Bond Street entrance St. Michael's Hospital was founded as a Catholic hospital in 1892 by the
Sisters of St. Joseph, who operated the Notre Dame des Anges, a boarding house for working women. Originally an old
Baptist church, the hospital on Bond Street was created in response to care for the poor population in the south end of Toronto. The hospital opened with a bed capacity of 26 and a staff of six doctors and four graduate nurses. Within a year, it was expanded to include two large wards and an
emergency department. In 1894, Toronto-based railway magnate
Hugh Ryan funded a major extension of the hospital —building a three-storey surgical wing that included an
operating theatre designed to accommodate fifty medical students and ten wards each containing ten beds. These additions, which cost $40,000 (the equivalent of $1.48 million in 2024), placed the hospital on the path to becoming the preeminent
teaching hospital it is today. As early as 1895, St. Michael's Hospital started receiving medical students. It negotiated a formal agreement with the
Faculty of Medicine at the
University of Toronto in 1920 that has continued to this day. By 1912, the hospital's bed capacity had reached 300, and a five-room operating suite was added. The ongoing physical expansion, most prominently in the 1960s, increased the original 26-bed facility to 900 beds. Between 1892 and 1974, St. Michael's school of nursing graduated 81 classes, totalling 5,177 graduates. The school was closed in 1974, when nursing education was moved into
the province's college system. Thereafter, the hospital opened a school for medical record librarians, the first in Canada, and participated in the preparation of dietitians and
X-ray and
laboratory technologists. In March 2010, the hospital re-branded itself to simply St. Michael's to reflect its growing movement into medical research. Meanwhile, a new motto ("Inspired Care. Inspiring Science.") was also revealed. On 1 August 2017, St. Michael's Hospital merged with
St. Joseph's Health Centre and
Providence Healthcare to form a
new hospital network known as Unity Health Toronto. ==Construction==