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Silver Cross Hospital is a 348-bed acute care/general hospital that was founded in 1895. [1] The hospital was located in Joliet, Illinois , before it relocated to its new campus on February 26, 2012, in New Lenox, Illinois .
The ballpark's original name was Silver Cross Field, with the naming rights belonging to Silver Cross Hospital. In November 2017, the City of Joliet announced their plan for rename the facility Joliet Route 66 Stadium, which included a new facade showcasing the area's automotive history centered around U.S. Route 66. [3]
Joliet currently has one hospital within its city limits: Presence Saint Joseph Medical Center (also known as St. Joe's), located on the west side. Silver Cross Hospital, now located in neighboring New Lenox, was located on Joliet's east side.
An arrest warrant has been issued for a man who allegedly pushed an 80-year-old discharged from Silver Cross Hospital in New Lenox out of a moving van, according to police. New Lenox police said ...
Shortly before December 5, 1991, Speck was transported from Stateville Correctional Center to Silver Cross Hospital in Joliet, Illinois after complaining of severe chest pains. [60] [61] Speck later died in the early morning hours of December 5, of what was believed to be a heart attack, one day shy of what would have been his 50th birthday. [62]
Holy Family Hospital, Greenville; Holy Cross Hospital, Chicago; Hoopeston Community Memorial Hospital, Hoopeston; Hopedale Hospital, Hopedale; Hospital Sisters Health System; Good Shepherd Hospital, Shelbyville; Humboldt Park Health, formerly Norwegian American Hospital, Chicago
Silver Cross has built a $400 million hospital just off of U.S. Route 6 nearby the new I-355 extension in New Lenox; replacing their Joliet location on February 26, 2012. The replacement hospital brings services from Children’s Memorial Hospital , the Rehabilitation Institute of Chicago (RIC) – the #1 Rehabilitation Hospital in the Nation ...
The Joliet Slammers are a professional baseball team based in Joliet, Illinois. The Slammers compete in the Frontier League (FL) as a member of the West Division in the Midwest Conference. The team plays their home games at the Duly Health and Care Field , and is owned by Mike Veeck, Bill Murray and the Night Train Veeck company.