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It was designed by John Whitling and opened as the East Suffolk and Ipswich Hospital and Dispensary in August 1836. [2] [3] A children's wing was added in 1875 [3] and it was renamed the East Suffolk and Ipswich Hospital in 1902. [4] It joined the National Health Service in 1948 and it became the Ipswich Hospital, Anglesea Road Wing in 1955. [4]
English: Scan of an 1850 facsimile of John Speed's 1610 Map of Ipswich, Suffolk, UK, taken from Wodderspoon's "Memorials". Date: 23 February 2006, 19:49:00: Source:
The Benjamin Stickney Cable Memorial Hospital is a historic hospital building at the junction of Massachusetts routes 1A and 133 in Ipswich, Massachusetts, U.S.The Colonial Revival building was built in 1917, following an extended fundraising effort, begun in 1906 and pushed further along by philanthropist and Castle Hill owner Richard T. Crane, Jr., after the 1915 death in a car accident of ...
John Speed's Ipswich is a graphic account of the town of Ipswich, Suffolk created by John Speed in conjunction with the Dutch engraver, Jodocus Hondius, in 1610. [1] It was featured as an inset for his map of the county of Suffolk, published in Theatre of The Empire of Great Britaine. It is the earliest extant map of Ipswich and features many ...
The trust was formed on 1 July 2018 by the merger of Colchester Hospital University NHS Foundation Trust and The Ipswich Hospital NHS Trust. [3] [4] The trust used Datix in 2022 to report inappropriate attendances at A&E to GP practices.
Whitehouse Ward is a ward in the North West Area of the town and district of Ipswich in the English county of Suffolk. It returns three councillors to Ipswich Borough Council. It is designated Middle Layer Super Output Area Ipswich 003 by the Office for National Statistics. [1] It is composed of 5 Lower Layer Super Output Areas. [2]
The hospital had its origins in the Ipswich Workhouse Infirmary, which was designed by Henry Percy Adams and built by George Grimwood & Son, and which opened in 1889. [1] [2] It became the Ipswich Borough General Hospital in 1939 and, after it had joined the National Health Service in 1948, it became the Ipswich Hospital, Heath Road Wing in 1955. [1]
Fore Street, detail from map by John Speed, 1610. In the fifteenth century Fore street was at the centre of the wool trade handling the exports from the wool towns of Hadleigh, Kersey and Lavenham. There were a number of extensive complexes of buildings between the street and the quay.