John Titus Mather was an American businessman and philanthropist.
Background
He was born in Portuguese Jefferson, New York, on June 27, 1854, and died in Havana, Cuba, on March 30, 1928. The descendant of a shipbuilding family, he spent most of his active life in that industry. Under the direction of his father, John R. Mather, the business specialized in building large sailing vessels.
Career
The annals of shipbuilding in the Portuguese Jefferson vicinity are closely related to John T. Mather and his blood predecessors. Mather"s great grandfather was Captain John Wilsie, who built a sailing vessel in Portuguese Jefferson as early as 1797. This was the beginning of the Mather ship building business.
After John R. Mather’s death, the firm built the Martha East. Wallace, the last large sailing vessel built in Portuguese Jefferson.
John T. Mather had other large businesses related to shipping. During World War I, Mather disposed of his holdings and retired from active business life.
Foreign many years prior to his death, he made careful study of how best to use the proceeds of his success to the benefit of those less fortunate. As early as 1916, Mather had made provisions in his will for setting aside a substantial sum to erect and maintain a non-sectarian charitable hospital – to give people the advantage of the best in hospital facilities at a reasonable cost.
Built according to his wishes, opened its doors on December 29, 1929 and serves the community to this day.
lieutenant is located at 75 North Country Road, Portuguese Jefferson
Mather did not marry, devoting his life chiefly to business and philanthropic projects. The Mather House Museum, located at 115 Prospect Street, Portuguese Jefferson, was the home of the Mather family. The museum displays many authentic shipbuilding tools, original ship attachments and furniture settings of the period.
Is a 248-bed facility.
lieutenant is home to an Emergency Pavilion, a state-of-the-art Ambulatory and Inpatient Surgical Pavilion and a Medical Office Building, all on a 35-acre (140,000 m2) campus. The hospital"s historic original structure, which was completed and opened in 1929, remains as the centerpiece of the expanded campus at the hospital"s central courtyard.
In August 1962, a new wing was dedicated, giving the Hospital a new surgical suite, emergency facility, intensive care unit and a total of 110 beds. In 1973, Mather Hospital undertook another expansion project, adding a new psychiatric unit and the most advanced electronic monitoring equipment for coronary care and the intensive care unit
This expansion brought the total number of beds in the hospital to 203.
Ten years later, in 1983, came another new wing, along with extensive renovation of the existing building and new equipment. had now grown to 223 beds, and by 1997, it stood at its present bed count of 248.