Our Story
Our Story

A history of our commitment.

In addition to our major work of founding Bloomington’s first hospital (now Indiana University Health Bloomington), and supporting its four major expansions, the Local Council of Women have developed numerous organizations throughout the years dedicated to strengthening and supporting our community’s healthcare system.

1897

Finding our voice.

First organized in 1897, members of nine different public-spirited women’s clubs in Bloomington, Indiana, came together to collectively promote work in the community’s interest. This small group of representatives eventually formed what we know today as the Local Council of Women (LCW).
1897
Hopewell House
1905

Hopewell House

During the group's January 1905 meeting in the Gentry Hotel, Mrs. John Harris, wife of the Monon railway surgeon at the time, told of a tragic accident that occurred in October of the previous year in which a young man’s legs were mangled by a passing train and all efforts by three local physicians to save his life were unsuccessful. With no hospital facility available, the boy died in the office of the railway surgeon.

The outpouring of sympathy from the council over this horrific event set in motion tentative plans for the development of a healthcare facility that could meet the needs of the community. And, in February 1905, the following women incorporated under the name "Local Council of Women" for the purpose of acquiring and operating a hospital that could serve the Bloomington community:

  • Maude E. (Showers) Wilson
  • Julia A. Blair
  • Lena M. Beck
  • Antoinette M. Mottier
  • Flora D. Kitson
  • Alice A. Buskirk
  • Vesta T. Rogers
  • Anna B. Hill
  • Atlanta C. Holland
  • Laura C. Mathers
  • Minnie Waldron
  • Anna B. Hoffman
  • Eudora Shoemaker
  • Catherine A. Harris
  • Sarah C. Duncan
  • Charlotte Lowe Bryan
  • Mable Tichenor
  • Irene Burtt

Soon, a 4 ½ acre tract of land on the corner of Rogers and First Street with a barn and a two-story, ten-room, red brick house on the property known as the Hopewell House was chosen for the hospital’s location. The LCW raised $2,500 to be put towards the $6,000 purchase price of the land, as well as an additional $3,000 for repairs to the Hopewell House which was built circa 1880. And on November 29, 1905, the Hopewell House opened as the first Bloomington Hospital.

1905
Bloomington Hospital (1919)
1919

Expansion One

However, the community was growing, and the Local Council of Women set their sights on helping to develop a hospital on the same property that could continue to meet the needs of the community and started accumulating a building fund for that purpose.

In April 1917, promoted as a war measure and funded through the sale of Liberty Bonds, the Local Council of Women announced plans for a new hospital. And, in 1919, a new 35-bed limestone building was constructed at a cost of $60,000 and the old red brick Hopewell House was converted into nurses’ quarters.

1919
Bloomington Hospital (1947)
1947

Expansion Two

As early as 1943, with a concern for the health of soldiers returning from World War II, advancements in medical technology, and a growing population, plans for a third hospital expansion were organized by the Local Council of Women for a limestone addition to be added on the east side of the 1919 building. Altogether, $125,000 was raised for the expansion known as the Kohr Building and construction was completed in 1947.
1947
1961

Bloomington Hospital Auxiliary

In 1961, the Local Council of Women founded the Bloomington Hospital Auxiliary to provide an effective base of community volunteers to help staff the hospital information desk, gift shop and various other hospital operations and has served as a generous source of support.
1961
1965

Bloomington Hospital Foundation

In 1965, after three years of planning and research, the Local Council of Women founded the Bloomington Hospital Foundation (now the Bloomington Health Foundation) with a treasury of $3,000. In 1967, the Bloomington Hospital Foundation was incorporated within the framework of the Local Council of Women for the actual operation of the hospital and centralized the work of fund-raising.
1965
Bloomington Hospital (1965)
1965

Expansion Three

Continuous growth and evolving medical technology continued to motivate expansion. After raising $2.25 million dollars to add an additional 140 beds and 213,000 square feet of space, the decision was made to demolish the Hopewell House where the hospital originated and construction on the west expansion, which began in 1963, was completed in March 1965.
1965
1973

Meals on Wheels

Founded by the Local Council of Women in 1973, Bloomington Meals on Wheels (MOW) has been serving our neighbors in Bloomington, Indiana for over 50 years providing medically tailored meals prepared by IU Health Bloomington and Meadowood retirement community kitchen to homebound individuals within the city limits who are unable to cook for themselves due to chronic illness, disability, injury, or advanced age.

MOW ensures that clients receive two nutritious meals per day, delivered by a friendly volunteer, helping people maintain their independence and cuts health care costs by allowing clients to remain in the comfort of their own homes. Many clients depend upon the service long-term while others only need the service temporarily as they recover from a hospital stay or illness.

1973
1974

Hospice Care

In 1974, the Local Council of Women founded Hospice of Bloomington (now IU Health Hospice), which provides practical and emotional support to loved ones and patients who are in the end stages of life.

MOW ensures that clients receive two nutritious meals per day, delivered by a friendly volunteer, helping people maintain their independence and cuts health care costs by allowing clients to remain in the comfort of their own homes. Many clients depend upon the service long-term while others only need the service temporarily as they recover from a hospital stay or illness.

1974
1977

Expansion Four

By 1977, expansion and renovation plans were under way to bring the hospital to well over 300 beds and remodel numerous operating functions
1977
1987

Property Transfer

In 1987, LCW deeded the hospital properties to Bloomington Hospital. The incorporation documents required that Bloomington Hospital had to obtain LCW approval to sell more than five percent of its assets in any given year and retained LCW’s responsibility of appointing six members to the Hospital Board.
1987
2008

Transition to Clarian

In February 2008, the Local Council of Women membership met to vote on a highly controversial merger proposal that would allow Bloomington Hospital to change its by-laws to enable a merger with the Clarian Health system of hospitals. This was the most overwhelming period for the LCW Board in decades. This hotly contested change caused the LCW membership to grow from 110 to over 1,200 in just a few weeks and the vote was close, but the majority voted to merge. This initial vote was called into question, and there was a petition for a re-vote and a second membership meeting was held, where the vote remained the same—in favor of a merger with Clarian. However, LCW retained its power to approve future by-laws changes for Bloomington Hospital and the right to appoint six members to the Hospital Board.
2008
2018

Transition to IU Health

Clarian, renamed IU Health, requested permission in January 2018 to dissolve the Bloomington Hospital board of directors and to form a regional board that includes community representatives from Bloomington, Bedford, Paoli, and Martinsville. The LCW membership approved the dissolution and LCW was given a seat on the regional board as well as an Ad Hoc position, and three seats on the newly created Community Health Committee, which received $250,000 to advance community health initiatives. LCW itself was given $500,000 to help promote community health projects.
2018

Past Presidents

Honoring our past leaders.
Past presidents for the Local Council of Women are also listed on the electronic donor board near the front lobby of IU Health Bloomington Hospital.
1901 – 1902
Dora S. Shoemaker
1903 – 1906
Mrs. Maude Showers
1907
Mrs. W.L. Bryan
1908
Mrs. J.K. Beck
1909 – 1910
Mrs. Mottier
1922 – 1924
Mrs. T. J. Louden
1926 – 1928
Mrs. H.L. Smith
1929 – 1931
Mrs. Joseph A. Neil
1931 – 1935
Mrs. Alexander King
1935 – 1937
Mrs. James E. Moffatt
1937 - 1939
Mrs. J.E.P. Holland
1939 – 1940
Mrs. G. Heighway
1941 – 1943
Isabella Love
1944 – 1946
Mrs. C.J. Sembower
1946 – 1948
Lillian Setser
1948 – 1949
Mrs. H.E. Binford
1949 – 1951
Mrs. Z.G. Clevenger
1951 – 1953
Mrs. John R. Figg
1953 – 1954
Mrs. Russell Fair
1954 – 1956
Mrs. W. MacDonald
1956 – 1958
Mrs. F.B. Stimson
1958 – 1960
Mrs. G. W. Henley
1960 – 1962
Mrs. J.P. Matthews
1962 – 1963
Mrs. Theodore Ellis
1963 – 1964
Mrs. Fred Barrett
1963 – 1965
Mrs. Austin Clifford
1965 – 1966
Mrs. Margaret Sibitt
1966 – 1967
Bea Franklin
1968 – 1969
Ruth Brogneaux
1969 – 1970
Mrs. A.B. Clark
1971 – 1972
Pat Bartlett
1972 -1973
B.A. Kuntz
1973 – 1974
Mary Lou Hancock
1974 – 1975
Mary Oliver
1975 – 1976
Myra Baker
1976 – 1977
Janet Carrell
1977 – 1978
Virginia Tyte
1978 – 1979
Jean Campaigne
1979 – 1980
Ellen Stewart
1980 – 1981
Cecelia Wahl
1981 – 1982
Rosemary Wentworth
1982 – 1983
Anne Call
1983 – 1984
Louise Nebergall
1984 – 1986
Liz McCrea
1986 – 1988
Joan Olcott
1988 – 1989
Jean Anderson, Ed.D.
1989 – 1990
Pam Walters
1990 – 1991
Liz Shindell
1992 – 1994
Gerry Miller
1994 – 1995
Bonnie Dyar
1995 – 1996
Dottie Saltzman
1996 – 1997
Erdine Simic
1997 – 1998
Darlene Haddawi
1999 – 2000
Leigh Richey
2001 – 2003
Cathi Barzilaukas
2004 – 2006
B. Ann Wrenn
2007 – 2008
Susan Wier
2009
Ellie Rogers
2010 – 2011
Denise Lessow
2012 – 2014
Nancy Lumbley
2015
Vanessa McClary
2016
Jean Scallon
2017 – 2020
Ben Niehoff
2021 – Present
Vanessa McClary

Works Cited

McHenry, Clyde. “Hospital Taking Place as Leading Institution.” The Bloomington Daily Telephone, 22 Mar. 1934, p. 10
Wier, Susan. “Susan Wier’s History of LCW.” The Local Council of Women Newsletter, Fall 2018, pp. 6-7

Wier, Susan. “LCW Then, Now, & Looking Toward the Future.” The Local Council of Women Newsletter, Fall 2022, p. 2

“Bloomington’s Hospital History.” Youtube, uploaded by Monroe County History Center, 26 Nov. 2021, www.youtube.com/watch?v=5zvyHY1dDZ8
“IU Health Bloomington Hospital Historic Resource Assessment.” City of Bloomington, 18 Apr. 2019, bloomington.in.gov/2019-04-18_IUBloomington_Final-Report_Revised.pdf

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