From humble beginnings, HFH grows into an institution
In 1945, as the world began to rebuild at the end of World War II, in the north of the subcontinent, an Italian architect and war prisoner designed the Holy Family Hospital (HFH) for Christian missionaries to serve the people of the region.
The hospital was opened in 1927 in an old building near Liaquat Bagh on Murree Road by the Christian Mission of Philadelphia, and it moved to the new building in Satellite Town in 1946. The mission donated the hospital to the Punjab government in 1977, after which it became the largest teaching hospital in the division.
With its humble beginnings as 200-bed institution, HFH now offers 1,050 beds. It is affiliated with the Rawalpindi Medical University (RMU), whose vice chancellor Dr Mohammad Umer in fact trained as a doctor at HFH and spent more than 35 years in service there.