St. Vincent Indianapolis Hospital

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St. Vincent Hospital in Indianapolis, Indiana, USA, was founded in 1881 by the Daughters of Charity. The Daughters of Charity, a Roman Catholic organization, came to Indianapolis on the urging of Bishop Silas Chatard. Four sisters arrived with a total of $34.77 amongst them and set up in an unused seminary building next to St Joseph's Church in Downtown Indianapolis. By 1889, the Daughters of Charity moved their hospital to a new location at the corner of South St. and Delaware St. Rapid growth caused them to move once more in 1913 to a new larger facility at on Fall Creek Drive. About that same time they changed the name of the infirmary to St. Vincent Hospital, after St. Vincent de Paul.

St. Vincent Hospital remained on Fall Creek until 1974 when they moved to their current location on West 86th St.

St. Vincent Indianapolis is the centerpiece of St. Vincent Health which operates 17 facilities over 45 Indiana counties and is one of the largest ministries in the Roman Catholic health care organization, Ascension Health.

St. Vincent Children's Hospital was renamed "Peyton Manning Children's Hospital at St. Vincent" on September 6, 2007. For nearly a decade, the Indianapolis Colts quarterback has had a strong relationship with St.Vincent Health and St.Vincent Children's Hospital including sponsoring monthly events, made countless private patient visits, served as a spokesperson for various child health and safety initiatives, and has dedicated patient rooms with personal and professional memorabilia.