Montefiore Home Country Sanitarium
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Montefiore Home Country Sanitarium was an American sanatorium located in Bedford Hills, Westchester County, New York. Opened in September 1897, it was under the same management as the Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids at Manhattan, New York. The country sanitarium was situated in a sheltered situation on the Berkshire Hills, at an elevation of about 450 feet (140 m), and was 60 miles (97 km) from New York City or one and a half hours by rail.[1][2][3]
The Country Sanitarium came into existence as a result of the repeated observations that the proportion of consumptives among the sufferers treated in the Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids was very large. In 1895, the project was started by Lyman Bloomingdale and heartily supported by Jacob Schiff.[4][5]
Established with beds for ten patients, it was enlarged in May 1898,[2] to accommodate 40 with the hope of further extending the number of beds to 60. The two buildings were frame houses, one of which had a large veranda. There was also a good bathroom and heating with hot water. Originally a farm, the grounds covered 136 acres (55 ha) of land. Patients were sent there who were able to do a little light work, with the object of ultimately making the sanatorium self-supporting. It had already begun to supply the Home in Manhattan with fruit and vegetables and dairy produce.[6] Nearly all the patients were consumptives in an early stage, but a few were sufferers from asthma or neurasthenia. Only men were admitted, and no charge of any kind was made. There were no house physicians, but one of the visiting physicians of the Home in New York attended once a week, and more frequently if called through the telephone.[1]
The first annual report showed that 57 patients had been treated, of whom five were cured, eight were left in an improved condition, and 15 were transferred to the Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids in Manhattan, as their advanced condition of phthisis became detrimental to the surrounding incipient cases; and 29 cases remained in the sanatorium at the time the report was finished.
It was exclusively for the consumptive poor, who were selected from the applicants for admission to the Montefiore Home for Chronic Invalids. The house physician of the institution was Dr. Herbert; the medical director, Dr. Joseph Fraenkel. It was the plan of the founders to add to the existing buildings some smaller cottages with separate rooms, more suitable for the care of tuberculous patients than the original large pavilion, which consisted only of a large dormitory.[2]
