Beth Israel is
Hebrew for "House of Israel." The hospital was incorporated as Beth Israel Hospital on May 28, 1890, by a group of 40
Orthodox Jews on the
Lower East Side of
Manhattan, each of whom paid 25 cents to set up a hospital dedicated to serving immigrant Jews living in the tenement slums of the Lower East Side. At the time, most of New York's hospitals would not treat Jewish patients. It initially opened a
dispensary at 206 Broadway in 1891, and moved to Jefferson and Cherry Streets in 1895. In 1902, the hospital established its nursing school, today known as
Mount Sinai Phillips School of Nursing (PSON). On March 12, 1929, it moved to
First Avenue and 16th Street, facing
Stuyvesant Square, and the old building was converted into an old age home, the
Home of Old Israel. It purchased its neighbor Manhattan General Hospital in 1964 and was renamed Beth Israel Medical Center on March 10, 1965. By then it had extended beyond its Jewish base and served the entire population of
Lower Manhattan including Manhattan's Lower East Side,
Chinatown,
Gramercy, the
West Village, and
Chelsea. In 1988 it had the largest network of
heroin-treatment clinics in the United States with 7,500 patients and 23 facilities. It acquired
Doctors Hospital on the Upper East Side in the 1990s, renaming it Beth Israel Medical Center-Singer Division, and Kings Highway Hospital Center in
Brooklyn in 1995, renaming it Beth Israel Medical Center-Kings Highway Division. In 2004, the Singer Division closed and the Manhattan inpatient operations were consolidated in the buildings on First Avenue at 16th Street in Manhattan. As of 2010 Mount Sinai Beth Israel had residency training programs in nearly every major field of medicine including
Emergency Medicine,
Internal Medicine,
Surgery,
Otolaryngology,
Oral and maxillofacial surgery,
Radiology,
Family Medicine,
Dermatology,
Obstetrics and
Gynecology,
Neurology,
Ophthalmology,
Pathology,
Psychiatry,
Podiatry, and
Urology. Mount Sinai Beth Israel also had a department of
Chiropractic, Music Therapy, and Acupuncture. On November 22, 2013, the name of Beth Israel Medical Center was changed to Mount Sinai Beth Israel as a part of the merger with Mount Sinai to form the
Mount Sinai Health System. On May 25, 2016, Mount Sinai announced a significant restructuring and downsizing, with plans to build a new hospital with only 70 inpatient beds on a site several blocks away, after which the main hospital on 16th Street would close and be sold. On June 11, 2017, the hospital's Labor and Delivery Department closed, followed by the hospital's "Continuum Center for Health and Healing" later in the year. == Closure ==