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Map of the location of the Westminster Hospital (top left) relative to Westminster Abbey and the Palace of Westminster Edward Stanford's map of London, 1862 Westminster Hospital was founded in 1719, following a meeting in a coffee house, where four men met to discuss a "charitable proposal for relieving the sick and needy and other distressed persons”.[citation needed]. In 1834 a medical school attached to the hospital was formally founded. Westminster Hospital moved from Marsham Street to become Chelsea and Westminster Hospital at the old St Stephen's Hospital site in 1994. [edit] HistoryThe Westminster Hospital was established in 1719 as a charitable society "for relieving the sick and needy at the Public Infirmary in Westminster", and promoted by a Mr. Henry Hoare (most likely a scion of the C. Hoare & Co banking family) and associates. It was the first subscription hospital erected in London, and was incorporated in 1836.[1] In 1720, a house was taken for the purpose of an infirmary in Petty France; from which, in 1724, the institution was removed to Chapel Street, and some time after to James Street. A new and spacious hospital building was completed and opened in 1834, of an embattled quasi-Gothic character, erected by Messrs. Inwood. The hospital was situated by the Broad Sanctuary and the northern side of the nave of Westminster Abbey, between the Sessions House and Victoria Street, and accommodated about 200 in-patients, and the total number of patients relieved annually, in an 1878 account, is about 20,000. According to the same 1878 description, "Patients are admitted by order from a governor, except in cases of accident, which are received, without recommendation, at all hours of the day or night".[1] The following document, which may be styled the first annual report of this institution, dated 1720, hung framed and glazed on the wall of the secretary's room as at about 1878:
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