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History
Mary Frances Skiff Memorial Hospital founded in 1921
Mary Frances Skiff Memorial Hospital was dedicated on May 30, 1921, and named in honor of the late wife of Vernon W. Skiff, a prominent Newton business owner.
Mr. Skiff, the founder of the Jewel Tea Company, personally donated $100,000 for the project. An additional $70,000 was pledged by the residents of Newton. Construction began in 1919 and was completed in early 1921. The new facility was described in Modern Hospital magazine as one of the finest, most modern hospitals in the country. The first patient admitted to the hospital was Mrs. Lavina Lint of Mingo, on Jan. 15, 1921. Three days later, the first baby was born at the hospital. He was Max Dodge, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Dodge of rural Newton.
Among the dignitaries who attended the dedication of the new hospital were
F.L. Maytag, founder of the Maytag Company (second from left),
and Vernon W. Skiff (third from right).



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Early hospital serves Newton
As late as 1917, there was no hospital in Newton or Jasper County. In March of that year, the newly formed Newton Hospital Association leased a property in the 400 block of E. 2nd St. N. The property, known informally as the Caleb Lamb home, was remodeled into a nine-bed hospital. It opened on Dec. 30, 1917, and operated for four years until Mary Frances Skiff Memorial Hospital was opened.
Although no longer needed as a hospital, the home remained in use for nearly 50 years, serving as a dormitory for hospital nurses, orderlies and other staff. Its proximity to the hosptal allowed the staff to remain close to their work at all times, an important factor before automobiles were commonly owned. The home was demolished on Sept. 20, 1963, to make room for the Hunter Addition of Skiff Memorial Hospital.


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F.L Maytag helps to rescue fledgling hospital
Although Vernon Skiff made good on his pledge of $100,000 to pay for the new hospital, the citizens of Newton nearly reneged on their pledge to raise $70,000 for the project. In 1927, six years after Mary Frances Skiff Memorial Hospital opened, a $40,000 debt still hung over the hospital, largely due to unpaid subscriptions and donations from the original fund drive. F.L. Maytag, founder of the Maytag Company and a long-time supporter of the hospital, came to the rescue.
Maytag agreed to a personal pledge of $250,000 to build a new YMCA, but only if Newton residents could retire the hospital debt. When he announced his plans, Maytag even pledged $1,000 to kick off the fund raiser, hoping others would follow and the hospital debt would soon be retired. Recognizing a ripe opportunity, the Chamber of Commerce quickly formed a 30-member committee headed by H.C. Korf, another staunch supporter of Skiff hospital who also played a key role in its construction. The committee launched a fund drive and within one week had raised $54,191. The hospital debt was immediately retired and Mary Frances Skiff Memorial Hospital was turned over to the city of Newton, debt-free.
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A growing hospital for a growing city
Between the 1920s and 1950s, the city of Newton tripled in size; so had the number of patients at Skiff Memorial Hospital. To accommodate the growing need for hospital rooms, in December 1953 community leaders launched a campaign headed by Dr. R.W. Wood to raise funds for a new hospital addition. Within six months, they had collected $307,000, along with $184,500 in federal Hill-Burton funds. Within months, construction on the new East Wing began. When it opened in April 1956, the 45-bed wing increased Skiff's capacity to 101 beds.
In the photo at below, Dorothy Miller and Berdene Spencer were
hostesses for an open house in April 1956 in the new East Wing.



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Hunter Addition serves geriatric patients
Skiff Memorial Hospital was more than doubled in size in 1965 with the opening of the Hunter Geriatric Addition. The addition was made possible through a $400,000 bequest from the late Charles P. Hunter, a local merchant and lifelong Newton resident. Hunter's wish was to provide elderly guests with a comfortable, homelike atmosphere and pleasing environment, including areas for visiting, recreation and hobbies. Sickness was not a prerequisite for admission to the 40-bed facility. When it opened on Aug. 8, 1965, it was considered one of the finest geriatric centers of its time.
Other funding for the $1,030,000 project came from $150,000 in corporate donations, $100,000 from city taxes, $50,000 in individual donations and $330,000 from a federal Hill-Burton grant.
Unfortunately, the geriatrics unit fell an early victim to the dramatic changes in health-care funding in the early 1980s. Due to low patient census and declining reimbursements from the federal Medicare program, the hospital was forced to close the unit in 1983. Although the Hunter Addition space is used in an different way than originally intended, it continues to serve the health-care needs of the community.
Charles P. Hunter



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Skiff grows with two additions in the 1970s
Between 1973 and 1976, Skiff Medical Center continued to modernize its facilities. In 1973, the hospital added a new ancillary wing at the east end of the Hunter Addition. It featured a new emergency room, X-ray department, laboratory, Medical Records department, and a new boiler room east of the new addition. The $900,000 project was financed through a federal grant and hospital revenues.
In 1976, Skiff completed an new patient wing on the east side of the hospital, connecting the 1955 addition with the emergency room addition. Twenty-six new patient beds were added, along with a new four-bed coronary care unit and air conditioning throughout the hospital. Funding for the project came largley from a gift of 16,000 shares of Maytag common stock given to Skiff in 1971 by the Maytag Family Foundation. When it was complete, the hospital had 124 available beds (58 for acutely ill patients, four for coronary care patients, 23 for surgical patients, 18 for skilled nursing care patients, nine for obstetrics patients and 12 baby bassinets).



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Community support helps Skiff thrive in the 1990s
The 1990s saw a remarkable transformation in Skiff Medical Center's facilities, medical services, equipment and staff. The process began in 1991 when Newton voters approved $3.3 million bond issue. Private donors contributed another $1.5 million, and Skiff took on a $4.5 million loan. The money was used to give the hospital a complete facelift, build several new additions and invest in state-of-the-art medical equipment. The Ross Medical Arts building, named in honor of the late Skiff administrator Ronald R. Ross, was built in 1994 to house physician practices and the Skiff Rehabilitation Center.
Thus began an unprecedented period of growth and improvement for Skiff Medical Center. In the decade that followed, more than $15 million was invested in new facilities and equipment. The Ross Medical Arts Building was expanded twice to meet the growing demand for physician office space and outpatient therapy services. The hospital's entire medical/surgical floor, along with the emergency room, special care unit, radiology department and laundry, were completely renovated. Important services such as kidney dialysis and a permanent magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) unit were added.
The thriving hospital attracted many new physicians, and the Skiff medical staff doubled within a decade. Thousands of Jasper County residents who once chose Des Moines hospitals and physicians returned to Skiff and its medical staff for their health care. As a result, the hospital prospered and continued to invest in improvements that will serve generations to come.





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21st century sees original hospital modernized, Monarch Wing added
The early years of the 21st century saw Skiff Medical Center turn its attention once again to the original hospital structure built, in 1921. The building was totally modernized, bringing new life into a facility that had served local citizens for more than eight decades.
The centerpiece of the project was a new residential hospice facility called the Monarch Wing. The six-bed hospice unit was created on the third floor of the building, in the same space that had housed Skiff's obstetrics unit for many years. Hospice patients and their families now spend their final days together in a warm, home-like atmosphere that meets their medical and emotional needs.
More than $1 million of the funding for the project came from 818 contributions from Jasper County businesses, individuals and organizations. The remaining $2.5 million came from hospital reserves.



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Skiff celebrates more than 23,000 births
More than 23,000 babies have been born at Skiff Medical Center since the hospital opened its doors in 1921. Here are the year-by-year totals:
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1921 – 26
1922 27
1923 51
1924 51
1925 83
1926 90
1927 112
1928 119
1929 127
1930 172
1931 168
1932 150
1933 131
1934 160
1935 162
1936 182
1937 199
1938 219
1939 170
1940 152
1941 162
1942 201
1943 259
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1944 355
1945 329
1946 337
1947 412
1948 427
1949 428
1950 416
1951 431
1952 537
1953 444
1954 456
1955 523
1956 526
1957 527
1958 501
1959 502
1960 533
1961 517
1962 485
1963 427
1964 445
1965 372
1966 353
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1967 336
1968 339
1969 340
1970 386
1971 333
1972 312
1973 306
1974 287
1975 307
1976 257
1977 299
1978 256
1979 237
1980 250
1981 192
1982 203
1983 186
1984 184
1985 191
1986 147
1986 147
1987 118
1988 139
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1989 121
1990 117
1991 141
1992 126
1993 117
1994 153
1995 181
1996 179
1997 188
1998 170
1999 191
2000 198
2001 211
2002 215
2003 220
2004 232
2005 274
2006 217
2007 231
2008 233
2009 231
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