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Despite the move, the hospital kept the name 'Charing Cross'; at first it was called 'Charing Cross Hospital, Fulham' but eventually the 'Fulham' part was dropped. [4] The Charing Cross Hospital building in Agar Street (a Grade II listed building since 1970) [6] was converted for use in the 1990s and became Charing Cross police station. [7]
Barnes Hospital, London; Cassel Hospital; Charing Cross Hospital – Hammersmith; Chelsea and Westminster Hospital – Chelsea; Cromwell Hospital – South Kensington (independent) King Edward VII's Hospital – Westminster; Kingston Hospital – Kingston upon Thames; Lister Hospital – Chelsea (independent) The London Clinic – Westminster ...
The Trust was designated a Genomic Medicine Centre in 2014. The same year, Hammersmith Hospital became the first in Europe to use a new heart mapping system to treat patients with complicated heart rhythm disorders. In a UK first in 2016, focused ultrasound was used at Charing Cross Hospital to treat essential tremor without brain surgery.
London County Mental Hospital (1918–1928) Hanwell Mental Hospital (1929–1937) St Bernard's Hospital (1938–1980) Psychiatric Unit (1980–1992) – part of a re-organised complex of divisions on same site and called Ealing General Hospital with a central corporate body. West London Mental Healthcare (NHS) Trust.
Charing Cross Police Station is a Metropolitan Police Service station in London's Charing Cross area. Its site in Agar Street was formerly the main site of Charing Cross Hospital. [1] The station comprises two individually listed Grade II listed buildings. [2] [3]
Area around Charing Cross c.1833 A map showing the Charing Cross ward of Westminster Metropolitan Borough as it appeared in 1916. The railway station opened in 1864, fronted on the Strand with the Charing Cross Hotel. In 1865, a replacement cross was commissioned from E. M. Barry by the South Eastern Railway as the centrepiece of the station ...
Based at the Charing Cross Hospital site in Hammersmith and Chelsea and Westminster Hospital in Chelsea, the new medical school took the form of its larger precursor in using "X" as an abbreviation for "Cross". The medical school also maintained academic units at the university hospitals of Queen Mary's Roehampton, West Middlesex, Ashford and ...
Charing Cross Hospital and Medical School in 1881, in Charing Cross. Charing Cross Hospital was founded in 1818, as the 'West London Infirmary and Dispensary', by Dr Benjamin Golding, to meet the needs of the poor who flocked to the cities in search of work in the new factories. The hospital started training medical students in 1822.