Witton Isolation Hospital | |
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Geography | |
Location | Witton, Birmingham, England |
Coordinates | 52°32′22″N 1°52′21″W / 52.539353°N 1.872525°WCoordinates: 52°32′22″N 1°52′21″W / 52.539353°N 1.872525°W |
Organisation | |
Care system | NHS (from 1948) |
Hospital type | Quarantine |
History | |
Founded | c. 1900 |
Closed | 1966 |
Witton Isolation Hospital was a facility for the treatment and quarantine of smallpox victims and their contacts in Birmingham, England.
Built around 1900, Witton Isolation Hospital was initially in a semi-rural district but by the 1930s the site was surrounded by the newly built Kingstanding and Perry Common social housing developments. It occupied the site now enclosed by College Road, Brackenbury Road and Plumstead Road.
Witton Isolation Hospital was used sporadically during the 20th century, particularly during the outbreak of smallpox that occurred in the city in 1962. The last cases quarantined there were during January and February 1966, following an outbreak that originated at the University of Birmingham Medical School. Witton Isolation Hospital was eventually superseded by the UK's first National Isolation Hospital, established at nearby Catherine-de-Barnes in 1966.
In May 1966, the hospital's resident caretaker resigned and the facility of ten buildings was left unguarded except for the ten feet high perimeter wall. In the middle of 1966, local children broke in, causing some vandalism.
After the incident involving children breaking into Witton Isolation Hospital in mid-1966, Birmingham's Chief Medical Officer, Ernest Millar, was contacted by a local resident who had regularly seen the children from the top seats of a double-decker bus.
Dr Millar eventually ordered the facility to be destroyed by fire and on 3 May 1967 – chosen because the wind was blowing from the south, away from the city centre – the buildings were set ablaze by firemen of the Birmingham Fire and Ambulance Service, under the supervision of William Nicholls, Deputy Chief Medical Officer, and George Merrill, Deputy Chief Fire Officer, accompanied by representatives of the news media. All personnel involved in the operation had to wear protective clothing and be inoculated. Four tons of flammable material, including kerosene, waste oil and aluminium powder accelerants, were needed to burn the buildings, which were then empty. All windows were kept open to assist the fire spreading. A virologist from the UK government microbiology laboratories at Porton Down (then part of the Ministry of Defence), was asked to conduct tests to assess the efficiency of the conflagration.