Charitable aid begins in Quincy

The Civil War was a disruptive event in most peoples' lives and as a port city, Quincy felt that disruption deeply.
The city had travelers, disabled veterans, widows, and orphans passing through or settling who more often than not, needed assistance. The need was particularly acute during the winter.
On Nov. 30, 1869, several Quincy church and community leaders met to discuss these needs. The Quincy Daily Herald mentions a public meeting "for the purpose of organizing an association for the relief of the poor of our city during the coming winter". Eleven ministers, 19 lay people, and two physicians met that evening. They decided that four persons from each city ward would solicit monetary pledges and four people would distribute the aid in each ward from December 1 to April 1. The assembled citizens pledged money, food stuffs, and dry goods.
The newspaper further states on Dec. 4, 1869 that, "The poor must be cared for, and the demands of the deserving, who have lost in life's lottery and been wrecked amidst destitution and suffering, are undisputable. Every person in the enjoyment of health and work should give something. ..."
The entire process was repeated in December 1870 with The Quincy Daily Herald reporting, "The demand and necessities are greater than a year ago."
Lorenzo Bull, a business owner and civic leader, "suggested that it would be well to provide for the establishment of a permanent organization for the relief of the poor, who are certain always to be with us."
A new organization was not formed and in 1871 and 1872, the Ladies Aid Society took over the winter relief of the poor from the Relief Association. In the fall of 1873, with the same conditions looming, the association gathered 12 citizens and incorporated themselves under state law as the Charitable Aid and Hospital Association of Quincy, Illinois.
The document states that "the object of this Association shall be the relief and support of sick, destitute and dependent persons and the establishment and maintenance of an Infirmary and Hospital in said City of Quincy."
By 1874, the association was under contract with the trustees of the board of supervisors "for the care and support of the poor and indigent paupers of the city of Quincy."
This aid was to be provided for throughout the entire year. For the next two years, 300-500 people per month were supported with total expenses ranging between $8,000 and $10,000. In 1876, one of the elected supervisors, Gustav Levi, was awarded the contract to provide for the poor from his own business and the businesses of other supervisors. Henceforth, the association turned all of its energies to managing the newly opened Blessing Hospital.
Over the years, the association members witnessed the difficulty in helping the poor, who were often sick, in their homes. According to the Report of the Charitable Aid and Hospital Association (1877), "Those who have not seen for themselves can have but a little idea of what it is to be sick in those homes of poverty, where there is stench, dirt, dampness, and whatever fosters disease and misery. …"
There was a City Poor House, also known as the City Infirmary "which had none of the essentials of a hospital (but provided care) and the … Hospital on Broadway ... (which) was frequently too full to take patients."
St. Mary's Hospital had opened in October 1867 with 50 beds. Father Schaefermeyer of St. Boniface had asked the Franciscan Sisters of the Poor to come to Quincy to do home nursing and establish a hospital because he too was dissatisfied with the care of the sick and indigent at the City Poor House. The nursing sisters arrived in 1866 and began doing social work and home nursing until the hospital opened the following year.
Even with the established St. Mary's Hospital, by the fall of 1874, the Charitable Aid and Hospital Association was committed to building a hospital which opened for patients on May 10, 1875.
According to The Quincy Whig of May 8, 1875, caring for the poor and those in the City Poor House "made the provision of this new hospital imperative … it was determined to provide a place where any sick person in the city, who had no home, or whose home lacked such essential and desirable things, might have the best of medical and surgical skill, careful nursing, a clean and well ventilated room, good diet and pleasant surroundings."
Blessing Hospital took less than one year to build on land donated by Matthias and Sarah Denman. It was funded solely by donations and had no debt. The hospital was a two-story brick building facing Spring between 10th and 11th. It had two wood burning furnaces, hot and cold running water, and 20 beds in 12 wards, with room for 10 more. The hospital cost $8,500 to build plus the site value of $3,000.
The Needle Pickets, a society of Quincy women organized during the Civil War to provide aid to Union solders, donated the last of their treasury. Businesses and individual citizens contributed money, goods, and services.
The first matron was Mrs. Ellen W. Williams and the physician in charge was Dr. R. W. McMahon. Dr. McMahon was located at Eighth and Hampshire and at the Relief Association office on 25 S. Fifth. Anyone needing hospital care was to apply to Dr. McMahon at either location. The hospital would not accept patients with contagious or venereal diseases. The Quincy Whig of May 8, 1875 said, "Like schools and libraries, hospitals are for no single class. Those who are destitute will be made welcome, and those who, being able, prefer to pay the cost of their maintenance, will be allowed to do so."
As the smaller of the two city hospitals, Blessing Hospital cared for only 208 patients in the first two years. The hospital relied on the contributions of the 20 protestant churches, B'nai Shalom Temple, and the generosity of the citizens of the community to survive.
The major diagnoses of those first two years were intermittent fever, pneumonia, and other unspecified pulmonary complaints. The Board of Trustees, with John Wood as the president, operated the facility with the matron, physician, and various maids and handymen.
By 1877, they clearly needed more expertise and hired Miss Elmira C. Davis, a trained nurse from New York City. Things were about to change at Blessing Hospital, but that is another story.
Arlis Dittmer is the library coordinator for Blessing Health System. She curates the archival collection and regularly answers historical questions for the health system and the public.
Sources
Certificate of Incorporation of the Charitable Aid and Hospital Association of Quincy, Illinois, October 27, 1873. Quincy, IL: Blessing Archives.
Report of the Charitable Aid and Hospital Association: To the Public (Brochure). Quincy, IL: Blessing Archives, 1877.
"Charitable Aid." The Quincy Whig, May 8, 1875.
"City News." The Quincy Daily Herald, November 30, 1869.
"Relief Association." The Quincy Daily Herald, December 28, 1870.
Sisters of the Poor of St. Francis. Annual Report of St. Mary's Hospital, Quincy Illinois: For the year 1915. Quincy, IL: Blessing Archives.
"The Relief Association." The Quincy Daily Herald, December 4, 1869.





