• Late 19th Century Feeding Cup  One of a number of ceramic feeding cups in the Royal Infirmary museum collection.

    Late 19th Century Feeding Cup

  • Victorian Cot  This cast iron child's cot is typical of those used on our children's wards in Victorian times.

    Victorian Cot

  • Matron's Chatelaine  Dating from the late 1800s, this chatelaine was worn by the hospital Matron and held the hospital keys. It was attached to Matron’s belt.

    Matron's Chatelaine

  • Baby's bottle  An elaborately decorated baby’s bottle dating from the late 1800s. A rubber teat was attached to the spout.

    Baby's bottle

  • Feeding cup  A ceramic feeding cup from the 1930s which bears the Leicester Royal Infirmary insignia.

    Feeding cup

  • Night light  This night light dates from the mid 19th century and still has its original tallow wick. It has a handle to the rear and was carried by nurses as they checked on their patients during the night.

    Night light

  • Balkan Frame  This picture was taken in the early part of the 20th Century. The Balkan Frame was an apparatus designed to extend and immobilise the femur. It was used in the treatment of fractures. Weights were hung from a rope and pulley mechanism to provide traction to the affected limb. The frame acquired its name because it was first used in the Balkan wars of the 19th Century.

    Balkan Frame

  • Bandage winder  Bandages were often made from strips of old sheet which were wound in to usable rolls using this device. This particular model dates from the early 1900s.

    Bandage winder

  • Ceramic male urinal  Dating from the 1930s. Since these ceramic models the Infirmary has used metal, plastic and now single-use papier mache urinals.

    Ceramic male urinal

  • Iron Lung  The Negative pressure Ventilator (or "Iron Lung") was used up until the 1960s and enabled a person to breath if they had lost their own capacity. It has been superceded by positive pressure ventilation in modern times. The Iron Lung was commonly used in the treatment of Polio patients, with many people spending years using this form of therapy.

    Iron Lung

  • Enamel Urinal  An Enamel Urinal dating from the 1950s

    Enamel Urinal

  • Enema pump  A reservoir enema pump circa 1880.

    Enema pump

  • Monaural Stethoscopes  A collection of turn of the 19th / 20th Century monaural stethoscopes. The doctor would place one end against their ear while the other end rested on the patient’s body.

    Monaural Stethoscopes

  • Oxygen Bottle  This oxygen bottle dates from the 1950s.

    Oxygen Bottle

  • Pill Roller  A 19th Century pill roller used in the manufacture of medicines.

    Pill Roller

  • Scalpels  A small surgeon’s scalpel and needle set circa 1890. Note the bone handles.

    Scalpels

  • Scarifier  Up until the late 19th Century scarifiers were used to place several cuts in the skin, after which a glass cup would be heated and placed over the wounds. This process of “cupping” was understood to draw poisonous substances from the body.

    Scarifier