Skip to main content
Ball State University Website

Indiana Crossroads: Hoosier Civil Rights

Search using this query type:

Search only these record types:


Advanced Search (Items only)

  • Browse Items
  • Browse Collections
  • Mapping Freedom
  • Hoosier Civil Rights: A Master Timeline of Our Exhibits

FLOWER MISSION HOSPITAL.jpg

Title

Flower Mission Hospital

Description

The Indianapolis Flower Mission was a women’s charity organization founded by Alice Wright in 1876 [1]. The organization met every two weeks to give the patients of Indianapolis City Hospital a wide variety of flowers and gifts [2]. Early activities also included setting up a boarding house for homeless boys in 1879 [3]. After years of maintaining and raising funds for the boarding home, members envisioned a hospital that specialized in the care of women and children [4]. Due to a lack of funding, this idea did not come to fruition; instead the Mission set up the country’s second training school for nurses, which they ran until the City Hospital took over in 1896 [5]. The Flower Mission also started the city’s first visiting nurse program, for which they hired a nurse to visit patients at home to provide care and supplies. The school closed in 1980, having offered nursing training for almost a century [6].

The Mission received needed funding in the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, thanks to very generous donations from Colonel Eli Lilly, a local philanthropist and pharmaceutical entrepreneur [7] Eleanor Hospital, the mission’s first hospital which focused on the care of sick children, was named after the Colonel’s deceased daughter [8]. The mayor of Indianapolis at the time, John Holtzman, was another big supporter for the Mission. Upon the opening of the Mission’s first hospital for late-stage tuberculosis patients in 1903, Holtzman was quoted in a local newspaper as having said, “I want to assure the ladies of the Flower Mission that the present administration will give every assistance in the great work of earing for the sick and poor.” He claimed that any person that suffered from “the great white death” deserved the utmost care [9].

When it opened, The Flower Mission was one of the only medical institutions in Indiana that dealt with patients who were in the final stages of tuberculosis [10]. However, this quality of care was not available to African Americans. The early twentieth century surge of tuberculosis hit the black community particularly hard. Living conditions for African Americans in Indianapolis were already poor, and the effects of tuberculosis only made it worse. There was no medical facility in the city where black tuberculosis patients could receive the appropriate care they needed [11]. In 1916, the Indianapolis Women’s Improvement Club (WIC) appealed to the Flower Mission Hospital to accept African American patients. The WIC was organized by African American women to benefit the Indianapolis black community [12]. While the hospital did initially agree to WIC’s plea to accept black patients, a short time later, it rescinded this action and no longer accepted African Americans. A year later, the Flower Mission financially aided the WIC in employing a black social worker who provided at-home care to African American patients, much like their own visiting nurses. In 1918, WIC members were allowed to furnish a room in the Flower Mission Hospital to be used exclusively by black patients. When the Mission opened their final hospital on Fall Creek Boulevard in 1938, they provided a segregated ward for African American patients [13]. Years after the opening of the Mission’s first hospital in 1903, Mayor Holtzman’s words were true to the hospital’s purpose: any person who suffered from tuberculosis deserved care, and finally, African Americans were included, albeit still segregated from white patients. After the 1930s, activity slowed for the Indianapolis Flower Mission. The tuberculosis crisis was under control, and the Flower Mission primarily became a grant funding institution until they disbanded in 1993. The Flower Missions Memorial Hospital is now home to the Bellflower Clinic and the Wishard Memorial Nursing Museum, where the public can learn of the Flower Mission’s history [14].
Interview 2 with Patricia Brown

Source

[1] Brittany D. Kropf, “Indianapolis Flower Mission,” Discover Indiana, last updated April 2, 2019, https://publichistory.iupui.edu/items/show/18.
[2] Kropf, “Flower Mission.”
[3] Indianapolis Flower Mission Records: 1884-1987, 1976.0206, 1997.0125. Indiana Historical Society Archives, Indianapolis, Indiana.
[4] Indianapolis Flower Mission Records.
[5] Indianapolis Flower Mission Records.
[6] Kropf, “Flower Mission.”
[7] Ibid.
[8] Ibid.
[9] “Mission Gives Hospital Keys to the Mayor,” The Indianapolis Star, November 27, 1903, https://www.newspapers.com/clip/4068531/flower-mission-hospital-opening-mayor/.
[10] Kropf, “Flower Mission.”
[11] Earline Rae Ferguson, “The Woman's Improvement Club of Indianapolis: Black Women Pioneers in Tuberculosis Work, 1903–1938,” Indiana Magazine of History 84, no.3 (1988): 237-61, http://www.jstor.org/stable/27791176.
[12] Ferguson, “The Woman's Improvement Club of Indianapolis”
[13] Ibid.
[14] Kropf, “Flower Mission.”

Contributor

Student Authors: Gwyneth Harris and Phillip Brooks
Faculty/Staff Editors: Dr. Ronald V. Morris, Dr. Kevin C. Nolan, and Christine Thompson
Graduate Assistant Researchers: Carrie Vachon and JB Bilbrey

Rights

PHOTO & VIDEO:
Flower Mission Tuberculosis Hospital, Indiana Historical Society, M0384.
https://images.indianahistory.org/digital/collection/tuberculosi/id/99/rec/13

Collection

Places

Tags

1800s, 1900-40s, 1950s-present, Healthcare, Indianapolis, Integration, Marion County, Oral History, Organization, Segregation, Women

Other Media

Interview 2 with Patricia Brown (Flower Mission Hospital) - audio/mpeg

Citation

“Flower Mission Hospital,” Digital Civil Rights Museum, accessed September 23, 2023, https://www.digitalresearch.bsu.edu/digitalcivilrightsmuseum/items/show/103.

Output Formats

  • atom
  • dcmes-xml
  • json
  • omeka-xml
  • ← Previous Item
  • Next Item →
Ball State University Website

Ball State University 2000 W. University Ave. Muncie, IN 47306 800-382-8540 and 765-289-1241
Copyright © 2023 Ball State University