(An excerpt from my book Died in Long Beach - Cemetery Tales)
Seeking HealthMany who find obituaries of loved ones who died in Long Beach often wonder why they came to Long Beach in the first place. A number of the obits list the person only having been in town a short while before they found their eternal resting place in either Long Beach Municipal Cemetery or Sunnyside Cemetery. Many of us living now, take the medical marvels that science has discovered within the last fifty years for granted. However, back at the turn of the 20th century you were considered "old" if you lived to be 50 years of age. Diseases that we now have inoculations for were prevalent then. Smallpox, infantile paralysis and tuberculosis were common medical problems. Often there was nothing doctors could do and the only hope was prayer. However, science was advancing. Physicians discovered that patients with tuberculosis improved if they moved to a dry climate. Sea air and a regulated diet were also considered valuable in combating the disease. Long Beach had the sea air and a relatively mild climate year round. It was the perfect place to build a sanitarium.
Long Beach Sanitarium
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The Long Beach Sanitarium used the "Battle Creek" idea, practiced by John H. Kellogg. At his Michigan sanitarium, Kellogg advocated total abstinence from alcoholic beverages, tea, coffee, chocolate, tobacco, and condiments. He preached a meat free diet and believed milk, cheese, eggs, and refined sugars should be used sparingly, if at all. Man's natural foods, Kellogg claimed, were nuts, fruits, legumes and whole grains.
There were about a hundred stockholders in the association running the sanitarium, among them twenty-two local physicians. There was no resident physician, each patient called in his or her own doctor.
Dr. W. Harriman Jones, whose Harriman Jones Medical Group continues to this day, was one of the driving forces behind this new sanitarium and later became one of the most prominent physicians in Long Beach. Born in Battle Creek, Michigan, February 22, 1876, Jones came to California when he was three. He attended Cooper Medical College, now Stanford University School of Medicine, and received his medical degree in 1899. Dr. Jones started his practice in Long Beach in 1902 and became the city's first health officer, instituting sewers, garbage collection and sanitary inspections. In 1930 he opened his own clinic---the Harriman Jones Clinic on Cherry and Broadway in Long Beach. On June 17, 1956, he died in the hospital that had once been the Long Beach Sanitarium---St. Mary's Hospital.
Shortly after the Long Beach Sanitarium opened in 1906, local physicians decided it was time for a real hospital. Dr. Jones had used a small house at 327 Daisy as a hospital, but something larger was needed. Area doctors first considered the old Porterfield home at 519 Cedar, but when neighbors protested they were forced to look elsewhere. In 1908 they rented the H.L. Enloe home at Broadway and Junipero for $60 a month. Each physician contributed $200 and elected Dr. Lewis A. Perce chairman of the board. Perce's wife suggested the name Seaside Hospital and Perce donated a sign with the hospital's name. By 1912, the doctors' needs had outgrown the capacity of the house. A new hospital was needed.
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These are wonderful, thank you.
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