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The Royal London Hospital is a large teaching hospital in Whitechapel in the London Borough of Tower Hamlets.It is part of Barts Health NHS Trust.It provides district general hospital services for the City of London and Tower Hamlets and specialist tertiary care services for patients from across London and elsewhere.
Tower Hamlets Town Hall is a municipal facility in Whitechapel Road, Whitechapel, London. The new structure, which has been commissioned as the headquarters of Tower Hamlets London Borough Council, incorporates the façade of the old Royal London Hospital which is a Grade II listed building. [1]
The trust took on formal legal responsibility for the operation of the NHS Nightingale Hospital London, a temporary hospital set up at ExCeL London to treat patients during the 2020 COVID-19 pandemic. [6] On 11 January 2021, the Trust opened the NHS COVID-19 Vaccination Centre, Newham at the ExCeL London site. [7]
The hospital was renamed the Royal London Hospital for Integrated Medicine in September 2010 to better reflect its activities. [5] It stopped providing NHS-funded homeopathic remedies in April 2018. [6] In 2024, King Charles III became patron of the hospital, a role Queen Elizabeth II had filled until her death in 2022. [7]
The shop was directly opposite the Royal London Hospital, and Merrick was frequently visited by doctors. [35] Merrick later moved to the hospital permanently, where he spent the last years of his life. [36] The Blind Beggar is at No. 337 and was the founding point of the Salvation Army following a meeting outside the pub by William Booth in 1865.
The King talked to paediatric nurse Becky Platt, who works at the Royal London Hospital and spent just over a month working in Gaza earlier this year. She said afterwards: “One of the particular ...
In his speech, which was recorded in Fitzrovia Chapel, a former London hospital chapel, Charles, 76, also spoke of his “deep sense of pride” at how communities responded to the riots following ...
The red-brick church was designed by Arthur Cawston, built in 1888–1892, located behind the former Royal London Hospital. It is on the site of an earlier chapel built in 1818-1821 dedicated to St Philip. After the Second World War it was combined with the parish of St Augustine's, Stepney, and made redundant in 1979.