The congregation of the Sisters of St John of God was founded in 1871 in
Wexford, Ireland. In 1895, Perth's Bishop
Matthew Gibney sent a request to the Sisters for help to care for people suffering from
typhoid fever during the
1890s gold rush. The first hospital established under this arrangement was at
Kalgoorlie in the late 1890s followed shortly by
another in the Perth suburb of
Subiaco. The Sisters often cared for patients with infectious diseases including typhoid and Hansen's disease (leprosy), which spread quickly in crowded mining camps. In 1937, after much lobbying by Sister
Mary Gertrude, the order established a hospital for Aboriginal Australian patients with Hansen's disease, outside of Derby. The Sisters of St John of God went on to establish additional hospitals, pathology and social outreach services in Western Australia, Victoria and New South Wales. In 2007, St John of God Health Care merged with the services previously operated by the Hospitaller Order of St John of God in Victoria, New South Wales and New Zealand. In 2015, St John of God Health Care expanded into public health care and took ownership of Hawkesbury District Health Service and opened St John of God Midland Public and Private Hospitals. In May 2025, the Sisters of St John of God announced plans to close the Sisters of St John of God Heritage Centre in Broome, Western Australia. The former convent has operated as a museum and archive since 1995, and many Aboriginal families with links to the area are concerned about what will happen to the historical photos and documents, many of which could be the only copies of such documentation in existence. As a result of being a privately owned collection, these documents and photographs are not protected by state legislation and as a result, could technically be destroyed without recourse available to family members and descendants of the Stolen Generations survivors. The Sisters of St John of God have long had links to the Broome area, having arrived at La Grange Mission (also known as Bidyadanga), 200 km south of Broome in 1957 to teach the children living in the mission. At the time the Sisters of St John of God arrived to La Grange, Missions continued to house Aboriginal children and young people, most of whom had been forcibly removed from their families for the purpose severing ties to family, language and culture under the guise of protection. ==Pomegranate symbol==