WINNIE A. SCOTT

Article by Kate Sowada

Historical Marker #2025 commemorates the site of Winnie A. Scott Hospital, which was located at 228 East Second Street in the South Frankfort neighborhood.

South Frankfort’s northeastern section has historically had a large African American population. Because of segregation, however, until the Scott Hospital was constructed African Americans had few options for medical treatment. In the book “Community Memories: A Glimpse of African American Life in Frankfort, Kentucky,” Margaret McIntosh recalls, “there was no hospital for Blacks to go to, unless it was an emergency. And if it was an emergency, they had to go in the back way and be operated on and after they recovered, they’d bring them back out and take them home.”

The Women’s Club Hospital Company, with community support, established a hospital on December 26, 1915. The property for the hospital was bought from Lena Morton, a local widow. The hospital was housed in a two-story frame building in a residential area. The hospital consisted of seven or eight patient rooms and an operating room. King’s Daughters Hospital, another Frankfort hospital located a few blocks away, provided some financial assistance and advised on the development of the facility.

Originally known as the Women’s Improvement Club Hospital, its name was changed to honor Winnie A. Scott, an early chairman of the hospital’s board of directors who was instrumental in its founding. Scott graduated from what is now Kentucky State University in 1890 as part of its first graduating class. She became a teacher at the Clinton Street School and was the Superintendent of Corinthian Baptist Sunday School. Scott died on May 19, 1920, at age fifty. Winnie A. Scott Hospital was the only Frankfort hospital serving African Americans until desegregation of King’s Daughters Hospital in 1959.

In January 1943, John M. Perkins, a Frankfort businessperson, donated $5,000 to the hospital and proposed it become part of Kentucky State College. Merging the hospital with the college had the potential of cultivating a nursing school. The state was asked to provide supplemental funds for this proposal. However, limited resources during World War II made the construction of a new facility unfeasible. Therefore, the hospital did not become part of college, which began a nursing program in 1967.

The hospital asked for some federal grant funds under the Hill-Burton Law, an act passed in 1946 that gave health care institutions grants and loans for construction and modernization. Grant recipients were required to provide a proportional amount of services to people who were unable to pay and make their services available to everyone living in the facility’s area. King’s Daughters Hospital also asked for funding at the same time. Federal authorities responded that Frankfort was too small to receive two similar loans from the agency. Ending a forty-four-year operation, Winnie A. Scott Hospital merged with King’s Daughters located on Steele Street, partly due to the federal grants requiring integration.

The building was converted into apartments after the hospital closed. Recommendations were also made convert it into a rest home for African American senior citizens. The building continues to hold symbolic importance as a segregation landmark in Frankfort. Click here to view more information & map locating the site of Winnie A. Scott Hospital.