YorkSpace has migrated to a new version of its software. Access our Help Resources to learn how to use the refreshed site. Contact diginit@yorku.ca if you have any questions about the migration.
 

House of Refuge, c. 1860

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

1860

Authors

Unknown

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Location: Toronto Public Library

Abstract

Description

Note: Established in 1860 on the site of today’s Bridgepoint Health on the east side of the Don north of Gerrard, the House of Refuge provided shelter for “vagrants, the dissolute, and for idiots.” It was used an an isolation hospital during the smallpox epidemics of the 1870s; a separate part of the building housed homeless elderly people during the 1880s and 90s. The original building was demolished in 1894, and a new structure operating under the name of the Riverdale Isolation Hospital became Toronto’s treatment and teaching centre for infectious diseases in 1904. As infectious diseases declined in the twentieth century, the building was renamed the Riverdale Hospital in 1957.

Keywords

House of Refuge, Don River, isolation hospital, smallpox

Citation

House of Refuge, c. 1860. Toronto Public Library, TRL, Historial Picture Collection, B 4-66b.