Group    From 1895  To 1903

Oriolet Hospital and Convalescent Home

Categories: Medicine

Founded and endowed by Arnold Frank Hills (1857–1927), MD of Thames Ironworks, sportsman (founder of West Ham FC), philanthropist, and promoter of vegetarianism.

A centre of treatment for sick vegetarians it consisted of a Victorian house named Oriolet and an Arts & Crafts open-air ward block with 20 beds. The committed fruitarian Josiah Oldfield was made its Warden.

c.1898 Oldfield left and in May 1903 the Salvation Army took over the hospital. It was run by Florence Booth, renamed the Oriolet Hygienic Home and re-opened in June 1903 for the treatment of TB patients. When the doctor in charge became unwell and no replacement could be found the hospital was closed. 

1908 the premises were taken over by St Ethelburga's Home for Girls, which moved from Kilburn. 1922 that closed and the building became the York House Hotel. Part of the site became a tea garden until 1929. A small section continued as the garden of the Wheatsheaf public house, now, 2022, the Quindici Italian restaurant.

The Hotel was demolished in 1930 and new homes have been built on the site, as well as a new road - York Crescent. The only remnant of the Oriolet Hospital is a dragon finial on the roof of No. 97 Staples Road.

Source: (the magnificent) Lost Hospitals of London.

This image comes from Childrens Homes which has other photos of the buildings when they were used by St Ethelburga's Home for Girls. We wonder if the building at the far right is the still standing 105 Staples Road.

What we have failed to discover is where the name Oriolet came from. Oriole is a type of colourful European or North American bird.

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Oriolet Hospital and Convalescent Home

Commemorated ati

Oriolet Hospital and Dr Oldfield

The site of the Oriolet Fruitarian Hospital (1895 - 1903) and its director Dr...

Read More

Other Subjects

William Harvey

William Harvey

Born at Folkestone, Kent. Discovered and proved the circulation of the blood.

Person, Medicine

2 memorials
Sir Jonathan Hutchinson

Sir Jonathan Hutchinson

Surgeon and pathologist. He was born on 23 July 1828 in Selby, Yorkshire and our picture source gives a biography of his life. He died, aged 84 years, on 23 June 1913 in Haslemere, Surrey and was ...

Person, Medicine

1 memorial
Dame Rosalind Paget

Dame Rosalind Paget

Nurse and midwife. Trained at the British Lying-in Hospital. She was the first superintendent, and later inspector general, of the Queen's Jubilee Institute for District Nursing at the London Hospi...

Person, Medicine

1 memorial
Comte Jacques Jean Marie Rogge

Comte Jacques Jean Marie Rogge

He was born on 2 May 1942 in Ghent, Belgium. Elected President of the International Olympic Committee in 2001 and served until 2013 when he was made the IOC's Honorary President, a lifetime positio...

Person, Medicine, Sport / Games, Belgium

1 memorial