Wisdom Hospice Charity
The Wisdom Hospice Charity is dedicated to supporting the work of the Wisdom Hospice, providing specialised end of life care and support to local people, their families, friends and carers whether at home, in the hospice or hospital. It's all about the patients and helping the hospice team to care for them and their families.
With your help, the Charity will be able to continue supporting The Wisdom Hospice and ensure that those facing life-limiting illness get the help they so desperately need. We need to raise more than £2,500 a day towards The Wisdom Hospice's running costs. Whilst we are funded partly by the NHS, with every new day we are facing increasing pressure to achieve these targets.
Each day we meet new supporters that are raising money for us in so many inspiring ways. We really could not do the work that we do without the generosity and support from our local community.
THANK YOU.

Vision and Mission
The Charity’s Vision and Mission are one and the same - to promote the relief of suffering and the treatment of adults in Medway and Swale with life-limiting illnesses. The Wisdom Hospice delivers the best of care.
The Charity supports the Hospice by raising money to provide an annual grant, plus those little extras, to ensure our patients are as comfortable as possible.
The Queen visited our hospice on 31st October 1984. Forty years ago, we opened the doors to the adults of Medway and Swale.
Meet the Team
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Martin Reeves
CEO
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Ray Harris
Chairman
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Jane Buck
Financial Controller
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Maisie McDonagh
Accounts Office Administrator
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Emma Dengate
Fundraising Co-ordinator
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Jane Morgan
Community Fundraiser
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Margaret Barker
Trustee/Director
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Barbara Fisher
Trustee/Director
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Vicky Webster
Trustee/Director
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Judy Oliver
Trustee/Director
Our History
Forty years ago, The Wisdom Hospice opened its doors to the adults of Medway and Swale. The Wisdom Hospice was born out of need; a need for palliative care in the community.
This need was recognised by, among others, Consultant Surgeon Dr Peter Jennings and Chief Nursing Officer, Ann Denholm from Medway’s new and innovative Symptom Control Team.
Terminally ill cancer patient Molly Wisdom was under their care. She was so impressed by the new service that she vowed to raise funds for a hospice.
“If you can keep me alive until June, I will have two coffee mornings for you and raise £50,” said Molly in 1977 to her doctors. She wildly exceeded her modest goal and in the final seven months of her life raised the first £2,000 for The Wisdom Hospice, named in her memory.”
The Friends of The Wisdom Hospice, now the Wisdom Hospice Charity, was set up to build on her vision and inspired an army of determined fundraisers. One of those fundraisers was Wynn Bartlett, an outpatient sister at St Bartholomew’s Hospital.
Now in her 80s, Mrs Barlett said:
“The team of nurses all worked together. We had jumble sales, market stalls, fruit stalls and bazaars at St Barts. We held a Dickens Day, we had an event where we only dressed in blue and sold things that were blue. Our husbands grew beards then shaved them off. It was great. The people in the town were wonderful. It was a tight knit community, like a big family and we had a captive audience with all the outpatients coming and going. We raised an amazing £10,000 for the hospice and we were all proud of our fundraising efforts and what we’d managed to achieve.”
Fast forward to 1983 and £700,000 later, the fundraising goal was achieved. The Wisdom Hospice was built and opened its doors in spring 1984. Later that year, on Wednesday 31st October, Her Majesty the Queen and the Duke of Edinburgh officially opened the hospice.
“If one day was paramount in 1984, then that day must be Wednesday 31st October, when the whole of this Medway area was gladdened by the Royal visit.”