Neha Patil (Editor)

Jessop Hospital

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Care system
  
NHS

Emergency department
  
No

Founded
  
July 22, 1878

Hospital type
  
Maternity

Closed
  
2001

Jessop Hospital History Grade II listed Jessops Edwardian demolished by Sheffield

Location
  
Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England

Beds
  
57 initially, 217 at closure

Affiliated university
  
Sheffield Medical School (University of Sheffield)

The Jessop Hospital for Women was a hospital in Sheffield, South Yorkshire, England.

Contents

History

Jessop Hospital Jessops Hospital for Women Leavygreave Road Sheffield

The Jessop Hospital for Women was opened in 1878 with funds from Thomas Jessop, a wealthy steelworks-owner. The architect was John Dodsley Webster. It was built to replace the old Sheffield Hospital for Women at Figtree Lane, which had only nine beds. The building cost £26,000 - a lot of money at the time - all paid for by Jessop. Initially it had fifty-seven beds, and was built in the classic Gothic Revival style. An Edwardian wing was built later, the hospital now accommodating 151 beds. Between 1927 and 1972 the hospital had a 45 bed annexe at Norton Hall known as the Firth Auxiliary Hospital. A further wing was added in the 1970s, increasing this number to the 217 present at closure in 2001.

The main maternity hospital in Sheffield is now the Jessop Wing of the Royal Hallamshire Hospital.

Jessop Hospital httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

In 2007 the majority of the 1970s wing was demolished by the University of Sheffield as part of their Jessop West development. The Victorian Wing of the original hospital was converted to house the Department of Music, who occupied it in 2009.

Jessop Hospital The demolition of the Edwardian Wing of Jessop Hospital

Despite being a Grade II listed building, demolition of the Edwardian wing started on 30 July 2013. Demolition was pursued in favour of renovation as it provides the University of Sheffield with a greater floor area for new development at a lower cost.

Diane Blood

Jessop Hospital BBC South Yorkshire In Pictures Goodbye Jessop Hospital

The hospital was in the news in 1998 when Diane Blood gave birth to a baby boy, having been inseminated using her husband's sperm, which had been taken from his body while he was unconscious on life support, shortly before his death. A prolonged legal case gave her the right to do this, despite not having the written consent of her husband.

Jessop Hospital Sheffield City Council approves demolition of Grade II listed

Jessop Hospital Jessop hospital Sheffield review Art and design The Guardian

References

Jessop Hospital Wikipedia