I say that with tongue in cheek, but my three youngest
grandbabies, ages 5, 6 and 7, have visited the hospital on several occasions.
Not for anything super serious, thank goodness. Watching them cavort with their
friends at their annual joint birthday party today – their b-days are close together –
I thought how lucky we are to have them.
You see, they are adopted. The youngest, Emerson, was only four
days old when my daughter and her spouse brought her home from the hospital. My
husband had the pleasure of babysitting her for two months until she was old
enough to go to daycare.
Over the years since then, the kiddos have had their share of
childhood illnesses and minor accidents, involving trips to the doctor and/or
hospital. Which brings me to Cook Children's Medical Center.
Cook Children’s is a nationally recognized not-for-profit
pediatric hospital located in Fort Worth, Texas. One of the largest
freestanding pediatric medical centers in the U.S., it is consistently
recognized as one the best children's hospitals in the nation. But it didn’t
start out that way.
The Cook Children’s of today exists thanks to two
women, Ida Turner and Matilda Nail Cook.
Ida Turner was the former postmistress of Fort Worth. On a cold
November day in the early 1900s, Mrs. Turner met a man carrying an infant; the
man was a doctor, and the child had been left on his doorstep. Mrs. Turner
purchased a warm wrap for the baby and, doing some investigating, learned no
hospital in Fort Worth would provide charity care for abandoned children.
Turner vowed to somehow build a hospital that would care for every child,
regardless of the parents' ability to pay, and the community of Fort Worth rallied around her. Contributions poured in from hundreds of
community members, land was donated, architects provided plans free of charge,
countless tradesmen stepped in to build the hospital without any pay and scores
of volunteers held fundraisers and stepped in wherever they could.
On March
21, 1918, Mrs. Turner’s dream, the Free Baby Hospital was opened. The hospital opened its doors with only
30 beds. A second floor was added in 1922 to include care for older children
and adolescents and the hospital was eventually renamed The Fort Worth
Children's Hospital.
Fort Worth's Free Baby Hospital; https://www.cookchildrens.org/about/history/Pages/default.aspx |
Meanwhile, when oil was found on the Cook Ranch
near Albany, Texas, in 1926, Matilda Nail Cook decided to use her money to found a hospital to serve Fort Worth’s women and children in
memory of her late husband and daughter. On January 28, 1929, the W.I. Memorial
Hospital opened. Designed
in Italian Renaissance style, it had 55 beds.
W.I. Cook Memorial Hospital; https://www.cookchildrens.org/about/history/Pages/default.aspx |
When the polio epidemic struck in 1952, the board of trustees of the W. I. Cook Memorial Hospital voted to expand the facility to 72 beds and changed its mission to care exclusively for children. They renamed the facility Cook Children's Hospital. It was proposed that the hospital combine with Fort Worth Children’s Hospital, but the boards of the respective institutions could not reach an agreement. The two hospitals finally merged in 1985. Countless Fort Worth and Tarrant County families are very grateful for the care given to their children by this fine medical center.
Lyn Horner is
a multi-published, award-winning author of western historical romance and paranormal
romantic suspense novels, all spiced with sensual romance. She is a former
fashion illustrator and art instructor who resides in Fort Worth, Texas –
“Where the West Begins” - with her husband and one very spoiled cat. As well as crafting passionate
love stories, Lyn enjoys reading, gardening, genealogy, visiting with family
and friends, and cuddling her furry, four-legged baby.
Newsletter: Lyn’s Romance Gazette http://eepurl.com/bMYkeX
Website: Lyn
Horner’s Corner
Wow, it sounds like a very Awesome caring hospital. Thank you for sharing this post, I enjoyed reading it. God Bless this hospital. Have a Great week. God Bless you and your whole family.
ReplyDeleteWhat a wonderful place, and the history. Thank you. Doris
ReplyDelete