Thomas Guy establishes a hospital in Southwark,…
1721 CE
Thomas Guy establishes a hospital in Southwark, London, to treat "incurables" discharged from St. Thomas' Hospital, of which he is governor, in 1721.
Guy's Hospital is said to be the last general hospital endowed in full by one person.
A publisher of unlicensed Bibles who has made a fortune in the South Sea Bubble by successfully selling his stock in the company with a price ranging £300-600 per share, souGuy had been a Governor and benefactor of St. Thomas' and his fellow Governors support his intention by granting the south-side of St. Thomas' Street for a peppercorn for nine hundred and ninety-nine years.
Today a large teaching hospital, it is, with St. Thomas' Hospital and King's College Hospital, the location of King's College London School of Medicine (formerly known as the GKT School of Medicine).
The Tower Wing (formerly known as Guy's Tower) is the tallest hospital building in the world, standing at one hundred and forty-two point six meters, with thirty-four floors.