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TOP PERFORMING HOSPITAL IN LONDON IS 300 YEARS OLD Chelsea and Westminster Hospital celebrates 300-year anniversary with a special commemorative service at Westminster Abbey

Chelsea and Westminster Hospital celebrated its 300th anniversary with a special commemorative service today at Westminster Abbey, London, attended by past and current staff, patients, volunteers, supporters, MPs and other NHS dignitaries.

 

The historic service recognised the pioneering forefathers who set up Westminster Hospital in 1719, the first hospital in the world funded by charitable giving, which continued to grow and become Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in 1993. The service included readings by past and current staff, alumni from Westminster Medical School (which later became Imperial College School of Medicine), patients and supporters of Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, including Alexander Hoare – a direct descendant of Mr Henry Hoare, who founded Westminster Hospital in 1719 with a charitable donation of £10.

 

Throughout its history, the hospital has had a number of distinguished medical students and staff including Hale Thompson who in 1847 performed the first operation under general anaesthetic at the hospital. The renowned physician John Snow studied and worked at the hospital and is best known for his discovery in the 1854 cholera epidemic that the disease was water borne. Lord Lister was the surgeon responsible for developing the antiseptic technique. Sir Clement Price-Thomas was one of the pioneers of thoracic surgery and famously operated on King George VI within Buckingham Palace in 1951. In 1981, Professor Brian Gazzard diagnosed one of Europe’s first cases of AIDS at Westminster Hospital. 


Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust and CW+ continue to build upon the legacy and the pioneering vision of the forefathers of 300 years ago to deliver exceptional patient care and patient experience in a world-class clinical environment. Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, which includes Chelsea and Westminster Hospital and West Middlesex University Hospital, is one of the UK’s top performing Trusts and was recently ranked as one of the Top 100 Hospitals in the world. The acute Trust is the second largest maternity provider in the country, the fourth largest A&E provider, has a world-renowned HIV/sexual health service and specialist burns and surgery programmes.

 

Charitable support continues to be as integral today as it has been throughout the hospital’s 300 history. One example is the biggest fundraising campaign launched by the hospital and its charity CW+ to redevelop and expand the hospital’s adult and neonatal intensive care units. The Trust and its charity announced today that they have reached their £12.5 million target towards the £25 million project, in just two years.

 

The Dean of Westminster, the Very Reverend Dr John Hall, led the Abbey service. During his Address, he said: “As we mark the three-hundred-year history of Westminster Hospital, and its continuing story as part of the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, we honour the men and women who have served over the years and those who continue to serve there in our own day. Visiting the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital a few months ago, it became clear to me was that the nature of the hospital’s physical structure and the care given there, conduce to an experience for patients that goes beyond immediate physical health needs. There is no doubt that the work and ministry of the Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust is a great force for good and a powerful example, and so highly worthy of this celebration.”

 

Lesley Watts, CEO of Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, who in 2018 was awarded CEO of the Year by the Health Service Journal, said: “Today, we celebrate our long history and ongoing pioneering approach to delivering exceptional patient care. We are proud to have been at the forefront of innovation with a long list of other hospital ‘firsts’ in emergency care, brain tumour extraction, breast cancer chemotherapy, HIV diagnosis and anaesthetics, to name but a few. As we recognise the past, we also look forward to continuing to deliver first class patient care through sector-leading innovation.”

 

A Distinguished Heritage

Mr Henry Hoare and four friends founded the original Westminster Hospital in 1719, and the hospital continued to grow and have several different locations before closing in 1992 to reopen as the new Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in 1993, combining services from Westminster Hospital along with five other London hospitals.

 

The renowned Westminster Medical School was founded in 1834 by the notable surgeon George Guthrie and provided over 160 years of medical education, with its legacy preserved and perpetuated today at Imperial College School of Medicine, at Imperial College London.


The hospital has a rich history including remaining operational throughout both World Wars, including several bombing attacks during the Blitz with miraculously no fatalities. The hospital once again found itself at the forefront of caring for victims of the IRA bombings in the Capital in the 1980s. In more recent times, the now Chelsea and Westminster Hospital provided life-saving care following the 2005 terrorist attacks, the Westminster Bridge and London Bridge attacks in 2017 and treated patients following the devastating Grenfell Tower fire in 2017.

 

The hospital has received Royal support over its 300-years with Royal patrons and support dating back to a donation in 1721 by George, Prince of Wales, followed by King William and Queen Adelaide becoming patrons in 1830, along with Queen Victoria. King George VI was also a patron and opened the fifth Westminster Hospital in 1939. In more recent times, Queen Elizabeth II opened the new hospital in 1993 and the Prince of Wales and Duchess of Cornwall visited Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in 2015 to open the new Children’s Hospital.


To celebrate and honour this remarkable history, hospital charity CW+ has installed a heritage timeline and permanent public exhibition at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital. Thanks to support from the Heritage Lottery Fund, this exhibition includes artefacts from the hospital archives, oral accounts and memories from past staff and a variety of film footage and photographs documenting the hospital’s history.

 

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About Us

About Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust

The Trust manages Chelsea and Westminster Hospital, West Middlesex Hospital and a number of community sexual health and HIV services across London. It employs over 6,000 staff who care for nearly one million people. The Trust provides a range of specialist clinical services as well as general hospital services for people living locally, which include A&E and maternity at both hospital sites. 

www.chelwest.nhs.uk


About CW+

CW+ is the official charity of Chelsea and Westminster Hospital NHS Foundation Trust including its hospitals and clinics. Our generous supporters and partners enable us to:

  • Build and enhance clinical facilities to create an outstanding healing environment for patients and staff
  • Deliver a unique art and design programme to transform the experience and wellbeing of our patients
  • Invest in health innovation to deliver exceptional patient care


CWPLUS Registered Charity No.1169897

www.cwplus.org.uk

 

About Imperial College London

Imperial College London is one of the world’s leading universities. The College’s 17,000 students and 8,000 staff are expanding the frontiers of knowledge in science, medicine, engineering and business, and translating their discoveries into benefits for our society.

Imperial is the UK’s most international university, according to Times Higher Education, with academic ties to more than 150 countries. Reuters named the College as the UK’s most innovative university because of its exceptional entrepreneurial culture and ties to industry.

 

Today, Imperial College School of Medicine accepts 345 new medical students every year. The School harnesses scientific excellence at Imperial to provide a distinctive, research-led student experience. Medical students work across multiple College campuses, in lecture theatres, tutorial rooms, laboratory space and a human cadaver anatomy suite. Students are taught in 15 major hospitals, hundreds of general practices, in partnership with the London Ambulance Service, and in hospices, prisons and community health centres. More than 1,500 College and NHS staff are involved in teaching approximately 2,100 medical students over the six-year course.

 

Mr Martin Lupton is Vice-Dean (Education) of the Faculty of Medicine at Imperial and is Head of Imperial College School of Medicine. Professor Jonathan Weber is the Dean of the Faculty of Medicine.

https://www.imperial.ac.uk/medicine/

 

Contacts

Sarah Holland

Head of Communications

sarah.holland@cwplus.org.uk

4 Verney House, 1B Hollywood Road

Phone: 02033156610

www.cwplus.org.uk