Fannie Lorber
1881-1958
Inducted 2006
Adopted by the National Jewish Medical and Research Center
In 1907, Fannie E. Lorber founded the Denver
Sheltering Home to care for the children of Jewish tuberculosis
patients at National Jewish Medical and Research Center and Jewish
Consumptive Relief Society. Once the Home, as it was called, had
been established, Lorber served as its president, ensuring
its growth and evolution as it continued to serve children with
respiratory issues.
In the late 1800s, Denver was a popular destination for individuals
suffering from tuberculosis because of the climate’s supposed
beneficial effect on respiratory diseases. Many hospitalized patients
were unable to care for their children, and many of these children
became “TB orphans” who were left to fend for themselves.
To help these children, Lorber spearheaded efforts to raise
money to open and perpetuate the Denver Sheltering Home. In 1920,
the organization became a national one, operating fundraising offices
in New York as well as Denver. Lorber recruited a team of women
to assist in her efforts and grew the organization to more than
100 auxiliaries nationwide.
As advances in tuberculosis treatment made it possible for more
patients to be cared for in their own communities, fewer children
of TB patients needed care in the Denver Sheltering Home. The Home
evolved to become a nonsectarian center that battled childhood
asthma under the name The Jewish National Home for Asthmatic Children.
The name was later changed to the Children’s Asthma Research
Institute and Hospital and finally to The National Asthma Center.
The Home, which achieved an international reputation for its innovative
and successful treatment of asthma, eventually merged with National
Jewish Hospital and Research Center to become National Jewish Medical
and Research Center.
Lorber was wholly dedicated to the children in the Denver Sheltering
Home from its inception in 1907 and served as its president until
her death in 1958. She was wholly dedicated to the children in
the Denver Sheltering Home from its inception in 1907 and served
as its president until
her death in 1958. |