🎄Christmas Opening Hours for 2024🎄
CLOSED between 4pm Friday 20th December 2024 and 10am Thusday January 2nd 2025
Ordinary opening hours apply before and after this period.

Beulah House, Blyth

NRO 8836/4

This blog has been researched and written by Hilary Love, one of the volunteers on our maternity care project. Project volunteers are researching maternity care in Northumberland with particular focus on Castle Hills Maternity Home, Berwick, and Mona Taylor Maternity Home, Stannington. We are also researching in less detail some of the other Maternity Homes in the county. This blog provides a brief history of maternity provision at Beulah House, Bondicar Terrace, Blyth, Northumberland.

Beulah House appears to have started life as a private residence. A newspaper account of 10 November 1924 records the death of Ralph Gregory Dobson, a grocer, at his home, Beulah House. By 1929 Beulah House was used as a Training Centre For Unemployed Women and Girls. The Centre trained women and girls for domestic service. By 1936 Beulah House was described as a Home Training Centre – still training women and girls for domestic service. A photograph in The Blyth News of 28 March 1940 is captioned ‘Mothers have their babies weighed and examined at Blyth’s new Health Centre which has been opened by the Town Council at Beulah House’. Later in 1940 it was described as a municipal clinic. A report in The Blyth News of 17 June 1946 records that the Town Council is proposing that Beulah House becomes a maternity home with six beds. Two Army huts were to be acquired and erected at the back of the house to be used as reception rooms – an office, kitchen and staff room. It was proposed that the maternity would be staffed by a matron-midwife and two day nurses and two might nurses. Beulah House Maternity Home closed in October 1973.

Records held at Northumberland Archives have revealed more about the history of Beulah House. The minutes of the Blyth Hospitals’ House Committee, 1962-1974, give details of various statistics such as admissions. The number of patients admitted during December 1961 was 64 and the daily average bed occupancy was 12.8. There were 41 admissions during January 1962 and, during the two months under review, 94 out-patients were examined. As a comparison, the admissions in December 1963 were 47 and 56 were admitted in January 1963. During the two months, 98 out-patients were examined. Nursing staff in October 1962 numbered six Midwives and four part-time Midwives, two State Enrolled Nurses and one part-time Nursing Auxiliary. In March 1963 there were seven Midwives and four part-time Midwives and two State Enrolled Nurses.

In the minutes for June 1964, the Nuffield Report on Food in Hospitals is mentioned. Beulah House is referred to as a small, busy hospital. Accommodation is extremely limited and very little could be done regarding the kitchen and storage lay-outs without a new building. Rearrangement of the kitchen accommodation was currently taking place.

In the Minutes for the meeting on Monday 14 December 1964, costing returns for the year ended March 1964 are outlined. There was a slight increase in the cost per patient per week but this was only 9/2d (46p) above the regional average, which was extremely satisfactory for a hospital with only 13 beds and a separate Nurses’ Home to maintain.

A letter from the Wansbeck Hospital Management Committee was received in July 1968 and a copy of a letter from the Blyth Division of the British Medical Association about the future of Beulah Maternity Hospital. The minutes of the meeting record widespread opposition and outline various objections:

  1. All deplored any suggestion of a closure of Beulah House. The maternity hospital was not an economic proposition at present  but it was thought bed occupancy would rise as the population increased and the temporary fall in the birth rate due to the Pill and other reasons became modified.
  2. Benefits to the patient: at present, approximately 500 patients per year are confined in Beulah House. The disadvantages of having to travel outside of Blyth to Ashington Maternity Hospital were discussed.
  3. The disadvantages of patients’ husbands and other visitors having to travel further during ante and post- natal periods were discussed.
  4. Benefits to the G.P.s in the town were mentioned but the general feeling was that the falling number of G.P.s and increased workload due to the increase in population, and a G.P. being out of town at another unit, would entail large numbers of patients being “at risk”.   In Blyth, G.P.s, broadly speaking, were grouped around Beulah Maternity Hospital and were able to give prompt attention to all confined in Beulah House.

The future of the hospital is discussed at almost every meeting in 1971 and 1972 and the minutes of the meeting on 14 February 1972 contain the following:

‘Although no decision had been taken as to the future of the hospital, this was under review due to the low occupancy rate and consequent high cost per patient, and the Consultant Obstetricians were of the opinion that this provided the Regional Hospital Board with adequate grounds for the hospital’s closure.

Further lengthy and detailed discussions took place about future policy and provision of services in Blyth, including a smaller general, community hospital. There was still strong opposition to Beulah House closing.

In June 1972, the Group Secretary discussed with members future hospital services in Blyth. ‘The township of Blyth, being the largest in the Wansbeck catchment area, had a need for hospital beds and would continue to do so for some considerable time.

With particular reference to possible closure of Beulah Maternity Hospital, the Regional Hospital Board would consider this in the light of services now being provided at Blyth and the availability of obstetric services at Ashington Hospital’.

At the meeting on 12 February 1973, the Chairman maintained the view that some publicity was desirable to acquaint the public that Beulah Maternity Hospital still offered obstetric facilities for G.P. cases, despite the tendency of some G.P.s to refer maternity cases direct to Ashington Hospital. As the Hospital Management Committee had recommended that Beulah Maternity Hospital be closed, the Group Secretary reported that he had instructed the Committee Secretary to withhold any publicity as it would conflict with the Management Committee’s policy.

The minutes of the meeting on 9 July 1973 states that three letters referring to the proposed closure of Beulah Maternity  Hospital had been received. The Committee Secretary stressed the fact that no official notification had been received regarding a definite date for the proposed closure.

That was reported at the meeting on 8 October 1973 when the date was given as 1 November 1973. 

All staff had been or would be offered alternative employment at other hospitals within the Group. The Principal Nursing Officer’s intention was to notify former staff of any future vacancies which may become available at Thomas Knight Memorial Hospital, Blyth.

On 10 December 1973, it was recommended that a function was held to which all personnel employed at Beulah House at the date of closure would be invited to a) express the Committee’s appreciation of the services rendered by the entire staff and b) to incorporate the disbandment of the Blyth Hospital House Committee on 11 February 1974.

The Secretary stated that there was still nothing further to report in relation to the possible provision of a Community Hospital in the Blyth district.

It was reported that Beulah Maternity Hospital had closed on 31 October 1973. All staff had either accepted alternative employment or resigned voluntarily.

52 thoughts on “Beulah House, Blyth”

  1. My mum, Irene Thornton was secretary of the Beulah Association, a group set up to fight against the closure of the unit. It was quite a high profile campaign in the local area and my mum told me she went into labour with me while being intetviewed by Jimmy Nails sister, who was doing a feature on the proposed closure.

    I was my mums.4th child born there and was named after the midwife who cared for my mum. The midwife was called Mary Pyle. I went on to become a midwife myself. Being born at Beulah obviously inspired me.

    Reply
  2. I was born here May 1st 1963 I loved reading this article when I tell the younger generation where I was born I had no information I could give them of Beulah house now I have thank you

    Reply
  3. Nurse Wake was a very muched loved midwife she adored children.Every mother in Blyth knew of her.She became my upstairs tenent after My hubbie and I bought flats ,she lived upstairs to me.Emily Wake will always be in our hearts.

    Reply
  4. is this what is now waterloo rest home? there were still matron stickers on the door when i worked there, it is a little creepy on nightshift especially the staircase

    Reply
    • Unfortunately, we don’t have an exact date for this photograph. Our Electronic catalogue shows the date as c.1970.

      Reply
  5. I was born here in 1971.
    My brother Stanley Lisle also born in 1950s. He was premature and smallest baby born at that time at Beulah House! He even made the local papers. Nurse Dixon looked after him!

    Reply
  6. My brother Stanley Lisle also born in 1950s. He was premature and smallest baby born at that time at Beulah House! He even made the local papers. Nurse Dixon looked after him!

    Reply
  7. I had 2 of my children at Beulah House, one in May 1968, and one in October 1969, it was a lovely place, I was sad when I heard it had closed

    Reply
  8. I worked there. After it was closed it was reopened and used as a temporary baby clinic while the clinic on Waterloo Road was revamped. This would be 1975.

    Reply
  9. myself and my twin sister were born at Beulah Hospital on the 26th of July 1955 l was born at 9.10 pm my twin sister was born at 9.40 pm sadly l have lost my sister this year but l heard so much of Bealah Hospital and seen photos . memories are precious x

    Reply
  10. As a pupil nurse at Ashington Hospital, from 1966 to 1968, I had to work 2 weeks at Beulah house as part of my nurse training.

    Reply
  11. My mam Joan McGowan was a midwife at Beulah. I remember it had a huge kitchen and the whole place smelled of antiseptic!

    Reply
  12. My mum was a midwife there then transferred to Ashington when it closed. She came back to Blyth in the 1980’s and was well known as Pat the midwife working along side Barbara.

    Reply
      • Thank you for this information, it’s good to know it was a loved building..I was born there on the 8th January 1962. I was the 6th Child of Eva (née Comrie) and John Falloon…looks like Mam was one if your 41 addmisions of January 1962..

        Reply
  13. I was born here on the 25th December 1965 me and my mam were in the papers because I was born Christmas day.
    my mam was called Shirley Proctor
    my name was Christine Proctor at birth.
    both of our sir names is now Dickson.

    Reply

Leave a comment