Allegheny at the foot of Montgomery’s Hill. A rented house
in the spring of 1848 was selected for the purpose of caring for
the sick and needy but no patients were admitted until the
spring of 1849.
When the city of Pittsburgh was celebrating the return of
the soldiers from the Mexican War, Dr. Passavant found
three soldiers sick with fever neglected in the boats at the
dock. With the aid of a theological student, Asa Waters, he
-ransferred them to the vacant infirmary, where, in the ab-
sence of nurses, the doctor himself with Mr. Waters nursed
them back to health.
In the summer of that year cholera suddenly made its
appearance at different points on the river; a number of these
patients were admitted to the infirmary. This caused so
great a panic that the neighbors threatened to stone the
building and Dr. Passavant was obliged to load his patients
into a wagon and seek a safe refuge for them before night.
He sought guidance in prayer and God led him across the
sity to Lacyville, where he found room for his wagon load of
patients in Dr. Lacy’s Female Seminary, which was empty at
that time. Dr. Passavant bought this building together with
a garden, for $5,500, and after four deaconesses arrived from
Germany to carry on the work, the Pittsburgh Infirmary was
Jedicated on July 17, 1849, to be a refuge for the worthy sick
of every religion, color or race.
In 1850 the field adjoining the infirmary, containing up-
wards of four acres, was purchased for the sum of $12,000.
Of this that portion bordering on Dinwiddie street was divid-
ed into 28 lots and sold for $500 a lot to pay for the property.
A pew infirmary building, 60x40 feet and four stories high,
was erected in 1851 on the newly purchased land. The ac-
~omodations it afforded were for forty patients, besides room
for the sisters, of which there were five. Sister Louisa Mar-
thens of Pittsburgh was the first American deaconess to enter.
This new building cost $8,000 and is still used as a part of the
hospital. The number of patients admitted in 1852 was 272.
Expenditures for the entire year were $2,432.35. The most
interesting years were 1853 and 1854—when admissions for
the two years amounted to 536—of those 38 were typhoid; 21