Plaque

St George's Hospital - 2

Inscription

St George’s Hospital was established on this site in 1733 in a country home built in 1719 by James Lane, 2nd Viscount Lanesborough. The hospital was located in the village of Knightsbridge due to the reputation for healthy country air. The three-storey red brick hospital was of simple design and wings were later added to the structure by architect Isaac Ware.

St George’s Hospital quickly outgrew its original building and in 1826, the trustees commissioned William Wilkins to design a new hospital. Wilkins was also the architect for the National Gallery in Trafalgar Square and University College. Completed in the early 1830s, Wilkins' building was designed In the classical style from drawings by Nicholas Revett of the choragic monument to Thrassylus at the Acropolis, Athens.

Many of the fathers of modern medicine studied, practiced and taught at St George’s Hospital and its medical school founded in 1831. Chief among these was John Hunter, the father of scientific surgery. Other well-known medical pioneers with careers at St George’s include Edward Jenner, a pioneer of immunology, Thomas Young, professor of natural philosophy to the Royal Institution and Henry Gray renowned for his comprehensive study of anatomy.

During World War II, the entire hospital was given over to casualties of war. The hospital and those who worked there escaped injury due to the war with the exception of a thousand pound bomb that fell on the lecture theatre of the medical school, but fortunately failed to explode.

The campaign to rebuild the hospital outside the centre of London began during World War II. During the 1950s, the hospital was offered a site in Tooting for the new St George’s Hospital and building began there in the 1970s. St George’s moved to its new buildings in Tooting South West London in 1980.

This historic building has now been carefully restored during an extensive four-year project (1988-1991) and transformed into a magnificent hotel which takes the name of the former Lanesborough House on this site.

Site: St George's Hospital (2 memorials)

SW1, Hyde Park Corner, The Lanesborough Hotel

Both plaques can be seen in our photo: one behind the lamppost on the left; the other attached to the bar in front of the door below the colonnade.

Credit for this entry to: Alan Patient of www.plaquesoflondon.co.uk

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the subjects commemorated on the memorial on this page:
St George's Hospital - 2

Subjects commemorated i

Lanesborough Hotel

A 5 star hotel, reputedly the most expensive in London. In 2011 the highest r...

Read More

Lanesborough House

Built by James Lane, 2nd Viscount Lanesborough.  Converted into a hospital in...

Read More

World War 2

Sorry, we've done no research on WW2, it's just too big a subject. But do vis...

Read More

St George's Hospital

Set up when the entire medical staff of the Westminster Hospital resigned in ...

Read More

Henry Gray

Anatomist and surgeon. Born in Pimlico. In 1845 he became a student at St Geo...

Read More

Show all 12

This section lists the other memorials at the same location as the memorial on this page:
St George's Hospital - 2

Also at this site i

St George's Hospital - 1

St George's Hospital - 1

There is no indication as to who erected the plaque, but the fulsome descript...

Read More

Nearby Memorials

Welsh Church - Peters

Welsh Church - Peters

W1, Eastcastle Street, 30

Each of these foundation stones is at the base of a pillar, reading left to right: Peters, Rowlands, Lewis, Taylor. Disappointingly we h...

1 subject commemorated
Women's Freedom League

Women's Freedom League

WC1, High Holborn, Holborn Tower, 137

Plaque is on a corner at the back of the building.

1 subject commemorated
Disraeli - Curzon Street

Disraeli - Curzon Street

W1, Curzon Street, 19

Disraeli moved here in November 1880.

1 subject commemorated, 1 creator
Philip de Laszlo

Philip de Laszlo

NW3, Fitzjohn's Avenue, 3, Hyme House

Erection date is approximate. Laszlo lived here with his wife and five sons, and died here. In his garden studio here he painted the you...

1 subject commemorated
Boris the cat

Boris the cat

NW5, Anglers Lane, 24

Boris the cat lived here, 1986 - 1996.

1 subject commemorated

Previously viewed

W. J. Lewis

W. J. Lewis

Member of the Building Committee to build the 1909 Bethnal Green Town Hall. Mayor of the borough in 1919. In 1921 he was named as Lt-Col W J Lewis OBE, Secretary of the Bethnal Green Liberal & ...

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
F. Musty
War dead, WW1
1 memorial
Hitchcock mosaics 02 - Hitchcock and Dietrich

Hitchcock mosaics 02 - Hitchcock and Dietrich

E11, Church Lane, Leytonstone tube station

6 artists/craftspeople and 5 organisations are named as creating this Gallery of 17 murals. Rather than repeat this information on all 17...

1 subject commemorated
Gilbert Bayes

Gilbert Bayes

Born 6 Oval Road, Camden Town. Also did the bronze group with clock at the entrance to Selfridges; Oxford Street (1928); the lovely sculptural work on 1 Wigmore Street (1925) as shown at Ornamental...

Person, Sculpture

11 memorials