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Community celebrates legacy of Penetanguishene hospital

Penetanguishene General Hospital operated from 1910 to 2008

NEWS RELEASE
GEORGIAN BAY GENERAL HOSPITAL
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Members of the community and representatives of Georgian Bay General Hospital (GBGH) gathered Thursday to remember and celebrate the legacy of the Penetanguishene General Hospital (PGH).

The event, held at the PGH site, included a smudging ceremony, prayer to pay homage to the hospital’s Catholic history, a historical summary, remarks from Penetanguishene Mayor Doug Leroux and stories from retired staff about what it was like to work at PGH.

PGH has held a special place within the Penetanguishene community for more than 110 years. (See historical timeline below.) Beginning in a small home in 1911, the hospital has changed and grown over time to meet the needs of those it served. This growth and change would not have been possible without the exceptional support of the community, including the hospital’s auxiliary, which dates back to 1920.

“I am so thankful to have been a part of PGH, which whole-heartedly embodied its motto of ‘To Serve, To Love,’ and honoured to have played a role in caring for this community,” says Doris Shirriff, former CEO of PGH. “Change is constant and inevitable, but I can tell you that at any point during its long history, working at PGH was a special experience. It was like a family and it always will be, no matter what the future holds for this site. Everything that PGH was is still in the hearts, minds and hands of the people who worked here, not in the bricks and mortar. The spirit of PGH will continue to live on within this community.”

As PGH and Huronia District Hospital (HDH) in Midland eventually entered a formal partnership to become the North Simcoe Hospital Alliance in the 1990s, planning occurred to divide some services between the two sites due to their close proximity. Within that same decade, the focus of PGH became on complex continuing care and rehabilitation while acute services were concentrated in Midland.

“Recognizing the close proximity of the two hospitals, the decision was made to concentrate specific programs between the two sites, ensuring similar care was not being duplicated just a few kilometres away,” says Gail Hunt, president and CEO, GBGH. “As a hospital administrator, though, you can appreciate that it’s about more than just numbers. You can never discount the feelings a community has toward foundational institutions like its hometown hospital. Residents of Penetanguishene embraced PGH and steadfastly supported it in every aspect. As we’ve noted in reviewing and preparing for this legacy event, there is a rich and fascinating history to this hospital, which has been evident since I first arrived in this community.”

Six years after formally amalgamating HDH and PGH (2008) into what is now GBGH, the board of directors made the decision to move complex continuing care and rehabilitation services to the Midland site. Since that relocation in 2014, dialysis services and the hospital’s finance department remained in the Penetanguishene site. The building has also been home to tenants including the Georgian Bay Cancer Support Centre and Hospice Huronia, prior to both organizations relocating. Finance and dialysis moved out of the building in 2021 and 2022, respectively.

The hospital anticipates the building will be on the real estate market this summer.

To view a slideshow video recapping some moments in PGH history, please visit www.youtube.com/watch?v=W5wQ7haqWLA.

Historical timeline

  • 1910 to 1911: PGH opens in a house as the first hospital in Penetanguishene with 19 beds, a school of nursing and an auxiliary to fundraise for hospital operations. According to the deed, it was purchased for $4,000 from the Firstbrook family. Previous to PGH, the marine hospital located in Sunnyside, near Midland, served both Midland and Penetanguishene. In the early 1900s there had been a diphtheria epidemic, which is thought to have brought more attention to the need for Penetanguishene to have its own hospital.
  • 1942: The Grey Sisters of the Immaculate Conception arrive from Pembroke to oversee the hospital, bringing 300 years of experience and a new level of health-care sophistication.
  • 1946: Planning for a new hospital begins.
  • 1954: A new PGH is built and becomes a model for community hospitals with expanded services. The support of the community is a major factor in the construction and equipping of the building.
  • 1963: The Grey Sisters purchase PGH from the town.
  • 1970s: PGH opens new emergency (1973) and physiotherapy departments and launches a capital campaign to fundraise to make up for funding shortfalls from the government. During this time, approval was also granted to turn 10 acute care beds into rehabilitation and chronic care beds. This later becomes the Complex Continuing Care and Rehabilitation Unit.
  • 1981: PGH undergoes a major renovation and a continuing care unit is added.
  • 1980s: Construction begins to convert acute beds to rehabilitation and chronic care beds. A rehab day hospital and diabetes education programs are opened. The Grey Sisters invite greater community participation and board leadership, as well as begin the strategic planning process. The hospital’s motto, “To Serve, To Love,” is launched.
  • 1992: PGH is approved by the Ministry of Health to operate as a regional rehabilitation centre. Obstetrical services transfer to HDH in Midland.
  • 1992 to 1996: The North Simcoe Hospital Alliance is created between PGH and HDH to determine how the hospitals can best serve their communities. PGH and HDH work together to divide services between the two sites. The PGH site ceases acute care services.
  • 2000: The Grey Sisters turn their sponsorship of PGH over to the Catholic Health Corporation of Ontario.
  • 2008: PGH and HDH merge and later become GBGH, a name selected by the North Simcoe community.
  • 2014: Complex continuing care and rehabilitation inpatient unit at the Penetanguishene site moves to the Midland site (to the current 1 North). Dialysis and finance remain in Penetanguishene. GBGH board of directors votes to eventually close Penetanguishene site.
  • 2021 to 2022: GBGH finance department relocates to the Midland site (existing building in parking lot) and dialysis services relocate to a community location in Midland (Prospect Boulevard).

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