1867
The Board of Lady Managers decides to receive
children younger than two years of age. No other institution in Rochester
accepts children so young and the Orphan Asylum Board Members feel compelled
to do so because they have the room to "open their arms to these unfortunate
babies."
1881
Potter Memorial Building is constructed with a
gift of $12,000 from Henry S. Potter. This four-story building has a dining
room and store rooms on the first floor, school rooms on the second floor, a
large dormitory on the third floor, and hospital wards on the fourth floor.
The old main building continues to be used as a dormitory and nursery space.
1887
Crestwood Children’s Center is originally founded
as Infant’s Summer Hospital of Charlotte, a temporary shelter on the Shores
of Lake Ontario serving children suffering from infants’ summer fever.
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From the Bound Volume “Infants’ Summer Hospital April 7, 1891 to April 6,
1914."
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Entry date “Rochester NY June 10 1913”
“Dr. Edward M. Moore, father of Dr.
Edward Mott Moore, Jr. formed the Infants’ Summer Hospital and for the first
two or three years visited the infants at the hospital daily. Dr. Edward
Moore, Jr. began to visit the hospital when his father's health failed.” “He
said in his address as reported in the Buffalo Express of May 17 1892: ‘I
have thought of it for years and yeas as we have mourned at the loss of life
among little children to. I was in doubt and fear for many years until the
summer of 1887 brought with its intense heat a frightful death rate from
summer complaint. With no promise of money, I and a few friends set out to
see what we could do. He put up a tent on the shore of Lake Ontario to.” I
make this record in simple justice to that “Grand Old Man,” who loved to do
good without seeking for praise or honor. "
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Arthur S. Hamilton
1890
On September 16 what is now known as Crestwood
Children’s Center is incorporated as Infants' Summer Hospital of Charlotte .
Infants' Summer
Hospital
Letter to
principals and teachers dated 1894

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