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Hillcrest
San Diego,
California


Medical Community History

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Hillcrest has been a center for medical facilities for over a century.
Three large hospitals: Mercy, Naval and UCSD (formerly County) form a triangle around Hillcrest and have led to a proliferation of medical offices and clinics throughout the neighborhood. Below is a brief timeline of important events in the growth of our medical community.



1880s
“Dr. William A. Edwards’ Sanitarium and Private Hospital, is situated on the crest of Florence Heights and overlooks the city and bay. It is accessible by two lines of streetcars and is replete with all that is essential for the comfort of invalids. None but well trained nurses are employed, and every facility is at hand for the skillful performance of surgical operations. The surroundings are pleasant and make this a most desirable home for those seeking change of climate, combined with skillful nursing and medical supervision.”
— J.P. Lefevre, M.D., County Physician, report to the San Diego County Hospital Board of Supervisors.
1889
The first semi-permanent home of the County Hospital is built at the Poor Farm in Mission Valley. The Poor Farm is located on the former Jose Maria Estudillo property just north of Hillcrest. Bed capacity is 60 patients. Indigent sick (those who could not afford to pay for medical care) perform chores either in the hospital or on the farm. Food is raised on the 140-acre grounds including, vegetables, chickens, figs, apricots and peaches. The 35.6-mile San Diego Flume, also finishied this year, supplies fresh mountain water for the hospital and farm. Two “first class windmills” provide the power for pumping water. [more on the Poor Farm]
1891
St Joes


The Sisters of Mercy open St. Joseph’s Sanitarium at Eighth and University
 (the present day House of Heirlooms/Jack in the Box corner).

The initial 19-bed, three-story hospital and 10-acre site cost $5,000.
1903
St. Joseph’s Training School for Nurses opens, graduating its first ten students on May 31, 1906. Buildings that housed the student nurses still exist on Eighth Avenue north of University (Friendship Hotel).
1904
County Hospital ca 1940


San Diego County Hospital opens at the north end of Front Street on mesa overlooking Mission Valley. Total cost is about $60,000.

 The 90 patients residing in the previous county medical institution, the County Poor Farm in Mission Valley,
 are transferred up the hill on May 15th. A fourth floor is added in 1910 and a five-story east wing in 1926.
1912
Alma Theobald, a graduate of Notre Dame and registered nurse, opens the Hillcrest Sanitarium in a rented house at 4235 Fifth Street. The sanitarium is noted for its peaceful residential character and excellent cuisine. She later moves her nursing home to 208 West Laurel and renamed it Theobald Sanitarium.
1914
The 4th Marine Regiment Field Hospital moves from North Island to Balboa Park to serve the Panama-California Exposition. When the Navy leases the park as a training facility in 1917, the field hospital grows to a 50-bed War Dispensary, occupying in the former Park Police Headquarters.
1919
The Navy ceases training operations in Balboa Park. The Dispensary remains in operation while a permanent Naval Hospital is built on 17.35 acres deeded to the Navy on Inspiration Point. The dispensary is renamed Navy Hospital on May 20, 1919.
1919
801 University Avenue (the building currently occupied by House of Heirlooms) is erected as a surgery annex for St. Joseph’s Hospital.
1922
Naval Hospital

Naval Hospital Balboa Park is commissioned on 22 August with initial capacity of 250 beds. Naval Secretary Josephus Daniels personally chose the Inspiration Point site so “convalescent sailors can sit on the laws and look far beyond Point Loma to see the ships that ply up and down the Pacific.”
A new trolley station is constructed on the Park Street Line to serve the facility. The Spanish-Revival complex was designed by architects from the Bureau of Yards and Docks. The government paid the $1.1 million cost while the Red Cross donated a $47,000 recreation hall.
[more on the Naval Hospital]
1924
Mercy Hospital




St. Joseph’s medical center moves to a new campus of Mediterranean Revival buildings on a promontory overlooking Mission Valley. Fifth Avenue is extended north of Washington, curving along the canyon rim, to terminate at the hospital entrance. In addition to the six-story building, the grounds house Mercy School of Nursing, a convent and a chapel. 
1932
Mercy Hospital School of Nursing changes name to Mercy College of Nursing.
1941
Voters affirm land grant of 21.32 acres to allow the Naval Hospital to construct two double-decked barracks on Florida Drive. The park nursery, which had previously occupied this site, was moved at the Navy’s expense. On the eve of WWII the hospital complex consists of 56 buildings with a bed capacity of 1,424.
1943
WWII requires the Navy to greatly expand hospital facilities in San Diego. They temporarily take possession of the Natural History Museum, Museum Man and the Fine Arts Gallery — all to be used as a Navy Hospital Annex until 1948. A nurses dorm was located in the House of Hospitality and the lily pond was briefly used as a swimming pool. During WWII approximately 172,000 patients were treated at the naval hospital.
1945
By the end of war, the Naval Hospital grows to 241 buildings with a bed capacity of 10,499. The Naval Hospital interdenominational chapel was dedicated in January on land the city had originally granted for recreation purposes.
1953
The Naval hospital treats about 90,000 patients during the Korean conflict.
1956 State engineers declare that the County Hospital’s structure is unsafe. Two years later the County supervisors vote to build a 600-bed replacement.
1961
Naval hospital bed capacity is 1,650.
1963
County Hospital moves into the present eleven-story building across the street from the old facility. The $12.5 million facility requires three years of construction and has since been clad with earthquake reinforcement.
1966
Mercy Hospital erects an eleven-story hospital building north of Washington Street. The original hospital is mostly razed except for an elevator shaft still in use today. USCD School of Medicine leases the County Hospital for $350,000 a year, renaming it University Hospital.
1970
Mercy Hospital becomes San Diego’s first paramedic base station. Graduation of the final class from Mercy College of Nursing.
1972
The Veterans administration opens a $48 million hospital adjacent to UCSD Hospital.
1977
San Diego Hospice is founded.
1980
UCSD decides to buy University Hospital, now called UCSD Medical Center, from the county for $17 million. The operating agreement includes a commitment to care for indigent patients.
1987
University Pharmacy (now Priority Pharmacy) begins to fill scripts for AZT, the first available prescription for treatment of HIV/AIDS. AIDS Coalition to Unleash Power (ACTUP) San Diego is founded.
1992
To attract more insured patients, UCSD expands and remodels their facility at a cost of $37 million.
1995
Mercy Hospital joins with Scripps Health but retains a connection with the Sisters of Mercy.
2004
The building which is now the new home of Scripps Mercy Surgery Pavilion at Fifth and Washington is completely remodeled.
2005
UCSD Medical Center announces “A New Vision for Healthcare” with plans to move its trauma program to La Jolla, leaving only emergency services at the Hillcrest campus. Scripps Mercy will be the only San Diego County trauma center south of I-8. Many objections follow.


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