Our hospital has a long and proud history as a health care provider and innovator
in Minneapolis. The following tells the story of how Abbott Northwestern was built
from a collection of great health care organizations into a leading regional medical
center and the Twin Cities largest non-profit hospital.
1882
Northwestern
Hospital n
1902
Abbott
Hospital
for Women
1882
Northwestern
Hospital
1882
Northwestern
Hospital
1882
Northwestern
1940
Sister
Kenny
Institute
1882
Northwestern
Hospital
1882
Northwestern
Hospital
1970 Abbott &
Northwestern
1980
The New
Hospital
Campus
1993
HealthSpan
1880
Northwestern
Hospital
Northwestern
Hospital
Today
1882
Northwestern
Hospital
1882
Northwestern
Hospital
1911
Eitel
Hospital
1882
Northwestern
Hospital
1966
Minneapolis
Medical
Center, Inc.
1975
Abbott
Northwestern
Sister Kenny
Institute
1982
LifeSpan
1993
Allina
2005
Heart
Hospital
1882 Northwestern Hospital
It was a wintry November day in 1882 when Harriet Walker summoned 44 women
to lay plans for what would become Northwestern Hospital for Women and Children.
Opened in a small rented house one month later as a charity hospital, Northwestern
Hospital dedicated the first structure built specifically for hospital use
on June 10, 1887, at the corner of Chicago Avenue and 27th Street in Minneapolis.
1902 Abbott Hospital for Women
Somewhat prophetically, Dr. Amos Abbott was named consulting physician to
Northwestern's first medical staff. Twenty years after joining Northwestern
Hospital in 1902 (and less than a mile away), Dr. Abbott left to start a
community hospital for women bearing his name. While it was not founded
as a charity hospital, Dr. Abbott's kindness often caused him to reduce
or waive fees for those who could not afford to pay.
1911 Eitel Hospital
Dr. George G. Eitel established "a first rate hospital" when he
founded Eitel Hospital. When it opened in 1912 on "beautiful Loring
Park" in Minneapolis, it featured sun porches outfitted with Navajo
rugs, and deluxe private rooms with brass beds and mahogany furniture. Jeanne
Eitel, his surgical nurse and wife, directed the hospital's nursing school.
1940 Sister Kenny Institute
Australia native Sister Elizabeth Kenny (nurses were called "sister")
brought her brash dedication to treating polio patients to Abbott Hospital
in the summer of 1940. Some physicians were put off by her style, but the
volume of patients and people wanting to be trained in her methods quickly
outstripped the capabilities of the hospital. So Sister Kenny took her pioneering
rehabilitation efforts to the old Lymanhurst School, six blocks north of
Northwestern Hospital in Minneapolis. It was here that the original Sister
Kenny Institute was dedicated in 1942.
1966 Minneapolis Medical Center, Inc.
In October 1966, a desire to increase the quality of patient care in a cost-effective
manner led to the formation of Minneapolis Medical Center, Inc. (MMCI),
Northwestern Hospital and three other health care facilities along Chicago
Avenue were the nucleus of an organization which would grow significantly
in the ensuing decade. MMCI's joint planning function created the Children's
Health Center (today called Children's Health Care - Minneapolis®)
which opened in January 1973. One month later, pediatric patients from Abbott
and Northwestern hospitals were moved into the new MMCI facility.
1970 Abbott and Northwestern
Abbott and Northwestern hospitals were merged into the Abbott-Northwestern
Hospital Corporation in 1970. The merger was seen as prudent and constructive,
since both hospitals had faced similar challenges over the years, served
similar constituencies and shared many physicians among their attending
staffs. And both had grown from modest beginnings to achieve widespread
recognition individually as outstanding medical institutions.
1975 Abbott Northwestern and Sister Kenny Institute
In 1973, the Sister Kenny Institute received permission from the hospital
corporation and the Metropolitan Council to build new facilities next to
Northwestern Hospital. But when the boards of the hospital and the Institute's
parent company -- the American Rehabilitation Foundation -- realized that
the missions of both facilities were complementary, the Institute merged
with Abbott Northwestern in 1975. This provided added resources and support
services for coordinated care of patients needing physical rehabilitation.
1980 The New Hospital Campus
An Abbott-Northwestern Hospital Corporation study later in 1975 recommended
consolidating Abbott and Northwestern operations into a single location;
the Northwestern campus on Chicago Avenue in Minneapolis was selected. The
last patients moved into the new Abbott Northwestern Hospital facilities
on Jan. 26, 1980.
1982 LifeSpan
In 1982, Abbott Northwestern's Board of Directors approved the creation
of a new parent corporation, LifeSpan Inc. It was designed so other hospitals
and companies could join it in the future. LifeSpan originally included
Abbott Northwestern Hospital, Sister Kenny Institute and Eitel Hospital.
1993 HealthSpan
LifeSpan merged with Health One on March 1, 1993 to form HealthSpan Health
Systems Corporation, the second largest, not-for-profit secular health care
system in the United States. Twin Cities metropolitan area hospitals involved
in the merger were Abbott Northwestern in Minneapolis, United in St. Paul,
Unity in Fridley and Mercy in Coon Rapids.
1993 Allina Health System
On Dec. 7, 1993, the boards of directors of HealthSpan and Medica approved
a letter of intent to merge the two organizations and form Allina Health
System, a not-for-profit integrated health care system committed to enhancing
the health status of the communities it serves. The hospitals and clinics
division owns or manages 17 hospitals, two nursing homes, and clinics in
more than 40 locations throughout Minnesota, Wisconsin and North Dakota.
The Medica division offers a broad range of self-funded and fully insured
health plan products to meet the diverse needs of its more than one million
members.
2001 Allina Hospitals & Clinics
In July 2001, Allina Health System was restructured into two, independent,
non-profit entities: Medica, a health plan organization, and Allina Hospitals
& Clinics, a healthcare delivery organization.
A board of community and physician members leads Allina Hospitals &
Clinics, a network of hospitals, clinics and other health care delivery
services throughout Minnesota and western Wisconsin. Twin Cities metropolitan
area hospitals within Allina Hospitals & Clinics include Abbott Northwestern
in Minneapolis, United in St. Paul, Unity in Fridley and Mercy in Coon Rapids.
2005 Abbott Northwestern's Heart Hospital
In spring 2005, the renowned cardiovascular services of Abbott Northwestern Hospital
and the Minneapolis Heart Institute® came together to create Abbott Northwestern's
Heart Hospital. The heart hospital is a 256-bed facility that provides new, expanded space for
the cardiovascular program, and new inpatient space for neuroscience, orthopaedic
and spine services.
History of Nursing and Medical Education
Nursing education dates from Harriet Walker's Training School for Nurses,
which began with the founding of Northwestern Hospital in 1882. Abbott Hospital
also had its own nursing program, and the two merged in September 1970.
The combined program graduated its last nurse in 1978, and today the focus
is on continuing education for staff nurses.
Medical education began with early Northwestern Hospital physicians serving
as part-time faculty at the University of Minnesota Medical School. Some
University interns also served one-year bed-side internships at Northwestern.
After residency programs expanded to four years to meet specialized needs,
the University and Northwestern Hospital officially affiliated their post-graduate
residency programs in 1965. In the 1970s, an extensive Continuing Medical
Education program was launched to serve physicians throughout the Midwest.
Today, the internal medicine residency program -- now more than a quarter
of a century old with more than 30 residents trained each year -- continues
the strong medical education tradition at Abbott Northwestern.
Abbott Northwestern Hospital
800 E. 28th St. Minneapolis, MN 55407
612-863-4000 E-mail us