Group    From 1789  To /12/1949

Western Dispensary

Categories: Medicine

Group

From AIM25:
"The Western Dispensary was founded in Charles Street, Westminster, in 1789, 'for gratuitously administering advice, medicines and attendance to the poor inhabitants of the City of Westminster and places adjacent'. From 1822 it also undertook maternity cases 'for the delivery of needy lying-in married women at their homes'. It moved to Tothill Street, Westminster, in 1850, to Broadway, Westminster, in 1858, and to Rochester Row, Westminster, in 1878-1879. A subsidiary organisation, the 'Marie Celeste Convalescent Branch', was established in 1888 with the object of sending patients of the Dispensary to suitable convalescent homes for recovery. The Dispensary was closed in December 1949 and its funds were handed over to the United Westminster Almshouses in 1952."

It was of course the 1946 creation of the National Health Service which rendered this Dispensary redundant.

The man who produced the standard translation of Wagner's prose works, published in 1895, was, twice, the Resident Medical Officer of this Dispensary.  William Ashton Ellis was born in 1823 in Wales.  Qualified as a doctor in London in 1844.  Around 1875 became a devotee of Wagner’s works.   Became the Resident Medical Officer at the WD in 1878.  In 1886 he unsuccessfully applied for the post of Secretary at the Dispensary which would have meant a reduction in salary – perhaps he hoped to work fewer hours and thus free up time for his real love.  The successful candidate was Morgan.  Ellis resigned as Medical Officer in 1887.  In 1915 he returned to his post at the Dispensary and died in his rooms there on 2 January 1919.  During the period 1887 – 1915 he produced the Wagner translations.  We found all this at Faithful, All Too Faithful, By David Cormack, 2002 – a fascinating story that involves Theosopy and other such features of the period.  

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Western Dispensary

Commemorated ati

Francis Charles Morgan

"Consols", from "Consolidated stock", were government bonds, a type of financ...

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Other Subjects

Dr. Louisa Garrett Anderson

Dr. Louisa Garrett Anderson

Born Aldeburgh, Suffolk. CBE MD. Daughter of Elizabeth Garrett Anderson and niece of Millicent Fawcett. Suffragette. Established and ran the Endell Street Military Hospital. The picture shows Ander...

Person, Gender Issues, Medicine

2 memorials
Chelsea Physic Garden

Chelsea Physic Garden

Originally established in 1673 as The Apothecaries Garden. The word ‘physic’ in this context means ‘healing’. In 1983 the garden became a registered charity and opened to the public for the first t...

Place, Gardens / Agriculture, Medicine

1 memorial
John Sewell

John Sewell

Surgeon of Lower Marsh Lambeth active in 1848.

Person, Medicine

1 memorial
Sir Rowan Boland CBE

Sir Rowan Boland CBE

Dean of the Medical and Dental Schools at Guy's Hospital in 1964. Born Scotland. Lost an eye in WW1.

Person, Medicine, Politics & Administration, Scotland

1 memorial
Mary Seacole Trust

Mary Seacole Trust

From the Trust's website: "We want British society to become fairer, more inclusive and more harmonious. We believe that overcoming exclusion and increasing participation by promoting equality of b...

Group, Gender Issues, History, Medicine, Race Issues

1 memorial