The Passaic County Historical Society
Lambert Castle, Paterson, NJ


 

 Early History of 
St. Joseph's Hospital, Paterson, NJ
Extracted from Paterson and Its Environs, Vol. 11, 1920
by Willian Nelson and Charles Shriner

St. Joseph's Hospital ca 1914
St. Joseph's Hospital - ca. 1914

St. Joseph’s Hospital was founded by the Sisters of Charity in 1867.  The building first occupied by them was on Church street, between Market and Ellison streets.   The sisters were heartily welcomed to Paterson, as the city stood in sad need of a place where the indigent sick could be properly taken care of.  St. John’s Catholic congregation contributed $400 in cash and contributions of cash flowed in from a number of sources, prominent among the contributors being the societies attached to St. John’s Church.  The women also took an interest in the project and organized a society each of the members of which agreed to contribute $1.00 per month towards the support of the hospital.   The contributions amounted in all $2,566.15.  The quarters occupied by the Sisters soon proved too small and were also open to the objection of being in the centre of the city, with no grounds surrounding.  In 1869 the residence of Mr. A. A. Fonda on Main street, near the Newark railroad crossing, was purchased together with the nine acres of land surrounding.  Two years later the Sisters saw themselves compelled to add a wing, for the purpose of supplying the demands of the institution and providing for laundry, bakery and boiler house, the latter being deemed necessary in order to heat the building with steam.  The cost of the building and ground, together with the improvements made, amounted to $98,000, of which sum $52,000 remained a lien on the property.  With this load of indebtedness the Sisters entered in the era in the history of this country generally referred to as “the hard times.”  It was only by the exercise of the most rigid economy and the most strenuous endeavors that they succeeded not only in caring for the sick in their charge but also in looking after the alleviation of the distress consequent on the stringency of the times and the closing of most of the industrial establishments in the city.  For the purpose of affording employment to a few, the Sisters started an industrial school.

A visitation of smallpox in 1883 called attention to the fact that the city of Paterson had no isolated building for the treatment of contagious diseases.  On the grounds owned by the Sisters, far removed from any of the main hospital buildings, stood a frame structure, the gift of Rev. Dean McNulty, which had been used as a school.  This was turned into a ward for the treatment of contagious diseases.  In 1885 another wing was erected at a cost of $20,000 but the demands on the hospital soon exceeded the accommodations.  In 1907 the Sisters began making arrangements for the erection of what became the main building of the hospital.  The two buildings already occupied, with such additions as were made from time to time, were of wood.  It was now determined to erect a building of stone and brick.  Ground was broken in 1909 and the building was opened in 1912, the cost being $125,0-00.  A great deal of the success attained by the hospital was due to the ability and unremitting energy of a woman, who for many years directed the efforts of the Sisters, Sister Mary Clare.  She was born in Newark, December 18, 1844, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Reilley.  Her first application to be admitted to the educational institution of the Sister of Charity at Madison, was rejected on account of her youth.  She was admitted to the novitiate on June 29, 1865, and came to the Paterson hospital on August 11, 1869, and there, after a life devoted to the care of the sick, she died on April 26, 1919.

The record of patients treated in the hospital is as follows:
1868 - 102 1869 - 140 1870 - 227 1871 - 325 1871 - 417 1873 - 380
1874-no rec'd 1875 - 274 1876 - 264 1877 - 291 1878 - 369 1879 - 411
1880 - 603 1881 - 711 1882 - 727 1883 - 577 1884 - 541 1885 - 505
1886 - 594 1887 - 825 1888 - 608 1889 - 756 1890 - 746 1891 - 845
1892 - 875 1893 - 883 1894 - 990 1895 - 1203 1896 - 1395 1897 - 1587
1898 - 1594 1899 - 1657 1900 - 1980 1901 - 1923 1902 - 1975 1903 - 2306
1904 - 2356 1905 - 1468 1906 - 1631 1907 - 1677 1908 - 1502 1909 - 1577
1910 - 2003 1911 - 2137 1912 - 2313 1913 - 2508 1914 - 2618 1915 - 3092
1916 - 3535 1917 - 3619 1918 - 3824

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