Glasgow State Tuberculosis Sanatorium

Glasgow State Tuberculosis Sanatorium. Image from the Bulletin, v. 23, no. 11 (1950)

History


Note: The Glasgow Tuberculosis Sanatorium was razed in 2014.


Glasgow Tuberculosis Sanatorium During Construction. (From the Courier-Journal, Louisville, Kentucky, 16 January 1949)

The District Six Tuberculosis Sanatorium located in Glasgow opened in late August of 1950. Dr. Reinhold Engleman was the hospital’s medical director. The hospital started admitting patients immediately after the formal dedication ceremonies on August 25th. As with the other Tuberculosis Sanatoriums in Kentucky, the cost of the entire project was $1,500,000. The Glasgow hospital was equipped to handle one hundred patients and each of those beds were allocated among the seventeen counties that were located in District Six. Under state law, each county in the district was entitled to space in the hospital based on the ratio of its 1940 census data. Additionally, the law stipulated that at least fifty percent of the cases seen at the hospital to be cared free of charge.


glasgowKY

Sun Room at Glasgow State Tuberculosis Sanatorium. Each of the Sanatoria had Identical Sun Rooms. (From the Courier-Journal, Louisville, Kentucky, 23 September 1951)

District Six Counties


  • Cumberland
  • Hart
  • Allen
  • Casey
  • Logan
  • Barren
  • Taylor
  • Green
  • Metcalfe
  • Adair
  • Russell
  • Clinton
  • Monroe
  • Butler
  • Edmonson
  • Warren
  • Simpson

(From Google Earth, 2008)

Sanatorium Design


Note: Each of the five “new” hospitals shared the same design and layout. You can visit our Madisonville State Tuberculosis Hospital page for photos of the interior.

The main hospital buildings were noted as being an “off-center T” and upon entering the main entrance, a patient or visitor would emerge into the admittance room or the outpatient clinic where all new patients are registered. This room had yellow-glazed tile walls, linoleum tile floor, and a noiseless celotex ceiling. A plaque hanging on the wall revealed site selection date.

The first floor, in addition to the aforementioned areas, included an X-Ray reading and record room, gown and wash rooms, treatment room, utility rooms, combination beauty parlor and barber shop, storage rooms, X-Ray and developing room, two dining rooms for personnel (one finished in pink and one in blue), a large ultra-modern kitchen, and numerous other rooms. General offices were located in the main hospital’s second floor, including administrative offices. Patients rooms were located on the second, third, and fourth floors. There were two-bed and four-bed wards with no private rooms. Each of the floors containing patients had a registered nurse on duty at all times. Waiting rooms for visitors were located at the half-way point on the floors. Minors were not allowed at any time, even with adults. Each floor also contained a service-kitchen, dining room for patients, and a dining room for hospital personnel all decorated in pastel shades. Each floor also contained a drug store and fluorescent lighting.

The operating room had the latest equipment and a dental clinical was located on the third floor. The patients rooms were decorated in shades of golden buff, light rose and pastel blue. The northern end of each floor contained a solarium with yellow leatherette chaise lounges. The eight-room home for the medical director is beautifully decorated and completely equipped from the playroom basement all the way to the second floor.


Contributed by Shawn Logan | contact@kyhi.org



⁘ Works Cited ⁘


  1. The Courier Journal (Louisville, Kentucky), 21 July 1950, p. 19.
  2. United States Department of the Interior, National Park Service, and Jenna Stout. “National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation Form .” National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation Form , Kentucky, 2016, pp. 1–18.

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