From the Evening Record – January 18, 1913:
The dimensions of the municipal building are 37 feet by 34 feet. It is to be constructed of pine with cement foundation and wings with cement piers. The ground floor will consist of wide (sic) central hall with stairway, reception room, main dining room, patient’s dining room, serving pantry, kitchen, halls leading to wings which will accommodate four patients in each wing and toilet and bath. The second floor, for the use of the house physician, matron and servants, contains five rooms with a bath. Floors throughout of oak, maple and Georgia pine. The basement has a modern laundry, heater room, fuel room, vegetable cellar, and fumigating room. The building will be heated by steam, the heating plant being adequate for any further addition to the building. It will be lighted by electricity and painted white. The sanatorium will be located in the central part of the property, about 250 feet from the embankment, facing the south, and so placed as to have all further addition to wings (sic) with southern exposure; the verandahs (sic) to be 8 feet wide, each room having a door opening on them. Ample room will be left for the erection of tents or shacks.
The building was built in 1913 in Union, located between Kingsville and Leamington, and today, little more than an intersection…
The building burned down in 1920, and was moved to Windsor, and reopened in 1922. The site is today better known as IODE/Western Hospital.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Built in 1929, the house at 2177 Victoria Avenue was originally numbered 1545 Victoria, pre…
Crescent Lanes first opened on Ottawa Street in 1944 at 1055 Ottawa Street, opposite Lanspeary…
Above is a photo of the home of Mr & Mrs Oswald Janisse, located at…
in 1917 two Greek brothers Gus & Harry Lukos purchased a one story building on…
Photo from Google Streetview A long time reader sent me an email the other week…
An unremarkable end to a part of Windsor's history. The large vacant house at 841…
View Comments
Interesting the use of 3 different woods for the floors instead of Oak for main use and usually pine as a secondary on the 2nd floors.
Do you know was this facility used for the treatment of TB patients, other communicable diseases or simply an early hospital?
VP, yes as a sanatorium it was founded for the treatment of TB patients and faced much opposition in establishing a location.
Hi..I am trying to get information on the Nursing Assistant Program that I graduated from in 1965.....Can you tell me who I would contact..Thank you...Barbara Skelton(nee Courtney).....
Very interesting, I found a false wall in my dads home on Pelisser street in windsor,,I found what appears to be 2 old journals from 1929 to 1938.....all written to a woman names Blanch..and all persons who wrote in this book..all signef their name and " essex county sanitarium"...seems like a history iof all patients and one patients journey, has all peoples names, addres and poems anad many interesting things..even in another language..not quite sure...the writing is immaculate...all like quill pen..these jounlas are fascinating..a peice of history..would like to find this Blances family and return the journals to them...226 344 0683
Hi, I am trying to get information about my great grandfather who worked at the sanitorium as a caretaker. Are there any staff records left?