In the early 1800s, Williamsport was just a small
borough along the
Susquehanna River. By the 1870s, it had become the lumber capital of the world. The population had grown dramatically, and with this growth came an increased incidence of sickness and injury. The sick were cared for in their homes by family members, and workers who were injured on the job were often treated in the
boardinghouse rooms where they lived. Following several
industrial accidents that occurred in the early 1870s, members of the Lycoming County Medical Society decided there was a need for a hospital where patients could be fed and cared for in a clean environment. In 1873, upon petition by members of the Lycoming County Medical Society and 23 leading citizens of the community, the
Lycoming County Court granted a charter establishing the Williamsport Hospital. The first hospital in Williamsport opened its doors around April 1, 1878. In the coming hundred or so years, as the population of the area grew and fell, Divine Providence was founded and opened in 1951 as a full-scale
emergency hospital and the main care facility in the
county. The emergency department was dissolved in the 1990s. Divine Providence Hospital was part of an alliance of three hospitals that formed Susquehanna Health in 1994. Divine Providence Hospital became of the UPMC network when Susquehanna Health was integrated into the
University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) on October 18, 2016. ==See also==