The Cooley Dickinson Hospital was founded with a bequest from the will of Caleb Cooley Dickinson, a descendant of Nathaniel Dickinson, the first settler in
Hatfield, Massachusetts, and a cousin of poet
Emily Dickinson. It was originally established as a "Hospital for the sick poor," and admitted its first patient in 1886. From 1901 to 1975, the facility turned out thousands of graduates from its Cooley Dickinson School of Nursing, including hundreds trained through an accelerated program during World War II for the U.S.
Cadet Nurse Corps. In the summer of 1964, U.S Senator
Edward Kennedy spent approximately two weeks at Cooley Dickinson Hospital recovering from a plane crash in neighboring
Southampton, before being moved to New England Baptist Hospital in Boston. The crash killed the plane's pilot, Edwin Zimny, and one of Kennedy's aides, Edward Moss, whose name is still honored by a Cooley Dickinson nursing scholarship that Kennedy established in his memory. Fellow Senator Birch Bayh (D, IN) and his wife Marvella also survived the crash and were also treated at Cooley Dickinson Hospital. In 2011, amid the nation's recovery from the
2008 financial crisis which led to widespread mergers and acquisitions across healthcare, Cooley Dickinson Hospital sought a new owner to avoid closure. Among candidates which included
Baystate Health and
Vanguard Health Systems, an overwhelming majority of staff supported acquisition by Mass General Brigham. The state approved the merger, and in 2013 Cooley Dickinson joined the Mass General Brigham system. == References ==