The Radcliffe Infirmary was a hospital in central north Oxford, England, located at the southern end of Woodstock Road on the western side, backing onto Walton Street.
Closed in 2007, after refurbishment the building was re-opened in October 2012 for use by the Faculty of Philosophy and both the Philosophy and Theology libraries of the University of Oxford.
History
The initial proposals to build a hospital in Oxford were put forward at a meeting of the Radcliffe Trustees, who were administering John Radcliffe's estate valued at £4,000, in 1758. The facility was constructed on land given by Thomas Rowney, one of the two members of parliament for Oxford. The foundation stone was laid on 27 August 1761 and the new facility was officially opened on 18 October 1770.[1]
A fountain of the Greek god Triton was placed in front of the main infirmary building in 1858[2] and the Oxford Eye Hospital was established on the site in 1886.[3]
During the First World War, part of the hospital was converted for military use as one of the many sections of the Third Southern General Hospital.[4]
In 1936 the Radcliffe Infirmary treated four members of the British Union of Fascists following the Battle of Carfax.[5]
A number of pioneering moments in medical history occurred at the hospital. Penicillin was first tested on patients on 27 January 1941[6] and the Nuffield Laboratory of Ophthalmology was founded on the site in 1942.[3]
The entrance of the hospital was seen in the ITV television series Inspector Morse in 1991.[7] The first Utah Array (later known as the BrainGate) implantation in a human (Kevin Warwick) took place on 14 March 2002.[8]
Agnes Jean Watt, Royal Red Cross[10] (1859–1946) Matron from 1897 to 1921[11] reformed the nursing department[12][13] and was also Principal Matron, TFNS, 3rd Southern General Hospital, Oxford, from 1909 to 1922.[14][15][16] She was trained under Matron Eva Luckes, at The London Hospital between 1888 and 1890.[17] Agnes worked as a sister for most of the next seven years at The London Hospital. Sydney Holland and Eva Luckes were determined that she should obtain the matron's position in Oxford.[13][18]
Thora Silverthorne trained as a nurse at the Radcliffe Infirmary, during which she earned the nickname "Red Silverthorne" for her Communist Party activism in the city of Oxford and for her membership of the October Club. Silverthorne volunteered as a nurse to serve hunger marchers passing through Oxford during the 1932 National Hunger March, an act of mercy she performed by "helping herself to bandages and dressings" from the Radcliffe Infirmary.[19] Silverthorne used her medical training at the Radcliffe Infirmary to help create the first-ever foreign hospital to serve the International Brigades and the Spanish Republic.[20] Later in life she created the UK's first union for rank and file nurses, the National Nurses Association.[19]
^Annual Report, 1921; Radcliffe Infirmary and County Hospital, Oxford Annual Reports, 1921; OHARI/1/A14, 8–9; Oxford Health Authority, Oxfordshire History Centre, Oxford
^ abRogers, Sarah (2022). 'A Maker of Matrons’? A study of Eva Lückes’s influence on a generation of nurse leaders:1880–1919' (Unpublished PhD thesis, University of Huddersfield, April 2022)
^Anonymous (1918). "Watt, Miss A., R.R.C.". The London Hospital Gazette. Supplement (198): Part 2, 29.
^Annual Report, 1915, 7; Radcliffe Infirmary and County Hospital, Oxford Annual Reports, 1911–1915; OHARI/1/A8; Oxford Health Authority, Oxfordshire History Centre, Oxford.
^Agnes Watt, British Army Nurses’ Service Records 1914–1922; WO399/15369; The National Archives, Kew
^Agnes Watt, Register of Probationers; RLHLH/N/1/3, 4; Barts Health NHS Trust Archives and Museums, London
^Agnes Watt, Register of Sisters and Nurses; RLHLH/N/4/1,103; Barts Health NHS Trust Archives and Museums, London
^ abMeddick, Simon; Payne, Liz; Katz, Phil (2020). Red Lives: Communists and the Struggle for Socialism. UK: Manifesto Press Cooperative Limited. p. 185. ISBN978-1-907464-45-4.
^Farman, Chris; Rose, Valery; Woolley, Liz (2015). No Other Way: Oxfordshire and the Spanish Civil War 1936-39. London: Oxford international Brigade Memorial Committee. p. 100.
^""Theodora Turner Obituary"". The Times: 21. 7 September 1999.