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The hospital moved to Egerton Road in Guildford and opened on 16 October 1978 as the Guildford District Hospital. [4] The new hospital was officially opened by Elizabeth II in February 1981; following the closure of St Luke's Hospital, she returned to open the St Luke's Wing at the Royal Surrey County Hospital in February 1997. [5]
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Royal Surrey County Hospital; S. St Ebba's Hospital; St Peter's Hospital, Chertsey; St Luke's Hospital, Guildford; W. Warlingham Park Hospital; West Park Hospital, Epsom
The new facility, which was designed by Sydney Tattle and built by Chapman, Lower and Peptic, [2] was officially opened by Neville Chamberlain MP, Minister for Health, as the Surrey County Sanatorium on 20 July 1928. [2] The hospital joined the National Health Service as the Milford Sanatorium in 1948. [1]
It became the Warren Road Hospital in 1930 and it joined the National Health Service as St Luke's Hospital in 1948. [2] After services transferred to the Royal Surrey County Hospital , St Luke’s Hospital closed in 1996.
The foundation stone for the hospital was laid by Charles Richard Sumner, Bishop of Winchester, at a site donated by the Earl of Onslow in Farnham Road in Guildford in 1863. [2] The 60-bed hospital was designed by Edward Ward Lower drawing on the ideas of Florence Nightingale and was opened as the Royal Surrey County Hospital in April 1866. [ 3 ]
There are three plans for the county. In March 2016 Sir Andrew Morris, Chief Executive of Frimley Health NHS Foundation Trust, was appointed the leader of the Frimley Health Sustainability and transformation plan footprint, which covers the areas of Bracknell and Ascot CCG, North East Hampshire and Farnham CCG, Slough CCG, Surrey Heath CCG and Windsor, Ascot and Maidenhead CCG. [2]
Royal Earlswood Hospital, a former asylum for the mentally ill in Redhill, Surrey, built in 1853, and given royal patronage by Queen Victoria in 1862, closed in 1997 and redeveloped as housing as Royal Earlswood Park