Ft. Defiance Hospital Arizona 1937 |
Secondly, it also marked a significant step in the articulation of a distinct institutional building style on the Navajo Reservation. Using the plans provided by Office of Indian Affairs architect Hans Stamm, local craftsman using local stone developed a local, Navajo-inspired elaboration of the Pueblo Revival Style, one that fulfilled Commissioner of Indian Affairs John Collier's policy that government buildings should reflect a style sensitive to the architectural heritage of the people they would serve. The complex is historically significant for bringing modern health practices and medicine to the Navajo Tribe and as evidence of the Commissioner's efforts to recognize tribal ethnic heritage through the style given to the building.
The old hospital opened in 1938 with 153 patients already checked in since construction finished at that time. It was used continuously as a hospital until 2005. The Fort Defiance Indian Hospital served as the main hospital on the Navajo Reservation until a new 200-bed medical center opened at Gallup in 1961. The Fort Defiance Indian Hospital gradually became outdated by the late 1990s. It was replaced by a new hospital in Fort Defiance which opened in 2002 and the 1938 building was vacant from 2005 until its unfortunate demolition sometime between 2011 and 2015. By January of 2017 it was gone.
The site, directly across from the then-existing hospital along Bonito Drive and within easy walking distance staff quarters and other support facilities, was chosen as an efficient, cost-effective alternative to several other sites favored by the architect. Lying within the valley formed by Bonito Creek, at the foot of a sandstone mesa, the site also provided some protection from wind and dust storms.
The three-story, roughly H-shaped floor plan fitted neatly onto the relatively narrow site, stretching along a north-south axis, between the base of the mesa to the east and Bonito Drive to the west. Public entrances were on the west, or street-side of the building, and utility uses were relegated to the rear, mesa side and were accessed via a driveway encircling the building.
The exterior walls, comprised of large, irregular red sandstone blocks, quarried locally and artfully shaped and fitted by Navajo stonemasons, were intended to evoke the surrounding landscape and traditional building techniques. Regularly spaced, rectangular openings with massive sandstone headers, provided most of the exterior detail. The building had a solid, timeless and utilitarian appearance that remained largely unchanged over the decades.
Beginning of erection of steel on Ft. Defiance Hospital |
View of Ft. Defiance Hospital from atop mountain at rear. 1938 |
Ft. Defiance Hospital 1937 |
Mr. & Mrs. Garrett's home. Ft. Defiance. 1938 |
Edward Money & Jim Beasley cooks at Mess Hall in Ft. Defiance. 1937 |
Photo from following: https://www.fdihb.org/history |
Information about the hospital was gleaned from the following sources:
Historic American Building Survey
Work underway to tear down Fort Defiance Hospital
Old Fort Defiance hospital to live on in memories of elders
Demolished Ft. Defiance Indian Hospital
Too bad it was demolished! Not even a small token of its existence was saved ! Shame on you you could have saved a door frame or something else as it was cherished by the many persons born there or worked there.
ReplyDeleteIt was a significant piece of history of the US Indian Affairs!