Southend University Hospital
In 1887, to celebrate Queen Victoria's Golden Jubilee, a public fund was started with the aim of building a hospital, and the site for Southend's first hospital was bought for £350 (in Warrior Square, near to Southend High Street).[1] In order to allow expansion a new site was identified at Westcliff-on-Sea: building work on the new hospital, which was designed by Henry Percy Adams, began in 1930[2] and the new building was officially opened by the Rupert Guinness, 2nd Earl of Iveagh in 1932.[1] In 1948, when the hospital joined the National Health Service, there were 24 consultants and 11 resident medical staff.[3] In December 2013, chief executive Jacqueline Totterdell announced that the Trust was considering merging some functions with other local hospitals.[4] The trust was the only one in England not to follow the Agenda for Change conditions of service for its staff, but in January 2019 it decided to revert to the national contract.