Description: Aerial View showing Thorncliffe Road running along the foreground, Thorncliffe Rise, centre left, with Redcliffe Road cutting across the top left corner and Mapperley Road cutting across at the top right. Nottingham Children's Hospital was founded as a charitable institution in 1869 by public subscription, with the aim of providing 'for the reception, maintenance and medical treatment of children of the poor under ten years of age'. Its official title was the Free Hospital for Sick Children but it was also known as 'St Lucy's', as the first nursing staff were recruited from the Sisters of St Lucy. Its first home was Russell House, Postern Street, Nottingham, a property presented by the daughter of the architect, T.C. Hine. Despite the additions of a new wing and an isolation block, the property was soon found to be inadequate and, in 1869, the hospital moved to Forest House, Chestnut Grove, to accommodation given by the lace manufacturer, Thomas Birkin. In 1978, the Children's Hospital closed and its occupants became the first in-patients of University Hospital, Queen's Medical Centre. The premises occupied by the Children's Hospital became the headquarters of Nottingham Health Authority.