- through fourth-class hospitals. [2]

In 1943, PHS collected its divisions into three operating agencies, and the Division of Hospitals became part of the Bureau of Medical Services. [7] [11] That year, the hospital system had reached its peak of 30 hospitals. [12] In 1951, all hospitals were redesignated Public Health Service Hospitals. [3] As of 1957, the Division of Hospitals operated 13 hospitals, 24 outpatient clinics, plus two neuropsychiatric hospitals and the National Leprosarium, and contracted with 155 other locations. [13] In 1965, there were 12 general hospitals and the 3 special hospitals. [12] [14]

During the PHS reorganizations of 1966–1973, The Bureau of Medical Services was broken up, and the Division of Hospitals became the Federal Health Programs Service, and then in 1973 became a different Bureau of Medical Services within the Health Services Administration. [7] [15]

The system came under pressure for closure starting in the late 1970s, as healthcare needs for sailors were dwindling, and healthcare for veterans was being taken over by the Veterans Administration. [10] The PHS hospital system was finally abolished during the Reagan administration in 1981, with the last eight general hospitals transferred to other organizations. [3] [16] The federal government would however continue to operate the National Leprosarium until 1999. [17]

List

The start year indicates when the hospital opened or was acquired by MHS/PHS. The end year indicates when the hospital was closed, converted to a clinic, or transferred to another organization. This list emphasizes hospitals considered major at some point in the system's history; there were also very many hospitals of lower statuses. [2] [7] [8]

Photo Location Start End Status Notes Refs

East Coast

Portland, Maine 1859 1952 Extant In use as private medical facility; see United States Marine Hospital (Portland, Maine) [1] [3] [8] [18] [19]
Boston, Massachusetts/
Chelsea, Massachusetts
1800 1804 The first Marine Hospital established; temporary location in rebuilt barracks at Castle Island [4] [8] [18] [20] [21] [22]
1804 1825 Demolished At Charlestown Navy Yard; transferred to the Navy and demolished
1825 1827 Temporary rented facility in Charlestown
1827 1857 Destroyed In Chelsea; after being sold, it was used as the Hawthorne School and then burned in the 1908 Chelsea fire.
1857 1940 Extant Built near Chelsea Naval Hospital; in use as apartments
1940 1981 Extant In Brighton; in use as private hospital facility
Vineyard Haven, Massachusetts 1879 1952 Extant In use as Martha's Vineyard Museum [3] [8] [18] [23]
Newport, Rhode Island ca. 1802 May have been temporary [1] [5]
Stapleton, Staten Island, New York 1831 1981 Extant Notable for the 1858 Staten Island Quarantine War at a satellite location, and being the birthplace of the National Institutes of Health in 1887 [4] [8] [24] [25]
1930s 1981 Extant In use as Bayley Seton Hospital
Neponsit, Queens, New York 1945 1950 Extant Neponsit Beach Hospital; leased from City of New York and replaced by Manhattan Beach hospital [3]
Manhattan Beach, Brooklyn, New York 1950 1960 [3] [26]
Ellis Island, New York 1902 1951 Extant See Ellis Island Immigrant Hospital [3] [18]
Cape Henlopen, Delaware 1894 1903 [18]
Baltimore, Maryland 1887 1981 Extant [4] [8] [27]
1934 1981 Extant Became a private hospital, now in use as an academic building for Johns Hopkins University
Washington, D.C. 1940 1961–
1967
Extant Freedmen's Hospital; previously operated by Department of the Interior; became Howard University Hospital [7] [28] [29]
Washington, D.C. 1940 1968 Extant See St. Elizabeths Hospital. Opened 1855 and was operated by the U.S. Army and then the Department of the Interior, transferred to PHS in 1940, and then to the National Institute of Mental Health in 1968; the eastern half of the campus is now operated by the District of Columbia, while the western half is now the headquarters of the Department of Homeland Security [7] [30]
Norfolk, Virginia 1800 1860s Demolished Built in 1787 by the State of Virginia, transferred to the federal government in 1800, sold off shortly after the Civil War, demolished in 1933 [4] [8] [18] [31] [32]
1922 1981 Extant In use as U.S. Navy Lafeyette River Annex
Portsmouth, North Carolina 1847 Abandoned before 1869 [1] [18] [33]
Wilmington, North Carolina 1881 1898 Constructed in 1860 but taken over by the Confederacy, and later became first site of Wilmington City Hospital; repurchased and used as Marine Hospital [1] [7] [8] [18] [34] [35]
1898 1918 Converted to PHS laboratory
Charleston, South Carolina 1833 Extant NRHP-listed. See United States Marine Hospital (Charleston, South Carolina) [7] [18] [36]
Savannah, Georgia 1906 1969 Extant In use as Bradley Hall of Savannah College of Art and Design [3] [8]
San Juan, Puerto Rico 1952 [3]

Gulf Coast

Key West, Florida 1845 1943 Extant [1] [3] [8] [18] [37]
St. Marks, Florida 1859 ca. 1861 Demolished Museum currently exists on its site at San Marcos de Apalache Historic State Park [1] [18]
Pensacola, Florida First planned in 1840s and 1850s but never built [1] [7] [18]
Mobile, Alabama 1843 1952 Extant Became Class II hospital after Civil War; NRHP-listed. See United States Marine Hospital (Mobile, Alabama) [1] [3] [8] [18]
New Orleans, Louisiana 1847 1858 Destroyed Abandoned after floods; destroyed in 1861 explosion [1] [8] [10] [4] [18] [19] [38]
N/A N/A Demolished Building partially constructed but never used as Marine Hospital; later used as insane asylum; hospital operated out of several temporary locations
1883 1933 Demolished Demolished and replaced with current building on same site
1933 1981 Extant
Galveston, Texas/
Nassau Bay, Texas
1931 [4] [39] [40] [41]
1970s 1981 Extant Nassau Bay hospital opened in 1972 as a private hospital, but went bankrupt a few years later and was taken over by PHS, replacing the Galveston hospital; became Houston Methodist Clear Lake Hospital
Fort Worth, Texas 1938 1967 Extant Narcotics hospital; now Federal Medical Center, Fort Worth [3]

Mississippi River

Carville, Louisiana 1921 1999 Extant National Leprosarium; became NRHP-listed Carville Historic District [3] [17]
Natchez, Mississippi 1852 1867 Destroyed Leased out after Civil War; became Natchez City Hospital; burned down in 1984 [1] [5] [18]
Vicksburg, Mississippi 1856 1870 Demolished [1] [5] [18]
Napoleon, Arkansas 1855 ca. 1861 Destroyed Destroyed by flood in 1868. See Napoleon Marine Hospital [1] [5] [18]
Memphis, Tennessee 1884 1965 Extant NRHP-listed; now Metal Museum [3] [8] [18] [19] [42] [43]
1937 1965 Extant
St. Louis, Missouri/
Kirkwood, Missouri
1858 1939 Demolished Larger building constructed adjacent in 1882; demolished in 1959 [1] [3] [5] [7] [8] [18] [19] [44] [45]
1939 1952 Demolished
Cairo, Illinois 1886 1919 Demolished [8] [18]
Galena, Illinois 1861 1868 Extant Later used as school and private residence [1] [5] [18]
Burlington, Iowa 1858 1865 Demolished [1] [18]

Ohio River

Paducah, Kentucky 1852 1861 Destroyed During the Civil War, Fort Anderson was constructed around the hospital building, which burned in 1862 [1] [5] [18]
Evansville, Indiana 1856 1867 Demolished Demolished around 1912 [1] [3] [8] [18]
1892 1947 Demolished Demolished early 1980s
Louisville, Kentucky 1852 1946 Extant NRHP-listed. See United States Marine Hospital (Louisville, Kentucky) [1] [3] [8] [18]
1933 1946 Extant
Cincinnati, Ohio 1860 1860 Demolished Became a military hospital upon completion and was never used as a Marine Hospital, later used by Good Samaritan Hospital; demolished ca. 1970. See United States Marine Hospital (Cincinnati) [1] [7] [18] [19] [46] [47] [48] [49]
1882 1905 Demolished Located in former Kilgour Mansion, built around 1815; in 1912 it was reopened as PHS Stream Pollution Investigations Station. See United States Marine Hospital (Cincinnati)
Lexington, Kentucky 1935 1967 Extant Narcotics hospital; now Federal Medical Center, Lexington [3]
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania 1851 1875 Demolished Demolished in late 1880s [1] [3] [8] [50] [51]
1909 1949 Extant Converted to clinic, now occupied by Allegheny County Health Department's Frank B. Clack Health Center; part of NRHP-listed Lawrenceville Historic District. See United States Marine Hospital (Pittsburgh)

Great Lakes

Burlington, Vermont 1858 1866 Destroyed Never used due to lack of patients; became Home for Destitute Children; burned down in 1893 [1] [18]
Buffalo, New York 1909 1949 Extant [3] [8]
Cleveland, Ohio 1852 1929 Demolished Sold to Pennsylvania Railroad in 1929 and demolished [1] [3] [8] [18] [52] [53]
1929 1953
Detroit, Michigan 1857 1930 Demolished Main building demolished in 1962; 1933 building on site NRHP-listed as U.S. Immigration Station Detroit [1] [3] [8] [18] [54] [55]
1930 1969 Demolished Demolished in 1984
Chicago, Illinois 1852 1864 Destroyed At Fort Dearborn; sold; burned down in 1871 Great Chicago Fire [1] [3] [8] [18] [19] [56]
1873 1965 Demolished Demolished for Disney Magnet School

Western U.S.

Port Townsend/ Port Angeles, Washington
1855 1858 Privately built and operated [1] [3] [18] [19] [8] [57] [58] [59]
1858 1893 Destroyed Originally privately built and operated under contract; purchased by government in 1883; burned down
1862 1866 Destroyed Relocated to Port Angeles; destroyed by flood and restored to Port Townsend
1896 1933 Demolished Demolished in 1971
Seattle, Washington 1933 1981 Extant Replaced Port Townsend hospital; transferred to City of Seattle and became Pacific Tower [3] [4] [60] [61] [62]
San Francisco, California 1854 1868 Demolished At Rincon Point; damaged by the 1868 Hayward earthquake and temporarily abandoned; later used as Sailor's Home and demolished in 1920s [1] [4] [8] [18] [63] [64]
1875 1932 On the Presidio of San Francisco
1932 1981 Extant On the Presidio of San Francisco; reopened as apartments in 2010. See Public Health Service Hospital (San Francisco)
Fort Stanton, New Mexico 1898 1953 Extant Tuberculosis sanatorium; created from former Fort Stanton; NRHP-listed [3] [18]
Lahaina, Hawaii 1844 1862 Destroyed See United States Marine Hospital (Lahaina, Hawaii) [18] [65]

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