Boston Floating Hospital
Organization
Dates
- Existence: 1894
Biography
Abstract:
The Boston Floating Hospital (BFH) was founded in 1894 to provide ship-based free medical care to indigent infants and children. Its many achievements include the extensive training of nurses in pediatric care and the establishment of a milk laboratory, leading to innovations in infant formula. The ship burnt in 1927 and was rebuilt as a land-based facility. In 1930 it became the pediatric unit of the New England Medical Center consortium, partnering with the Boston Dispensary and the Tufts College School of Medicine. It officially merged with these institutions, as well as the Pratt Clinic/New England Center Hospital in 1965. It was later renamed the Floating Hospital for Children, and was part of the Tufts Medical Center in Boston, Massachusetts. <p>The Boston Floating Hospital (BFH) was founded by Rufus B. Tobey, a Congregational minister, in 1894. A ship that floated around Boston Harbor during the summer season, the BFH provided free medical care to indigent infants and children under the age of five. It was also known for studying children’s diseases, innovations in milk formula, and for training nurses to instruct mothers in the care of sick children.</p> <p>Two factors contributed to the establishment of the BFH, one charitable and one medical: the relatively wide spread philanthropy work throughout New England, and the conviction by some that sea air was therapeutic during convalescence. Walking home from work on South Boston each evening, Reverend Tobey observed mothers bringing their children to the Boston waterfront, enabling them to breath the sea air. Learning of a hospital boat in New York, he, with the help of Edward Hale, spearheaded the effort to set up a similar institution in Boston. The BFH was a private charity, and relied on donations for its endowment and expenses.</p> <p>The barge Clifford, the BFH’s first base of operations, made its maiden voyage in Boston Harbor on July 25, 1894. Attendance was around eighteen hundred, which nearly doubled by its second year. Medical students constituted most of the staff, under the supervision of chief physician J. B. Thornton. These first years brought significant accomplishments: a pharmacy, kindergarten, and “Modified Milk Department” were set up on board the Clifford, and by 1897, an inpatient department allowed for overnight stay, under the medical leadership of Samuel Breck. The BFH was officially incorporated by the state of Massachusetts in October of 1901. The Clifford was replaced by the Boston Floating Hospital Ship in 1906. The BFH also had an on-shore department, located first in the North End before moving to Roxbury in 1916.</p> <p>An early innovation for the BFH came by way of Francis Parkman Denny in the milk lab, who organized a human milk collection system for sick babies, a practice that eliminated the need for wet nurses. Further research in the milk lab contributed to the development of the first synthetic milk product, commonly known as Similac. Later on, the BFH established a bacteriological laboratory (1910), and a Post Graduate Training School for Nurses (1916).</p> <p>On July 1, 1927, the Boston Floating Hospital Ship burnt. While the BFH was never again resurrected as a ship, it was rebuilt as a land-based facility because of its achievements in lowering the infant mortality rate. In 1930, it joined the Boston Dispensary (BD) and the Tufts College School of Medicine to form the New England Medical Center (NEMC). The land-based BFH was located at 20 Ash Street in Boston, known as the Jackson Memorial Building, and officially opened on October 12, 1931. It continued to provide free outpatient services to the Boston community until November 1938, when it began charging for its services; a day’s stay at the BFH cost five dollars. The NEMC consortium was beneficial to its three partners; students from Tufts College School of Medicine gained practical experiences at the BFH and BD, for example, and provided medical services in return. Laboratory tests and operations at NEMC throughout the years led to significant advances in medical treatment. According to a 1938 log book, patients who suffered from upper respiratory infections were given throat cultures at NEMC, which motivated doctors to make this part of routine laboratory practice, in addition to blood and urine tests.</p> <p>Up until 1965, NEMC existed as an overseer to its constituent organizations. In 1965, the Board of Trustees of the BFH voted yes to an official merger to integrate with the BD and the Pratt Clinic/New England Center Hospital (PC/NECH). (The Pratt Diagnostic Clinic, an extension of the Boston Dispensary, was established in 1938. It became a unit of NEMC in 1946 and was renamed New England Center Hospital.) The consolidation of these three organizations formed one corporation under the name the New England Medical Center Hospitals, Inc. In addition, during the merger, the Tufts-New England Medical Center (T-NEMC) had also been established as a separate corporation. T-NEMC had its own board, composed of members of the Board of Trustees of Tufts, as well as members of the Board of Governors of NEMC. The BFH opened a new facility in October of 1979, which was further expanded in 1982.</p> <p>From 1930 to 2022, the Floating Hospital for Children was part of the Tufts Medical Center and is located in the Chinatown neighborhood of Boston. In 2020, the facility was renamed Tufts Children's Hospital, and in early 2022 it was announced that the Tufts Children’s hospital inpatient pediatric ward would be shut down. The pediatric inpatient beds were to be converted into an adult intensive care unit, though the hospital planned to continue offering other pediatric services through clinics, outpatient procedures, and a neonatal intensive care unit.</p>Found in 129 Collections and/or Records:
An MBTA subway running along side buildings of the Boston Floating Hospital
Digital Image
Dates:
1962-07
Found in:
Tufts Archival Research Center
An MBTA subway running along side buildings of the Boston Floating Hospital, 1962-07
Item — Box Shared 41: Series UA014.001; Series UA136.002; Series MS024.007; Series UA039.001 [Barcode: 39090011498983]
Call Number: UA014.001.DO.03258
Scope and Contents
Color slide
Dates:
1962-07
Artist's rendering of how children were cared for at the Boston Floating Hospital
Digital Image
Dates:
1900
Found in:
Tufts Archival Research Center
Artist's rendering of how children were cared for at the Boston Floating Hospital, 1900
Item — Box Shared 43: Series UA014.001; Series MS029.004; Series MS054.003; Series MS036.011; Series UA136.002; Series MS024.007; Series UA020.003 [Barcode: 39090010624381]
Call Number: UA014.001.DO.03146
Scope and Contents
4.5 x 5.5 in copy negative and a 2 x 2 in. color slide.
Dates:
1900
Barge "Clifford" (left) with the new Boston Floating Hospital
Digital Image
Dates:
1906
Found in:
Tufts Archival Research Center
Barge "Clifford" (left) with the new Boston Floating Hospital, 1906
Item — Box 5: Series UA225.004 [Barcode: 39090016515765]
Call Number: UA225.004.001.00005.00098
Scope and Contents
From the Series:
This series contains slides created and collected by Dr. Henry H. Banks as part of his research for his historical book celebrating the centennial of the School of Medicine, "A Century of Excellence: The History of Tufts University School of Medicine 1893-1993." There are images of the School of Medicine, its staff and students. There are also slides highlighting statistics about the School tuition, enrollment, loans, and financial aid from the 1980s and 1990s.
Dates:
1906
Barge "Clifford" with Tug Boat
Digital Image
Dates:
1894 -- 1906
Found in:
Tufts Archival Research Center
Barge "Clifford" with Tug Boat, 1894 -- 1906
Item — Box 5: Series UA225.004 [Barcode: 39090016515765]
Call Number: UA225.004.001.00005.00096
Scope and Contents
From the Series:
This series contains slides created and collected by Dr. Henry H. Banks as part of his research for his historical book celebrating the centennial of the School of Medicine, "A Century of Excellence: The History of Tufts University School of Medicine 1893-1993." There are images of the School of Medicine, its staff and students. There are also slides highlighting statistics about the School tuition, enrollment, loans, and financial aid from the 1980s and 1990s.
Dates:
1894 -- 1906
BFH groundbreaking, Dr. Gellis, Miss Katz, Dr. Grossman, April Murphy
Digital Image
Dates:
1979-10-25
Found in:
Tufts Archival Research Center
BFH groundbreaking, Dr. Gellis, Miss Katz, Dr. Grossman, April Murphy, 1979-10-25
Item — Box 6: Series UA225.004 [Barcode: 39090016515773]
Call Number: UA225.004.001.00005.00126
Scope and Contents
From the Series:
This series contains slides created and collected by Dr. Henry H. Banks as part of his research for his historical book celebrating the centennial of the School of Medicine, "A Century of Excellence: The History of Tufts University School of Medicine 1893-1993." There are images of the School of Medicine, its staff and students. There are also slides highlighting statistics about the School tuition, enrollment, loans, and financial aid from the 1980s and 1990s.
Dates:
1979-10-25