In earlier work on McCord Hospital (MH) we have charted this American Board Mission
urban hospital’s establishment, expansion, and its strategies and struggles for survival from
inception in 1909 through the decades of segregation and apartheid. We have also explored
the links between MH and the emerging black middle classes and leading figures in South
Africa’s political and medical establishments. Here, we consider how the notion of ‘the
McCord Family’- an identity claimed and shared by its nurses, doctors, patients and many
others - was constructed and experienced. In part, this paper is prompted by a review of the
recent study of Groote Schuur Hospital which described the ongoing and shared allegiance
to the hospital on the part of many who were on its staff, whether cleaners, porters, nurses,
or specialist doctors.
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In the research for the MH project, similarly, documentary sources
and interviewees frequently invoked the image of a ‘McCord Family’, citing this as an
important motivation for working at the hospital or being a patient there. The ‘McCord
Family’ also extended to people at a far geographical remove from Durban. Central to this
notion of ‘the McCord Family’ was Christianity, especially Congregationalism, but
increasingly after World War 2, so would be a wider and shared sense of a religious or
spiritual mission and ‘service’.