History Daily - The Lincoln Hospital Takeover
Episode Date: July 14, 2025July 14, 1970. A group of Puerto Rican activists stage an occupation demanding better health care at the Lincoln Hospital in South Bronx, New York City. Support the show! Join Into History for ad-f...ree listening and more.History Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.
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It's just after midday
on June 17th,
1970 in Manhattan, New York.
22-year-old Miguel,
Mickey Melendez
maneuver is a large truck
through the busy streets.
He's never
driven something this big before.
The truck belongs to the New York City Health Department,
and Mickey has not been given permission to drive it,
but he's not worried about that right now.
Mickey is a member of the Young Lords Party,
a group of radical civil rights activists.
Mickey and his mostly Puerto Rican comrades
believe there is a tuberculosis epidemic underway in their community,
but no one's doing anything to stop it.
So today, Mickey and the Young Lords
have hijacked the City Health Department's mobile X-ray truck
and brought it to their headquarters.
Mickey nears the corner of Madison Avenue and 111st Street.
Waiting for him there is a crowd of nearly 200 people.
They clap and cheer Mickey's arrival as he brings the vehicle to a jerking stop.
And with the truck safely parked, Mickey opens the driver's door and climbs out.
He smiles at some of the faces he recognizes in the crowd as he rams the vehicle.
Then he opens up the back of the truck to reveal an x-ray machine and two very confused technicians.
Mickey helps them out and introduces them to the crown.
Mickey asks for the technician's help
to x-ray every member of the public waiting here today.
Sharing a look with his colleague, the first technician nods.
An elderly woman from the neighborhood is the first to step forward.
And Mickey invites her into the truck
as the technicians switch on their machine to get to work.
By the end of the day, Mickey Melendez
will have overseen the examination of more patients
than the x-ray technicians would normally see in a week.
and the young lord's stunt will reveal many undiagnosed cases of tuberculosis.
It will also lead to a change in city policy,
making the truck more accessible to the people who need it most.
The hijacking is such a success that even the kidnapped X-ray technicians will praise it,
and it will encourage the young lords to move forward with an even bigger plan
to take over an entire hospital on July 14, 1970.
From Noisor and Airship, I'm Lindsay Graham, and this is History Daily.
History is made every day.
On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
Today is July 14, 1970, the Lincoln Hospital Takeover.
It's just after 5 a.m. on July 14th, 1970, in the South Bronx, New York,
a month after the young lords hijacked a mobile x-ray truck.
22-year-old Mickey Melendez is once again behind the wheel of a large vehicle,
but today he's on a new mission.
This time, his truck isn't carrying X-ray technology.
missions. Instead, it's crammed with members of the young lords all dressed in white doctor's coats.
The streets are still quiet when Mickey parks outside the Lincoln Hospital and climbs out.
He throws open the back doors of the truck and starts handing out baseball bats and nunchucks to the
men and women inside. While he arms his comrades, two more trucks filled with other activists
pull up alongside Mickey. Soon, a small army, a hundred strong, has gathered on the sidewalk.
Their mission is to enter the Lincoln Hospital and seize control.
control, using force if necessary. And when Mickey is certain everyone is ready, he gives the signal.
The activists rushed toward the building, putting their latest plan into action. The end of the
1960s was a turbulent time in the United States. Civil rights protests, the seemingly never-ending
Vietnam War, and the assassinations of leading political figures left many feeling frightened,
angry, and marginalized. This led to the emergence of a wide range of new radical political
movements, and among them were the young lords. Founded in Chicago by Jose Jimenez, at first they were a
gang mostly known for petty theft and street fighting, and it wasn't long before Jose was behind bars.
But there, he was introduced to the work of revolutionary civil rights activists like Malcolm X and the
Black Panthers, and he started to take an interest in politics. As a Puerto Rican, Jose has long felt
that many people in the United States did not see him or his community as real American citizens.
And while he was in prison, he decided that Puerto Ricans needed someone to fight for them.
So once Jose was released in the summer of 1968, he pushed the young Lord's gang away from crime and into activism.
But it wasn't just in Chicago that the Puerto Rican community felt mistreated.
In New York, men and women like Mickey Melendez and his friends were also sick of being treated like second-class citizens.
They were often the victims of police brutality, and the local hospital which treated them was in desperate need of funding.
So in May of 1969, Jose Jimenez approved a New York chapter of the Young Lords.
This new group quickly got to work with headline-making protests of its own.
And after the success of the X-ray truck stunt,
the Young Lords of New York hope that their takeover of Lincoln Hospital
will shine a spotlight on the poor conditions and underinvestment at that facility.
Though their brandishing weapons, Mickey and the Young Lords meet no resistance
from the security guards at the hospital's entrance.
The facility staff are predominantly Puerto Rican.
and many have been tipped off about the planned takeover.
So most of the security and staff just stand aside.
Others even help, holding open doors for the activists as they make their way into the building.
Once inside, Mickey's first task is to make the hospital secure.
To ensure police officers can't simply walk in and pull the young lords out,
Mickey instructs his fellow activists to chain the doors shut.
Any patients or medical personnel who need to come or go will still be able to.
This is not a hostage situation.
but Mickey wants control over every entry and exit point.
Once the hospital is locked down,
Mickey then enters the administrative office.
For months, the young lords have been writing letters to the hospital
about the poor treatment of its Puerto Rican patients,
but they've all been ignored,
but hospital administrators can't ignore Mickey now.
He demands the administrative team leave the hospital at once
because the young lords are in charge now.
As the administrators file out of the building,
two members of the young lords take to the hospital rooftop.
There they hoist a giant Puerto Rican flag to the top of a tall flagpole.
Then from second floor windows, other activists unveil a huge banner that reads,
Welcome to the People's Hospital.
After just 30 minutes, the young lords have successfully taken over the Lincoln Hospital.
They have a list of demands and are ready to get to work showing the world
just how bad conditions are at the hospital and insisting change be made,
but they don't know yet whether anyone will listen.
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It's
9 a.m. on July 14th, 1970 in the South Bronx, four hours after the young lords entered Lincoln Hospital.
Miguel Mickey Melendez paces down the hallways getting a first-hand look at the state of the building.
The walls are filthy, cockroaches scuttle across the floor, and patients sleep in chairs while
they wait to be seen by the overwhelmed medical staff. Lincoln Hospital has been largely forgotten
by City Hall and is so dilapidated that it was condemned by the council years ago, but it still
remain standing all the same. With mortality rate three times the national average, this
ramshackle hospital has such a bad reputation that its local nickname is the butcher shop. But Mickey
isn't just here to spotlight the problems the hospital faces. He's come armed with solutions, too.
Before today, Mickey and the other young lords agreed on their priorities for this protest.
Raising political awareness about the plight of Puerto Ricans is high on their agenda, but so is
broader health care reform. The young lords want to make the Lincoln Hospital a community-first hub,
dispensing vital medical care and health education. So in an unused room, Mickey supervises the
creation of a new testing facility. He talks to a dozen nurses before dividing them into two teams.
Assisted by the young lords, one team of nurses will test patients for tuberculosis, the other for
lead poisoning, both common conditions in the poorer communities in the Bronx. Elsewhere, Mickey finds his
comrades hastily arranging a makeshift classroom. It's here that Mickey himself is going to give a
lecture on health education and politics to anyone in the hospital who wants to listen to what he has
to say. But before he can take his place at the front of the class, the young lords tell him the
New York Police Department is on the phone. They know all about the takeover, and they're not going to
just sit back and do nothing. Taking the call in the administrator's office, Mickey pulls a notepad
from his pocket with a list of the young lord's demands. He begins to read them one by one. He begins to read them
one by one. Among their requests are 24-hour child care for staff and visitors, the assurance of
no more cutbacks in the immediate future, and the promise of a brand new hospital in the long term.
As Mickey talks with the police, members of the press are allowed into the hospital to report
on the takeover. They had been tipped off by the young lords. It's all part of the group's plan.
Mickey and his comrades want a drum up support for their cause by showing the world just how bad
the hospital is, so they let reporters film the blood-stained walls, the filthy
floors and the huge banners declaring the hospital the property of the people. Then at a makeshift
press conference, various members of the young lords explain why they felt need to take this action
and why the takeover is crucial for their community. As the media relay the young lord's message
to the people of New York, Mickey explains to the NYPD that he and his fellow activists will leave
the building peacefully if their demands are met. But the police negotiators on the other end of the
line don't have the power to grant any of the group's requests. So they arrange a call
between Mickey and the New York City mayor's assistant, Sid Davidoff.
But despite being sympathetic to the young lord's call for action, Sid can only promise so much.
He knows that if he gives in too easily, it could prompt similar protests throughout the city,
and that would lead to chaos.
But while negotiations with the mayor's office continue, the NYPD decides that their officers
will have to move into the hospital to end the standoff.
It's not a solution that anyone wants.
Although they came to Lincoln armed with clubs and members,
nunchucks, the young lords always hoped their stunt would remain peaceful. And for their part,
the police don't want to risk the safety of officers or patients by having to force their way into the
hospital. But it seems there's no alternative. So over the next few hours, the police will gather
their forces around Lincoln Hospital. And inside the building and on the street outside,
fears will grow that the young lord's takeover can end only one way in violence. It's just after
5 p.m. on July 14th, 1970 at Lincoln Hospital in the South Bronx, 12 hours after the young
lords took over the building. One of the leaders of the group, Miguel Mickey Melendez,
throws on a white doctor's lab coat and tells the rest of the young lords to do the same.
Looking out from a second floor window, Mickey sees the NYPD mobilizing on the street below.
Mickey knows that the young lords could stay and fight, forcing the police to drag them out.
But the images of violence on the news won't help their cause.
It'll only make it easier for the authorities to dismiss the young lords as violent thugs and ignore their important message.
So Mickey has come up with a different plan.
Dressed in the doctor's disguises they wore to enter the building,
the young lords take turns simply walking out of the building alongside the regular hospital staff.
The unsuspecting cops on the street have no way of knowing they're watching the activists leave the scene.
And by the time they stormed the hospital, almost all of the young lords have vanished.
This peaceful surrender of Lincoln Hospital is thanks to negotiations between the mayor's office and the young lords.
While most of the activist's demands have not been met, a deal has been struck,
which includes an off-the-record commitment to build a new hospital.
They didn't get everything they wanted, but the young lords are satisfied.
Despite the success of their protest, however, the group will fracture and split in the aftermath of this hospital takeover.
Some members will accuse the FBI of infiltrating and disrupting the party.
But even with the demise of the Young Lords, the activists will still leave behind a legacy.
In March 1976, a new $200 million hospital will be open to serve the local community,
and the old dilapidated Lincoln will finally be shut down,
seven years after the Young Lords took it over to spotlight a failing health system on July 14, 1997.
Next on History Daily, July 15, 1983, the revolutionary Nintendo Entertainment System console is released in Japan.
From Noisor and Airship, this is History Daily, hosted, edited, and executive produced by me, Lindsay Graham.
Audio editing by Mohamed Shazir, sound design by Gabriel Gould, supervising sound designer Matthew Filler, music by Thrum.
This episode is written and researched by Owen Paul Nichols, edited by Joel Caller, managing producer Emily Burke.
Executive producers are William Simpson for Airship and Pascal Hughes for Noiser.
