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              Four Doctors 
    and Pitt Community Hospital 
            It 
    was May 3, 1902. The Greenville newspaper Kings Weekly reported 
    that Dr. Charles OHagan Laughinghouse had spoken to the Board of Aldermen 
    on Thursday evening, May 1, about the need for a hospital. In response to 
    the doctors appeal, the town board appropriated $1,000 toward the building 
    fund, half of which was to be paid when the hospital is assured 
    and the balance a year later. An endowment was also set up to provide $50 
    a month for maintenance of the hospital when it was established. A committee 
    of the board was to confer with Pitt County commissioners, who took no action, 
    but promised on May 8, 1902, to recommend a special tax to aid in building 
    the hospital and provide $100 a month for its support. Neither the first appropriation 
    for a hospital in 
    Greenville nor the endowment set up for its operation were ever spent, because 
    no hospital was built at the time. 
     
               Dr. Laughinghouse 
    was born on February 25, 1871. He grew up in Grimesland, attended Trinity 
    School in Chocowinity and Horners Military Academy in Oxford, NC, before 
    spending 1888 and 1889 at the University of North Carolina. He graduated in 
    1893 from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine and returned to 
    Greenville, where he shared a practice with his grandfather, Dr. C. J. OHagan. 
    Like him, he became one of the citys most notable physicians. He became 
    county coroner in 1894 when he was 23, and a member of the state Board of 
    Medical Examiners in June 1902. From 1909 until 1926, he was the school physician 
    for East Carolina Teachers Training School. In 1916-1917, he was president 
    of the North Carolina Medical Society. 
     
              In 1913, Lenoir 
    County Representative E. R. Wooten, probably in response to agitation by Dr. 
    H. O. Hyatt of Kinston, introduced a bill in the General Assembly that authorized 
    county commissioners to levy taxes for the construction and maintenance of 
    public hospitals. The bill was patterned after one that had been passed by 
    the Iowa Legislature in 1909, where the first tax-supported county hospital 
    was opened in 1912. 
     
              Dr. Laughinghouse 
    embraced the new bill because he thought it was more likely to succeed than 
    his earlier attempts. A number of prominent citizens, including US Representative 
    Harry Skinner and former governor Thomas Jordon Jarvis, banded together with 
    a group of doctors to advance a plan to set up a non-profit hospital partially 
    supported by Greenville and Pitt County taxpayers. In May 1913, Dr. Laughinghouse 
    offered the proposal to the Greenville town board, which appropriated funds 
    toward building the hospital. County officials and philanthropists provided 
    other money. During the summer, the NC Secretary of State incorporated Pitt 
    County Hospital, but the project failed because insufficient funds could be 
    raised. 
     
              Again in 1916, 
    Dr. Laughinghouse, by then president of the state medical association, made 
    another serious attempt to implement the 1913 legislation. He telephoned Dr. 
    Karl B. Pace, who had recently graduated from Jefferson Medical College in 
    Philadelphia and was an intern in New York city. Dr. Pace was from Maxton, 
    a small town in Robeson County a few miles east of Laurinburg. Would he be 
    willing to return to North Carolina and help with patients while Laughinghouse 
    campaigned for the hospital? Dr. Pace answered, Yes. 
     
              Dr. M. T. Edgerton, 
    Jr., the county health officer, joined the campaign, and the two physicians 
    traveled all over the county between September and December, crusading for 
    a bond issue to support building a hospital. They approached everyone with 
    influence that would listen: other doctors (only seven of whom lived in Greenville), 
    businessmen, teachers, and preachers. In the referendum held on December 5, 
    1916, the bond issue passed by a sizable majority in Greenville Township, 
    but the citizens of Pitt County outside the town voted against it. 
              Dr. Laughinghouse 
    immediately began working to have the 1913 law amended so that townships and 
    municipalities could erect hospitals independently of the counties where they 
    were located. Dr. Hyatt of Kinston joined him, and they successfully lobbied 
    for the amendment, which the 1917 General Assembly passed. Before they could 
    do anything more, World War I began. 
     
              Although he was 
    46 years old, Laughinghouse volunteered to serve in the Army Medical Corps 
    in May 1917. After organizing the medical profession of North Carolina for 
    service, he was assigned to the officers training camp at Fort Oglethorpe, 
    GA, as a major. He was placed in command of Base Hospital No. 85 at Fort Sill, 
    OK, and went to France in August, 1918, as a lieutenant colonel, supervising 
    the hospitals transfer to Paris, and in the following January to Angers. 
    While he was in France, he launched a hospital fund drive back in Greenville 
    by sending a $1,000 check toward the project.  
     
              Dr. Pace joined 
    the Army Medical Corps in 1917, along with most other Pitt County physicians, 
    leaving the area virtually without doctors until after the war. 
     
              Upon his return 
    home in March 1919, Dr. Laughinghouse resumed his practice. He took up again 
    his crusade for the hospital, but he made little progress. However, in the 
    following year the idea caught on in another quarter.  
              A newspaper essay 
    by Ray Smith, second-prize winner in a countywide contest, was published in 
    the February 17 issue of the Greenville Daily News. He responded to 
    the topic: Why the County of Pitt Should Have a County Hospital. 
    Smith proclaimed that Greenville was one of the best tobacco markets in the 
    state, and grew some of its finest tobacco. The county not only had some of 
    the best farming land but also had many manufacturing enterprises, tobacco 
    factories, cotton mills, oil and fertilizer mills, flour mills, and lumber 
    plants. It also had a good school system, and people from all parts of the 
    United States, as well as from foreign countries, attended the East Carolina 
    Teachers Training School of Greenville. What was lacking was a county 
    hospital, to make it unnecessary for the sick and injured, and poor people 
    who could ill afford to be transported by automobile or train to hospitals 
    in distant cities. 
     
              Our soldiers 
    went to Europe to cure the political ills of a degenerate civilizationso 
    that they might not be spread over the entire worldand to comfort and 
    assist the weak and wronged nations. So a memorial hospital would be for countless 
    years to come, a constant reminder of a principle, similar to that for which 
    our soldiers fought and died, Smith wrote. 
     
              Thus began a campaign 
    to construct a hospital that would be a memorial to those men who died 
    for a suffering world. It was fitting that the People, not a few 
    men, are being asked to build it, as the Greenville Daily News 
    said in an article on March 3, 1920. The roster of 14 directors read like 
    a gazeteer of towns in the county: J. F. Barwick, Ayden; William McArthur, 
    Beaver Dam; C. L. Parker, Belvoir; S. M. Jones, Bethel; S. M. Crisp, Falkland; 
    C. D. Horton, Farmville; R. A. Fountain, Fountain; W. E. Proctor, Chicod; 
    J. E. Winslow, Greenville; J. A. Stokes, Swift Creek; and A. G. Cox, Winterville. 
     
              The goal of the 
    campaign was $250,000 to build the plant and set up a fund for maintenance. 
    The county commissioners would use the money for construction and then pay 
    6 percent interest a year ($15,000) for maintenance. The hospital would enable 
    Pitt County, in the words of the Daily News, to follow up the 
    results of her public health work, doing for her boys and girls as much as 
    she is doing for her hogs, sheep, horses, mules, and cattle. A separate 
    building would house patients with tuberculosis, which had spread following 
    the influenza epidemic of 1918. The new hospital would have an operating room, 
    laboratories, X-ray, and incubators for premature infants. 
     
              The Daily News 
    reported on March 4 that the architect had submitted plans, and on March 5, 
    that $20,150 had already been subscribed to Pitt Memorial Hospital, even before 
    the fund-raising campaign opened. The goal was a certificate of stock 
    in every home in Pitt County. Canvassing continued all that week, for 
    a hospital to be built as a memorial to the soldier boys who paid the 
    great price across the seas. 
    In the same issue of the Daily News, another article read as follows: 
    Jack Boyd, colored, who resides at 205 Ninth Street, so far as is known, 
    has purchased the first share of Pitt County Memorial Stock, of any of his 
    race in the county. The purchase was made through W. C. Staples, salesman. 
    Boyd says that he is going to frame his certificate and hang it on the wall 
    at his home.  
     
              On Tuesday, March 
    9, the African-American citizens of Greenville held a meeting in the First 
    Baptist Church in the interest of the campaign, and a similar one two days 
    later in Farmville. The newspaper commented, The colored are already 
    taking decided interest in the hospital campaign, and they are going to make 
    a good showing when the final count is made. 
     
              The Daily News 
    said in an editorial on March 11 that the canvassers in Greenville had received 
    subscriptions by Tuesday of $40,000 toward the towns quota of $125,000. 
    Practically every household was subscribing. The canvassers intention 
    was to reach $100,000 in Greenville before tackling the other towns in the 
    county.  
     
              The county commissioners 
    would have to levy a hospital tax to pay the $15,000 a year for the hospitals 
    maintenance. Some people have gone into hysterics over an imaginary 
    ghost, read a newspaper editorial on March 15. What about the 
    six percent interest that the county commissioners agreed to pay to the Memorial 
    Hospital? The tax amounted to 25 cents per capita to maintain the hospital 
    building, provide for indigent patients, and furnish ambulance services. How 
    could anyone object to using a small amount of public money for public health 
    purposes? 
     
              On Tuesday, September 
    7, 1920, the Daily News under the headline, CITIZEN APPEALS FOR 
    COMMUNITY HOSPITAL IN PITT ran a contributed article designed to emphasize 
    the urgent need for a community hospital in Pitt County. It noted, Something 
    like half the amount desired for building and equipping the plant has already 
    been subscribed, and the campaign is now about to be renewed for securing 
    the balance so the work of construction may soon begin. 
     
              Between 1920 and 
    1922, it appears nothing was done about building a hospital. There may have 
    been a lack of cooperation from the doctors, since the director of the Pitt 
    County Department of Health in January, 1922, publicly emphasizing the importance 
    of a hospital, said, it is necessary that all physicians pull together 
    if it is to be as successful in this county as others.  
     
              On December 20, 
    1922, the Daily Reflector published an appeal to convert funds raised 
    for the recently abandoned community hospital campaign into a gift for the 
    Kings Daughters to use for destitute sick persons.  
    In 1923, the Rotary Club took up a new campaign for the same objective that, 
    according to The Daily Reflector, had been established more than twenty 
    years before. The newspaper was very sanguine about the hospital project, 
    saying, With Rotary behind it, it is a settled fact that we will soon 
    see the dream realized in a large, fully equipped hospital. But the 
    Rotary appears to have abandoned the effort when Drs. Laughinghouse and Pace 
    went forward with their plans.  
     
              Laughinghouse 
    went to Pace again early that year, and as the latter remembered, said, Karl, 
    its a shame that every county around us has one or two hospitals, and 
    we, the largest county in the eastern part of the state, have none at all. 
    The two men went to Wilson and discussed the problem with Dr. E. T. Dickerson, 
    a physician and surgeon at the Wilson Sanitarium. The three of them had further 
    talks with Dr. W. I. Wooten, who had attended the University of North Carolina 
    and graduated in 1920 from Jefferson Medical College. Wooten had just moved 
    to Greenville from Fair Bluff and set up practice.  
     
              These four physicians 
    found it unacceptable for their patients who needed hospitalization to have 
    to travel by ambulance over rough roads to Kinston, Washington or Rocky Mount. 
    The most seriously ill had to go by train to hospitals a hundred miles or 
    more away in Norfolk, Richmond, or Raleigh for treatment that could not be 
    obtained in eastern North Carolina.  
     
              In May 1923 they 
    obtained a charter to erect a hospital. Dr. Wooten, chairman of the building 
    committee, advertised for a site in Greenville. Three locations were considered 
    and then rejected for lack of parking space, one on property owned by the 
    Higgs family near the future Guy Smith Stadium, one on property owned by C. 
    Heber Forbes, and another near the old Model School on Reade Street. They 
    settled on the Frank Johnston property in the area called College View, 
    on the corner of what became Johnston Street and Woodlawn Avenue. 
     
               Fewer than 
    20 houses occupied the College View area where land was bought for the site, 
    just east of the old high school on Reade Street and two blocks from East 
    Carolina Teachers College. At the time, the area was right at the edge of 
    town. The road that would become Woodlawn Avenue was little more than a path 
    through a tobacco field, used to haul tobacco to the curing barns. Carl Pierce, 
    whose family moved from Falkland to Greenville in 1928 when he was 10 years 
    old, used to ride his pony down Woodlawn. He remembered that the townspeople 
    used the road to go down to the Tar River to fish, and young couples drove 
    through the farm that was to become Chatham Circle to park overlooking the 
    river. 
     
              When they announced 
    the charters approval and completed plans for a building, the promoters 
    said that they believed that not only every physician in the county 
    would take some stock in this much needed undertaking, but will give it their 
    constant and hearty cooperation and unqualified support. This statement 
    was overly optimistic. After talking with every physician practicing in the 
    town and county, the group found only a few of them interested in purchasing 
    stock at $100 a share. Drs. C. J. Ellen, G. G. Dixon, C. G. Garrenton, E. 
    B. Beasley, L. C. Skinner, and Joe Smith made nominal purchases. Only 2 percent 
    of the total needed was raised by stock sales. The estimated cost for the 
    building and its equipment was $65,000. In the end, it actually cost $85,000, 
    and the group of four doctors mortgaged their own property, borrowed against 
    their life insurance policies and then purchased more life insurance to provide 
    security for further loans.  
     
              The physicians 
    established a residence for nurses on the northwest corner of Woodlawn Avenue 
    and Third Street. While the hospital was being built, they set up temporary 
    facilities in September on the second floor of the building that housed H. 
    L. Hodges Store at 210 East Fifth Street. The air was permeated with the smell 
    of hardware from the store below, and of a stable next door. There were wards 
    and a limited number of private rooms, as well as a modern and thoroughly 
    equipped operating room, and every other convenience for the care and comfort 
    of patients that space will permit. On Friday, September 7, 1923, a 
    public reception was held at the temporary hospital, called by the Greenville 
    Daily Reflector a unit of the Pitt Community Hospital. 
    Residents of Pitt and adjoining counties were invited, and local doctors and 
    dentists were urged to attend with their wives, to meet and help welcome visitors. 
    More than 800 people attended the reception. 
     
              The temporary 
    hospital was staffed by the four doctors, by Faye Barnes, bookkeeper, and 
    five nurses, Emma Winfree (later Mrs. J. L. Evans), Vashti Benson (Mrs. Roy 
    Coburn), Maude Bryan (Mrs. Hubert Joyner of Farmville), Lucy Bond, and Katherine 
    Munns. Mattie Gold Mercer (later Mrs. Simon Brooks Tucker), later came to 
    Greenville from the Wilson Sanatorium with four student nurses to work there. 
     
     
              The new hospital 
    staffs first night was an exciting one, since they observed the first 
    surgical operation in the new facility. We all had to see that first 
    operation in Pitt County, Mrs. Tucker said. It was an appendicitis 
    operation the very first night we were there. 
     
              One local resident, 
    James F. Davenport, Jr., recalls a visit in 1924 to his second grade teacher, 
    Christine Johnson, who was recuperating from an appendicitis operation. He 
    was 8 years old at the time. He heard later that in 1924 it had cost $4 a 
    day to stay in the hospital. When the Community Hospital opened on Johnston 
    Street, the rate was $5 a day for each of the 22 private rooms, all 
    of which had windows for light and ventilation.  
     
              The Johnston Street 
    facility, a three-story building with 42 beds, 41 for white patients and 1 
    for black patients, opened on June 1. Dr. E. T. Dickerson was the superintendent 
    and surgeon of the hospital, which had a staff of 16 nurses. Two physicians 
    were in full-time attendance, Dr. Dickerson and Dr. Vernon Ward, who later 
    practiced in Robersonville. Day and night superintendent nurses and a surgical 
    nurse superintendent directed the nursing staff.  
     
              Faye Barnes, Dr. 
    Dickersons niece, moved from the temporary hospital when the new one 
    opened, and became the hospitals business manager. Her plan had been 
    to work for two weeks, until a replacement could be found. She stayed on for 
    16 years, and was said to have run the hospital. She insisted on payment when 
    services were performed, even if she offended patients by doing so. She helped 
    Jonah Hagan, the hospitals cook, in the vegetable garden, collected 
    honey from the hospitals beehives, dispensed supplies, including narcotics, 
    and drove the Cadillac ambulance that was used to transport patients. 
     
              From the beginning, 
    the hospital had a training school for nurses, who lived in the residence 
    at Woodlawn Avenue and Third Street. They had ample practical experience under 
    the direction of head nurse Virginia Ives, and attended daily lectures in 
    all the subjects needed to qualify them to practice in the largest hospitals 
    in the state. 
    The first officers included the four original doctors: Dr. Dickerson was president 
    of the hospital corporation, Dr. Laughinghouse first vice president, Dr. W. 
    H. Dixon second vice president, Dr. K. B. Pace treasurer, and Dr. W. I. Wooten 
    secretary. Dr. C. C. Garrington of Ayden was a member of the board of directors 
    of the hospital, along with Drs. Dickerson and Pace.   
  A 
    Hospital for the Colored 
    
             The 
    Daily Reflector reported on August 9, 1924, not only the Christian 
    people of the town, but everybody has come to realize that a hospital for 
    colored people in Greenville is an immediate and absolute necessity. 
    The Greenville Kiwanis Club began to campaign that summer for such a hospital, 
    to be financed by monthly donations of $10 to $20 from each of the churches 
    in Greenville. The money was to be paid on the first of each month to the 
    Welfare Officer, who was to pay over such a part of it from month to 
    month as is necessary to keep the hospital going. Kiwanian Laughinghouse 
    headed the committee working for the hospital, which began operation on September 
    1. He reported to the membership on September 5 that the churches in the community 
    had responded favorably to a request that each of their members pay 3 cents 
    to cover the rent and laundry for the hospital. 
     
              The Pitt Community 
    Hospital agreed to donate the use of its sterilizing equipment, operating 
    rooms, x-ray and pathology laboratory to limit expenses. At the request of 
    the Pitt County Medical Society, and in acknowledgement of the major donations 
    by the Kiwanis Club and the community, the supervisor and directors of Community 
    Hospital were in charge of professional services. To obtain enough money to 
    provide for indigent patients at the new hospital, the Kiwanis Club depended 
    upon donations from its members and the public, as well as the African-Americans 
    of Greenville, and most particularly on their churches and lodges, and finally 
    on donations from club members and others. 
     
              Before September, 
    an African-American graduate nurse, Frances Hopkins, with the help of her 
    family, had operated a hospital with two beds in a room in her home at 114 
    North Washington Street as a unit of Pitt Community Hospital. She had been 
    born in Greenville, and was experienced in hospital administration and management. 
    No surgery was done at her small hospital, but was performed at the Community 
    Hospital, with the patients being taken there in that hospitals ambulance. 
     
     
              Nurse Hopkins 
    leased space for the new privately owned hospital, St. Frances Hospital for 
    Colored People. It was located in the renovated Bernard House, near the corner 
    of First and Evans streets, two blocks north of the post office. She also 
    arranged for other adjacent houses to be connected with it if they should 
    be needed.  
     
              Besides leasing 
    the building, she also acted as supervisor of the hospital, and directed a 
    second graduate nurse and a few nurses who were preparing to attend classes 
    at the Community Hospital training school. Any physician in good standing 
    was permitted to practice at St. Frances Hospital. Patients were required 
    to pay in advance by the week. A ward bed, board, and nursing for women and 
    for children under 12 years old was $14 per week. For men and for boys over 
    12, it was $18. Private rooms for men or women were $21 per week. There was 
    a $5 minimum charge for the operating room and $5 minimum charge for anesthesia. 
    
  The 
    Staffing of the Community Hospital 
    
             Several 
    women were integral to the success of the new Pitt Community Hospital. The 
    head nurse or day superintendent nurse was Virginia Ives. There were also 
    an assistant day superintendent and a night superintendent, both graduate 
    nurses. The first group of nurses, who had begun their training before coming 
    to Johnston Street, graduated in March 1924. Maud Bell Bryan of Wilson, who 
    was surgical nurse at the hospital until the fall of 1924, and Emma Winfree 
    of Wadesboro, who became night superintendent, were in the first class. Mattie 
    Mercer Tucker finished her student training in October 1924, and went to Raleigh 
    to take and pass the nursing exams. The nurses training school offered 
    lectures on anatomy, physiology, chemistry, pharmacy, routine nursing, surgical 
    nursing, obstetrical nursing, dietetics, and record keeping. The average class 
    had 15-20 students. Many of them remained in Greenville to work after graduation. 
    The school continued in operation until 1932. 
     
              Dr. Dickerson 
    became ill from overwork a few months after the Community Hospital opened, 
    and was replaced by Dr. Malcomb Thompson, who came from a residency in Philadelphia 
    to practice as a surgeon and serve as superintendent. Dr. Dickerson eventually 
    returned to his practice but did not resume the position of superintendent, 
    leaving Dr. Thompson in that position. Dr. Thompson remained until 1929, when 
    he resigned and was replaced by Dr. J. L. Winstead, a graduate of UNCs 
    two-year medical school who had received his medical degree in 1925 from the 
    University of Maryland medical school in Baltimore.  
     
              In 1926, Dr. Sellers 
    Mark Crisp, who had served as an intern under Dr. Dickersons direction, 
    joined Dr. Pace in his practice and became a member of the hospital staff 
    and of its board of directors. Dr. Crisp had attended the two-year UNC medical 
    school after serving in the Army in France, and received his medical degree 
    at the University of Pennsylvania. He continued to practice in Greenville 
    until his death on July 29, 1955. 
     
              In October 1926, 
    Dr. Laughinghouse left Greenville to go to Raleigh as state health officer. 
    He filled that position until August 26, 1930, when he died in a High Point 
    hospital from a blood clot that had traveled to his heart from a varicose 
    vein in his leg. His death stunned his doctors and his family, since he appeared 
    to be recovering from an attack of phlebitis brought on by a long hike in 
    the mountains near Montreat, N.C. His body arrived in Greenville on August 
    27 for a wake at the home of his daughter, Mrs. R. C. Stokes, Jr. His funeral 
    was held at Jarvis Memorial Methodist church on Thursday, August 28, and he 
    was buried in Cherry Hill Cemetery.  
    
  Expanding 
    the Community Hospital 
    
             In 
    1930, the hospital directors added a specialist in the care of infants and 
    children, Dr. T. M. Watson, a boyhood friend of Dr. Pace who had been practicing 
    in Wilmington for several years. He arrived in the spring of 1930. His practice 
    flourished so that in 1933-34 a childrens wardthe Watson wardwas 
    added to the hospital. Beneath the new ward, a dining room and kitchen brought 
    the cost of the entire construction to $30,000. The old dining room and kitchen 
    wings were converted into two six-bed wards.  
              After the new 
    dining room was finished in 1934, the directors had recognized that a single 
    bed for African-American patients was insufficient, and renovated the basement, 
    converting it into a ward for 12 to 15 African-Americans. 
     
              Beginning in 1935, 
    two new wings were added to the east end of the hospital, for an additional 
    14 rooms and two wards, increasing bed capacity to 50 patients. There was 
    space for X-ray and laboratory equipment, and a sun parlor was to be built 
    on the second floor over the addition. As part of the same building project, 
    the ambulance entrance was moved from the back of the building to the Woodlawn 
    Avenue entrance. These additions cost $25,000. 
     
              During that same 
    year, Dr. D. B. Armistead was invited from his practice at a hospital in Richmond 
    to join the medical staff. Dr. Fred Haar, who had come to Greenville as an 
    associate of the pediatrician, Dr. Watson, began to actively support the hospital, 
    where it appears he had courtesy staff privileges but did not become a member 
    of the hospital administration. 
     
              During the depression 
    in the early thirties, the hospital did poorly financially, and for a period 
    between 1930 and 1935 operated at a loss. Sometimes only one or two of the 
    17 to 18 ward patients paid anything for professional services or medicine. 
    In spite of all efforts to have someone take responsibility for room, board, 
    and nursing costs, the hospital from time to time absorbed the $2 per day 
    fee. Only keeping expenses as low as possible could the hospital administration 
    bring income and expenditures into balance. 
     
              In September 1935, 
    the hospital was split into two divisions in order to qualify for Duke Endowment 
    funds for charity patients. One division, still called Pitt Community Hospital, 
    was the professional division, operating a clinic and taking charge of the 
    medical and surgical patients. The other division, Pitt General Hospital, 
    was a non-profit organization with Judge F. M. Wooten as president, R. J. 
    Slay vice president, and R. C. Stokes, Jr., secretary-treasurer. It leased 
    the building and furniture from Community Hospital, provided nursing, and 
    operated as a general hospital. The Duke Endowment provided $1 per day for 
    each charity patient, to be supplemented by local funds. Patients able to 
    pay were charged at the regular rate. Members of the Pitt County Medical Society 
    continued to be on the courtesy staff, maintaining the privilege of treating 
    their own private patients in the hospital.  
     
              By 1939, it was 
    becoming clear that the hospital, even with additional wards, could no longer 
    accommodate Pitt Countys needs for hospital-centered healthcare. The 
    board of directors hired an architect to draw plans for a 40-bed addition 
    to the hospital. Since 1935, the hospital had become solvent again, and even 
    accrued some money for renovations. Nevertheless, the directors abandoned 
    the expansion proposal to look for other solutions.  
    
  The 
    Service League 
    
             On 
    January 9, 1939, Dr. T. M Watson spoke to the Greenville Service League about 
    the opportunity to provide for the hospitalization of patients at the hospital. 
    He told them that the average hospitalization for an adult was for about 12 
    days and for a child about 5 days. Providing for one bed space would benefit 
    many persons each year. The League voted unanimously to support one bed for 
    a worthy person man, woman, or child, white or colored who was 
    not on charity, but could not afford hospitalization. A bed committee was 
    appointed consisting of Mrs. R. M. Garrett, Chairman, Miss Bessie Brown, and 
    Mrs. T. A. Smoot, Jr., to choose the patients who would use the bed.  
     
              In this way, a 
    fruitful and permanent relationship began between Pitt Community Hospital 
    and the Greenville Service League. 
     
              In March 1940, 
    some of the members of the league were making scrapbooks for children who 
    stayed in hospital wards. In addition, in March, the women solicited donations 
    of warm clothing for the Thrift Shop over the Guaranty Bank on Dickinson Avenue. 
    Mrs. Garrett received letters from many local doctors, commending the League 
    for supplying hospital space for many people who otherwise would not have 
    been able to afford it. 
     
               The Service League 
    held a dance early in April 1940 to raise additional money to provide the 
    bed, which had been named the Laughinghouse Hospital Bed the year before to 
    honor Mrs. R. C. Stokes, Jr., Dr. Charles Laughinghouses daughter and 
    the Leagues first president. The dance became an annual event. 
     
              The shortcomings 
    of the Community-General Hospital multiplied as Greenville and Pitt County 
    grew, and there were many discussions about appropriate remedies. The facilities 
    were no longer adequate. Community businessmen discussed expanding the hospital, 
    and also spoke to medical leaders from various parts of the state about the 
    idea of a new hospital. In 1939, the different proposals had been consolidated 
    into a plan to add 40 beds to Pitt General. Rumors about the possibility of 
    federal legislation to make funds available to build county hospitals led 
    to the abandonment of the plan in favor of the possibility of building an 
    entirely new one. 
     
              The board of trustees 
    of Pitt General decided in 1940 to buy the hospital from its stockholders. 
    They used as a down payment funds that had been set aside for renovation, 
    and issued notes for the balance, to be paid annually. They bought the plant 
    for far less than its original cost of $85,000. At first the notes were paid 
    as they came due, but when operating costs doubled, the struggling hospital 
    began to default. The final debt was not paid until 1951, when the county 
    commissioners purchased the building and grounds from the board of trustees 
    for $35,000, the amount of the debt remaining unpaid, in order to ensure that 
    Pitt General would close when the countys new hospital opened.  
     
               The old 
    hospital continued to receive patients until the county bought it, and the 
    building was then converted into office space. It was being repaired at a 
    cost of about $8,000 in November 1951, readying it for occupancy in January 
    of the following year. A variety of county and federal services were housed 
    in the building. 
    The building was finally sold at auction in 1980, and for several months afterward 
    stood as a deserted, boarded-up relic. In May, 1981, it was bulldozed to make 
    room for an apartment building. When it was sold, the value of the hospital 
    with its equipment and grounds was estimated to be between $200,000 and $250,000. 
     
  Campaign 
    for a New Hospital 
    
             Dreams 
    of a new hospital remained unrealized for several years. 
              Early in 1946, 
    District Highway Commissioner John G. Clark, Sr., the Sinclair Oil distributor 
    in Greenville, returned from a business trip with an idea buzzing in his head 
    about how to secure a hospital for the city and county. Clark was chairman 
    of the Democratic Party of Pitt County from 1943-1961, and was very active 
    in community affairs. He was uniquely placed to make his idea into a reality. 
     
              Clark had learned 
    from a member of the North Carolina Medical Care Commission that the Hill-Burton 
    Act Congress was debating would provide funds for hospital construction, if 
    passed. When he came back to Greenville, he discussed a county-owned hospital 
    with officials of the Chamber of Commerce, who appointed a committee to talk 
    with Pitt General Hospital trustees. They also talked with state officials, 
    who estimated that a hospital would cost approximately $5,000 per bed, fully 
    equipped. The cost had risen to about $12,000 a bed by the time actual plans 
    were made. 
     
              Later in the year, 
    Clark invited interested people from all sections of the county to a meeting 
    at East Carolina Teachers College to consider the question of a county hospital 
    and find out how the people of the county felt about it. With Clark presiding, 
    the group discussed how to raise the countys share of the money. The 
    consensus was that the most practical approach to funding would be through 
    a bond issue. A major setback occurred when the Hill-Burton Act failed at 
    first to become law, but the planners decided that they should persist in 
    the project. 
     
              Clark and C. Stuart 
    Carr, Jr., chairman of the Pitt General Hospital Board of Trustees, led a 
    group of people in selling their concept in every precinct of the county. 
    The task was far from simple. A special bond election would require a special 
    registration, and under the statutes governing such elections all the registered 
    voters who did not vote in the election would be counted as opposing the bond 
    issue. It was necessary to raise interest and persuade people to register 
    if they were in favor of the hospital, not to register if they did not intend 
    to vote for it, and also to get them to the polls to vote if they were for 
    the bond issue. 
     
              Through July and 
    August of 1946, Clark and Carr traveled hundreds of miles through county communities. 
    They gave speeches to church organizations, civic clubs, womens groups 
    and talked in country stores and filling stations to anyone they could find 
    around the cracker barrels there. They had a good case to present. Pitt County 
    seriously needed modern medical facilities, and the other counties around 
    were mostly years ahead of it in hospital space.  
     
              In the spring 
    of 1947, the sponsors of the hospital circulated a petition asking the county 
    commissioners to call an election on a special bond issue to cover the countys 
    share of construction. Many citizens from all parts of the county signed the 
    petition, and the commissioners authorized a referendum to be voted on in 
    September, 1947. By then, hospital cost estimates had risen to about $6,000 
    per bed, and the goal had become a 140-bed hospital. 
     
              In the summer 
    of 1947, the state Medical Care Commission held its quarterly meeting in Greenville 
    and approved a number of local hospitals, including a 100-bed facility for 
    Pitt County. Pitt County Commissioners met on Monday, July 7, and voted to 
    call a special election on September 16, 1947 for a vote on a bond issue of 
    $351,900 as the countys 39.1 percent share of the $900,000 estimated 
    for financing a new 140-bed hospital. The commissioners expected the Surgeon 
    Generals office to provide 33.33 percent of the financing, or $300,000, 
    and the state to pay $248,00027.6 percentout of state funds voted 
    at the previous session of the General Assembly. 
     
              On September 16, 
    1947, the countys citizens approved a bond issue of $452,000 for building 
    a new hospital. It was to be named Pitt Memorial Hospital in honor of Pitt 
    County men who had died in the two World Wars. As the trustees investigated 
    costs for hospital construction during the next few months, they recognized 
    that the money for the hospital would not be adequate. On March 8, 1948, the 
    Executive Committee of the hospital board of trustees reported to the county 
    commissioners that there was a $118,000 shortfall for a 100-bed hospital. 
    The cost would be $1.2 million. The commissioners agreed to assume responsibility 
    for $468,000, 39.1 percent of the total. 
     
              With hospital 
    construction plans under way, C. D. Ward, the former head of Pitt General 
    Hospital, was appointed as the first administrator of the still-to-be-built 
    Pitt Memorial. 
     
              The heirs of Jesse 
    Rountree Moye donated 17.5 acres of farm land on the Greenville-Falkland highway 
    (now West Fifth Street). Architect George Watts Carr of Durham was engaged 
    to draw up plans for the proposed hospital. In April, Carr submitted preliminary 
    plans to the board of trustees. The prospects were favorable for state and 
    federal funding in 1948, so Carr was instructed to prepare final plans for 
    the building. During the week of October 6, borings were made on the site 
    chosen for the hospital building. The architect found the soil so unsteady 
    that he advised placing pilings to secure the foundations on the first solid 
    rock, 45-50 feet below the surface, to avoid shifting and cracking. 
     
              On November 29, 
    bids were advertised for a 120-bed hospital to cost $1.4 million. Of this 
    sum, $877,000 would come from the state and federal governments and the balance 
    from the county. The county let contracts in January for constructing and 
    equipping the hospital. 
    
  The 
    First Pitt Memorial Hospital 
    
                 The 
        hospital was completed in 1951. On January 18, about 500 citizens heard 
        former Army Secretary Kenneth C. Royall, a practicing attorney in New 
        York city, pay tribute to Pitt County citizens for building Pitt Memorial 
        Hospital. 
         
                  Many of the 
        people attending the inaugural open house then toured the hospital to 
        admire its state-of-the-art features. These included a surgical suite 
        with two major and two minor operating rooms and air conditioning. There 
        was an emergency service area with a waiting room, an examining room, 
        and a treatment room; a ward for short-term care of mentally-ill patients; 
        a closed ward for isolating patients with contagious illnesses; the latest 
        in Burroughs electrical adding machines for bookkeeping; comfortable lounges 
        for staff members; and an autopsy room. It had segregated wards with 30 
        of its 120 beds reserved for black patients. At the hospitals opening, 
        a patient could have a private room with a bath for only $11 a day. The 
        kitchen, shining with stainless steel pots and pans, was equipped with 
        a machine that would produce 1800 pounds of flaked ice each morning. There 
        was an internal telephone system connecting nurses stations, the 
        emergency room, offices, and other working areas. There were 38 physicians 
        on the medical staff, 50 nurses, and 75 support staff members.  
         
                  On February 
        8, 1951, at 8:45 a.m., the first two patients, a Winterville woman, Mamie 
        McLawhorn Dews, and her week-old son, Kenneth Kirwin Dews, Jr., arrived 
        on the third floor maternity ward of the new Pitt County Memorial Hospital 
        from Pitt General. They had been chosen by drawing names from a hat. The 
        infant boys father was subsequently elected several times to the 
        Pitt County Board of Commissioners, served on the hospital Board of Trustees, 
        and was a notable supporter of PCMH for many years. 
         
                  At 11:39 a.m., 
        Lillie Bell Wilson of Havelock, who had been admitted at 10:50, delivered 
        the first baby in the new hospitala girl who had not yet been named. 
        Almost all of the patients were settled in their rooms by 5:00 p. m. The 
        hospital kitchen prepared the dinner meal, and it was served to everyone 
        who had been moved into the new hospital.  
         
                  The hospital 
        dreamt of by Dr. Charles Laughinghouse in 1902 had taken half of the century 
        to become a reality such as he could never have foreseen. 
        
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