Hale Infirmary

{{Short description|Hospital in Montgomery founded in 1890}}

{{Use mdy dates|date=January 2025}}

File:Hale infirmary 1919.png

Hale Infirmary (also Hale's Infirmary{{cite book |url=https://tile.loc.gov/storage-services/public/gdcmassbookdig/officialguidetoc01tint/officialguidetoc01tint.pdf |page=51 |title=Official Guide to the City of Montgomery 1861-1920 |year=1920 |publisher=Paragon |location=Montgomery}}) was a hospital in Montgomery, Alabama, for African American citizens during a time of segregation. It was the first such hospital in the city; founded in 1890 by Dr. Cornelius Nathaniel Dorsette, it was in operation until 1958.

The hospital was founded during the Black Hospital Movement, a nation-wide development of efforts that aimed to provide better medical care to Black citizens as well as training opportunities for doctors and nurses of color.{{cite encyclopedia |url=https://encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/black-hospital-movement-in-alabama/ |title=Black Hospital Movement |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Alabama |first=Thomas J. |last=Ward Jr. |date=August 31, 2023 |orig-date=August 24, 2009 |accessdate=February 25, 2024}} At the time, there were 25 such hospitals in Alabama, and Hale's was the first in Montgomery. Its founder, Cornelius Nathaniel Dorsette (1852? - 1897), had graduated from Hampton University in Virginia and from the medical school at the University of Buffalo (where he was the second Black graduate{{cite encyclopedia |first=A. J. |last=Wright |url=https://encyclopediaofalabama.org/article/cornelius-nathaniel-dorsette/ |encyclopedia=Encyclopedia of Alabama |title=Cornelius Nathaniel Dorsette |accessdate=February 26, 2024 |date=August 1, 2012}}). In 1883, Booker T. Washington (his classmate at Hampton) had asked him to come to Montgomery, and he was one of the first Black doctors to be licensed in the state. He became the personal doctor to Washington. He also ran a pharmacy and had an office on Dexter Avenue, where he had a three-story office building built for him.

Dorsette's father-in-law, James Hale, was the richest Black man in Montgomery. He donated the land for the hospital, and money was raised for the building by a white women's social organization.{{cite web |url=https://alabamayesterdays.blogspot.com/2018/12/hale-infirmary-early-alabama-hospital.html |first=A. J. |last=Wright |title= Hale Infirmary: An Early Alabama Hospital for Blacks |date=December 7, 2018 |accessdate=February 26, 2024 |website=Alabama Yesterdays}} The hospital was a two-story building with sixty beds, an operating room, and an isolation ward.{{cite web |url=https://www.hmdb.org/m.asp?m=240686 |website=Historical Marker Database |accessdate=February 25, 2024 |title=Hale Infirmary / The Lynching of Willie Temple }} It cost $7,000 to build, had plumbing throughout and bathrooms for men and women with hot and cold running water.

Halle Tanner Dillon Johnson, the first woman licensed to practice medicine in the state, was tutored in Hale Infirmary. In 1919, the lynching of Willie Temple took place in the hospital: he was murdered by a white mob while being treated for a gunshot wound. Later, Martin Luther King Jr. helped raise funds for the hospital. David Henry Scott, a doctor from Montgomery who had studied medicine at Meharry Medical College in Nashville, operated at the hospital, and for a while was the head of the hospital.

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