To spot the Women & Children's Hospital of Buffalo, just look for the large, multi-story building with rows of windows and a distinctly modern entrance marked “THE CHILDREN’S HOSPITAL” in bold letters on your right.
Now, take a deep breath and imagine this place as it would have been back in the 1890s. Picture kids laughing (or maybe crying a bit, let’s be honest) and the steady footsteps of nurses hustling through wide halls. This was no ordinary hospital-in 1892, Dr. Mahlon Bainbridge Folwell had a wild idea: kids shouldn’t have to recover in the same rooms as adults, with giant medicine bottles and scary old equipment looming over their tiny beds. Instead, he dreamed up a place just for them. It took some convincing, but thanks to Mrs. Williams and her daughter Martha, they turned an old house on Bryant Street into a sanctuary for sick kids and soon-to-be moms. Right from the start, the hospital was packed-so packed that within a year, they had to pile in 40 more beds to fit everyone!
Through the decades, the building grew and buzzed with energy, adding high-tech gear, teaching future doctors, and treating babies, teenagers-even young adults up to 21. Imagine the nervous excitement as families rushed through these doors, or the pride when the hospital’s pediatric care was ranked among the best in the country. Eventually, in 2017, the doors closed for the last time, and the hospital’s heart moved to a shiny new home nearby. But the spirit of those caring hands and hopeful hearts-well, you can still feel a little bit of that right here on Bryant Street.




