Newsletter
A Tale of Free-Fall and Redemption
Floating Hospital President Sean Granahan has a tale to tell, one of dramatic free-fall and hard-fought redemption — the story of The Floating Hospital itself.
The story behind a postcard
The story behind a postcard
Both Floating Hospitals appear together in this postcard, but neither would be named as we know them. The new boat on the left was known then simply as the “Floating Hospital” while the older boat on the right was named the “Robert Fulton.”
A connection to President Lincoln
Back in the early ’80s—the 1880s that is—one of our doctors would have been a celebrity to everyone who came aboard The Floating Hospital. To the Evening World, he was “one of the Guild’s most earnest workers.” But that wasn’t why he was famous. The paper also reminded its readers that “He was the first doctor to reach Lincoln’s side after Booth’s bullet struck him.”
Fifteen Hundred Checkups
In order to access the ship in the early days, all passengers were inspected by two doctors—one of our own and one from the Board of Health. They made sure the person standing in front of them matched the physician-signed ticket with the child’s illness indicated; that no child was older than six, unless a “little mother” (an older sister in charge of a younger sibling, with the mother absent); and to make sure no one had a contagious disease.
The Love Boat
It is rare these days to find love stories that have endured for years and even decades. So we were excited to hear about a couple celebrating 44 years of marriage whose romance sparked on our last ship, the Lila Acheson Wallace. The couple, Bruce and Pati Richards, will join us at our annual gala on June 10 at the Edison Ballroom.
History in the Making
One consequence of being an organization more than a century-and-a-half old is a large accumulation of records and documents—including archival photos and letters from dignitaries like Ronald Reagan and Hillary Clinton—with a responsibility to preserve and maintain them.
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