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St. Peter's Hospital in Helena, Montana.
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The beautiful 11th avenue doorway to the Kohrs Memorial wing, now all gone.
In 1932, Mrs. Conrad Kohrs, in memory of her husband, provided more than $100,000.00 for a new surgical wing for St. Peter's Hospital in Helena, Montana.1
Typical of twentieth-century American hospitals, St. Peter’s Hospital in Helena grew as a series of wings and in a combination of styles, but the Mission style dominated the look of the complex until a modernist wing, added in 1957, disrupted the hospital’s architectural harmony. The Conrad Kohrs Memorial wing represented a step in the development of the architecture in Montana, as they revealed the Mission style’s compatibility with other styles, particularly Renaissance Revival architecture. In 1931 New York architect Cass Gilbert, a devotee of Mission architecture, designed a new Mission-style wing endowed by Conrad Kohrs’s widow. It housed a much-needed operating room, obstetrical room, and additional private rooms.2
1. Helena As She Was: Retrieved June 17, 2009 from http://www.helenahistory.org/st_peters_hospital.htm
2. Chacon, Hipolito Rafael. Creating a Mythic Past: Spanish-style Architecture in Montana. Montana The Magazine of Western History, 51 (Autumn 2001), 46-60; Retrieved June 17, 2009 from http://visitmt.com/history/Montana_the_Magazine_of_Western_History/chacon.htm
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