Hospital Diakovere Henriettenstift

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Hospital Diakovere Henriettenstift
place Hanover
state Lower Saxony
Country Germany
management Stefan David, Matthias Winkelhake (Management), Directorate: Michael Fantini (Medical Director), Christian Thiemann (Commercial Director, Authorized Signatory from May 1, 2019), Sabine Mischer (Nursing Director),
Affiliation Diakovere
founding July 1, 1859
Website Henrietten Foundation website
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The Henrietten Foundation hospital is one of the oldest hospitals in Hanover . The main buildings are on Marienstraße in Südstadt . The Henrietten Foundation hospital was a member of the Diakonisches Werk in Lower Saxony and has been part of the Diakovere Group since January 1, 2016 .

history

Monastery history

Main facade along Misburger Damm, today Marienstraße , around 1920;
Postcard , Verlag Carl Thies Nflg.
Today's facade (detail)

The monastery was founded on July 1st, 1859 on the initiative of Queen Marie of Hanover . The name of the Henriettenstift honors Marie's grandmother, Princess Henriette von Nassau-Weilburg (1780–1857) , from whose estate the foundation capital comes. The aim of the foundation was the construction of a deaconess institution with an attached hospital and the training of nurses.

The original monastery building was built on Wilhelmstrasse (with 20 beds) and was inaugurated on July 27, 1860. First Mother Superior was Emmy Danckwerts while Gerhard Uhlhorn took spiritual direction. Initially, three deaconesses were sufficient to care for the patients. But already in 1860/1861 74 patients had to be cared for at the same time, the staff was increased to six nurses and two students.

For reasons of space, a new monastery building with 100 beds was built at Misburger Damm 7 (today: Marienstraße 80) as early as 1861–1863 . In 1863 Theodor Lindemann became the first medical director of the Henriettenstift; In 1866 Anna Forcke succeeded the late Emmy Danckwerts as superior of the Henriettenstift.

In 1867, the Bethesda subsidiary in Kirchrode was built as a school and then as a nursing ward for female patients. While 44 sisters were still active in the parent company or branch offices in 1869, the sorority numbered 300 at the end of the 19th century Several rest homes, crèches, kindergartens as well as industrial and household schools for the Henrietten Foundation.

After the Second World War , numerous branches were gradually abandoned and the location was restricted to Hanover, which now has 15 clinics and departments. In addition to the main building on Marienstraße, the location in the Kirchrode district with clinics and care facilities for the elderly is also important. In 2006 the Henriettenstift had around 1,600 employees, around 35,000 outpatients and 20,000 inpatients were treated. At the same time, around 500 senior citizens lived in the foundation's facilities for the elderly.

In order to remain sustainable in a competitive health system, the Henrietten Foundation, the Annastift and the Friederikenstift merged with their operating companies in 2006 to form the Holding Diakonische Dienst Hannover gGmbH . 2007, belonging to the Foundation Nursing and Therapy Center was named in the fishing road to Hilde Schneider (1916-2008), because of Jewish cancel grandparents their Deaconess training in 1938 had and in 1941 after the "Action Lauterbacher" in the Riga ghetto was deported.

Motherhouse building

“Feierabendhaus Raute, Marienheim” in Rautenstrasse in the southern part of the city ;
Around 1900 collotype copied picture postcard , Verlag Heinrich Feesche
New building on Marienstraße / corner of Sallstraße from 2002
Motherhouse Church on Marienstraße. The altarpiece shows the heavenly Jerusalem.

On the new monastery building from 1861 to 1863 (architect: Christian Heinrich Tramm ) on Marienstraße, the east wing to the former Henriettenstraße was added from 1884 to 1886 with administration, living and classrooms. From 1884 to 1886 a church was also built for the Henrietten Foundation according to plans by the architect Karl Börgemann . In 1887 the Feierabendhaus (Rautenstrasse 7–9, since 1908 the Hospiz house , now the seat of the hospital administration) was purchased. Due to the increasing number of patients (more than 1,000 annually), the west wing was built in 1898/1899, which was reserved exclusively for nursing.

In 1902 the funeral chapel was built and the house at Rautenstrasse 35 was bought as a nursing school . The children's ward was built in the same street in 1908, and during the First World War it was partly used as a hospital. A new nurses house was built in 1926–1928 and additional hospital rooms were created by expanding the building complex towards Sallstrasse. The old building was modernized and expanded by 1931/1932, with new operating rooms, dining room, kitchen and laundry. 853 nurses were available for 280 beds.

From 1930 to 1934 the number of records doubled from 3,534 to around 6,000 patients annually. During the air raids on Hanover in World War II , on 8./9. October 1943, numerous buildings were completely destroyed, only the central building of the main building remained undamaged. Operations here had to be temporarily stopped completely: the surgery was moved to the Annastift and the Hannoversche Kinderheilanstalt , the medical department in buildings on the premises in Kirchrode, while the operating theaters, the X-ray department and the slightly damaged buildings were restored. Reconstruction since 1947 began with the industrial school . 1950–53 the hospital was rebuilt around the old building. In 1954 the internal department could be brought back from Kirchrode.

For the centenary in 1960, the Henriettenstift received a carillon with 49 bells cast by the Schilling bell foundry . After the reconstruction was completed with the construction of the parent house in 1960, numerous conversions and modernization measures were commissioned from 1962 to 1984/1985, which initially ended with the construction of the new entrance hall on Marienstraße. The corner of the building on Marienstrasse and Sallstrasse was expanded from 1998 to 2002. The five-storey new building is based on the existing building and street lines and mainly contains rooms for patient care. The two- and four-bed rooms all face the streets at a slight angle. Inside the new building, a more than 800 m² inner courtyard was created, which is roofed above the fourth floor. Four tree supports support the roof.

Tents as an extended emergency room for the COVID-19 pandemic in Germany , 2020
Development of the extended emergency room by the THW, 2020

In the spring of 2020 during the COVID-19 pandemic in Lower Saxony , the hospital expected a sharp increase in patients who were infected with SARS-CoV-2 . For this purpose, the technical relief organization set up tents in front of the main building on Marienstraße, in which an enlarged emergency room was set up.

Meeting place of the regional church

As a rule, the regional synod of the Evangelical Lutheran Church of Hanover meets twice a year in the large hall of the Henriettenstiftung.

Chief

  • 1860–1869: Consistorial Councilor D. Gerhard Uhlhorn
  • 1869–1905: Pastor D. Johann Samuel Büttner
  • 1906–1913: Pastor D. Johannes Schwerdtmann
  • 1913–1926: Pastor Lic. Gustav Lohmann
  • 1926–1955: Pastor Otto Meyer
  • 1955–1971: Pastor Karl-Friedrich Weber
  • 1971–1997: Pastor Wolfgang Helbig (* 1932)
  • 1997–2007: Pastor Dieter Zinßer (* 1942) State superintendent a. D.
  • 2008-2016: Pastor Volker Milkowski (* 1968)
  • Since 2016: Pastor Uwe Mletzko

Fonts (selection)

  • The Henriettenstift, Evangelical Lutheran Diakonissenhaus Hannover. Its becoming and growing 1860–1935. Self-published, Hanover 1935.
  • Motherhouse Diakonie in the upheaval of times. For the 100th anniversary of the Henriettenstiftung Hannover. Self-published, Hanover 1960.
  • Helga Darenberg (ed.), Ulrike Tüper (text): Art out of silence. A homage to the picture weaving of the Henriettenstiftung. Ed .: Deaconess Mother House of the Henrietten Foundation Hanover. Schindelhauer (print), Hanover 2005.
  • Helga Darenberg (ed.), Susanne Kreutzer, Traudel Weber-Reich: Culture of care. A journey through time through 145 years of care history of the Henriettenstiftung. Book accompanying the exhibition of the same name, publisher: Deaconess Mother House of the Henrietten Foundation Hanover. Schindelhauer (print), Hanover 2005.
  • Heike Löhr (ed.), Ruth Kuntz-Brunner (text): Nursing and religious community. The example of the Deaconess Mother House of the Henrietten Foundation in Hanover since 1944. Report on an interdisciplinary research project. Published by the Deaconess Mother House of the Henrietten Foundation. Thomas publishing house and printer, Leipzig 2010.
  • Heike Löhr (ed.), Ulrike Tüper (text): “When my sister came by bike ...” A journey through the history of outpatient care. Book accompanying the exhibition of the same name. Ed .: Deaconess Mother House of the Henrietten Foundation Hanover. Thomas publishing house and printer, Leipzig 2010.
  • Heike Löhr, Volker Milkowski (eds.): Help - care - support: 150 years of the Henrietten Foundation. Lutherhaus Verlag, Hannover 2010, ISBN 978-3-7859-1034-4 .

literature

  • Wolfgang Helbig (Ed.): New paths, old goals: 125 years of the Henrietten Foundation Hanover. LVH, Hannover 1985, ISBN 3-87502-165-7 .
  • Wolfgang Helbig: Transformation. From the deaconess mother house to the diaconal company. Series: LLG - Guiding. To steer. Shape. Theology and Economics, Volume 37. LIT Verlag, Berlin 2016, ISBN 978-3-643-13196-6 .
  • Helmut Mundhenke: Hospitals. Pp. 47-51.
  • Rainer Kasties, Karl-Heinz Grotjahn, in: Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein (eds.) U. a .: City Lexicon Hanover . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2009, ISBN 978-3-89993-662-9 , p. 286.
  • Hans Otte : Looking back, a difficult legacy. The Hanoverian regional church and the Henrietten Foundation after 1945. In: J.-C. Kaiser, R. Scheepers (Ed.): Servants of the Lord. Contributions to female diakonia in the 19th and 20th centuries. Leipzig 2010 (= historical-theological gender research, 5), pp. 184–209.
  • Hans-Cord Sarnighausen: Emmy Danckwerts (1812–1865), Theodor Fontane and the Henriettenstift in Hanover. In: Heimatkalender Uelzen 2014, pp. 89–93.

Web links

Commons : Henriettenstiftung (Hannover)  - Collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. http://www.diakovere.de/unternehmen-mehr/krankenhaeuser/henriettenstift/ueber-uns/leitung-und-geschaeftsfuehrung/
  2. On June 27, 1860, in the presence of King George V of Hanover and his wife Queen Marie, the Henrietten Foundation was inaugurated in their first house on Wilhelmstrasse. diakoniekrankenhaus-henriettenstiftung.de, accessed on August 27, 2015.
  3. ^ Jens Schmidt-Clausen: Forke, Anna. In: Dirk Böttcher , Klaus Mlynek, Waldemar R. Röhrbein, Hugo Thielen: Hannoversches Biographisches Lexikon . From the beginning to the present. Schlütersche, Hannover 2002, ISBN 3-87706-706-9 , p. 119.
  4. Henriettenstiftung commemorates deported sister. epd state service Lower Saxony-Bremen, April 15, 2007; accessed on August 27, 2015
  5. ^ Philipp Meuser, Christoph Schirmer: New hospital buildings in Germany. Volume 1: General Hospitals and Health Centers. DOM Publishers, Berlin 2006, ISBN 3-938666-12-9 . P. 274 ff.
  6. Bernd Günther: Technisches Hilfswerk is building an extended emergency room in front of the Henriettenstift at StadtReporter.de on March 28, 2020
  7. Gerhard Uhlhorn in the Ecumenical Lexicon of Saints , accessed on August 27, 2015
  8. das Krankenhaus (2010/6) p. 567 (PDF; 343 KB), accessed on August 27, 2015
  9. Volker Milkowski becomes head of the Henriettenstiftung epd-Landesdienst Niedersachsen-Bremen, 23 November 2007; accessed on August 27, 2015
  10. Volker Milkowski is the new pastor in Eilvese HAZ from August 10, 2016, accessed on July 13, 2017
  11. Management / Management (The company). In: DIAKOVERE. Retrieved May 30, 2020 (English).

Coordinates: 52 ° 22 ′ 11 "  N , 9 ° 45 ′ 14.6"  E