
Bensham Hospital
Bensham General Hospital was originally part of the workhouse.
In
February 1886 plans had been submitted to the Board of Guardians for a
new workhouse, school and hospital on High Teams Farms, to replace the
old workhouse in Union Lane which had been built in 1841 but was very
overcrowded.
The architect in 1886 reported that he had tried to embody
most of the leading characteristics of Aston Hospital in his plans and
facilities and had included provision for infirm and chronic cases, imbeciles,
sick wards, surgical cases, itch and look cases, isolation and maternity
wards.
Accommodation was for 117 men and 111 women at a cost of £9,250
for the hospital and £36,000 for the whole institution. The workhouse
opened in June 1890, becoming known in the early 20th century as High
Teams Institution.
A survey in 1931 showed that hospital accommodation in Gateshead was
totally inadequate and recommended that the workhouse hospital should be
taken over and adapted as a general hospital.
In 1936, however a new
survey abandoned this plan on the grounds of costs and situation and
recommended a new 200-250 bed hospital with a maternity unit near the
Isolation Hospital in High Fell. Work on the Queen Elizabeth Hospital began in June 1939 but was interrupted by the
war. This new hospital, was in use from
1943, but was not officially opened until March 1948.
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In the meantime, the original plan was returned to and in June 1941 the
hospital wards of the High Teams Institution were appropriated to become
Bensham General Hospital. It, like other Gateshead Hospitals, fell
under the control of the Gateshead & District Hospital Management
Committee from July 1948.
Bensham Hospital Photos and Information brought to you by
The Felling Heritage Group
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