Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
St. Catherine of Siena Medical Center is a 296-bed, [1] [2] not-for-profit hospital located on Long Island in Smithtown, New York.The hospital opened in 1962 as St. John's Smithtown Hospital and its name was changed to its present in 1999.
Brooklyn Hebrew Maternity Hospital, 1395 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn [62] [63] Its prior name was Maternity Hospital of Brownsville and East New York. [62] Brooklyn Women's Hospital August 1, 1930 through 1960s. Brooklyn Home for Consumptives, Kingston Avenue and St. John's Place, Brooklyn; Brooklyn Homeopathic Hospital, 105-111 Cumberland Street ...
This is a list of hospitals in the five boroughs of New York City, sorted by hospital name, with addresses and brief descriptions of their formation and development.
Opened as St. Joseph's Hospital on June 25, 1905, became the South Shore Division of Long Island Jewish Hospital in January 1973, renamed St. John's Episcopal Hospital South Shore on July 1, 1976. [28] [29] [30] St. Mary's Children's Hospital, 29-01 216th Street, Bayside, Queens. Founded in Manhattan in 1870, moved to Queens in 1951.
The Manhattan complex in 1979 The main entrance of St. Vincent's Hospital (1900), Greenwich Village, New York City. St. Vincent's Hospital was a 758-bed tertiary care teaching hospital, at Seventh Avenue and Greenwich Avenue on the border of Greenwich Village and Chelsea. It included: Level I Trauma Center and Critical Care Center
St. Joseph's Medical Center - Established in 1888 by the Sisters of Charity of New York. St. Vincent's Hospital Westchester - Established by the Sisters of Charity of New York as a suburban branch of their primary hospital founded in the Greenwich Village section of Manhattan which was founded in 1850; when the Manhattan site was closed in 2010 ...
The Church of St. Catherine of Siena is a Roman Catholic parish church in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of New York, located at 411 East 68th Street, Manhattan, New York City. The parish was developed from that of St. Vincent Ferrer in 1896. [2] It is staffed by the Dominican Fathers.
The hospital was founded in its original building on the Upper West Side of Manhattan [2] in 1884 as New York Cancer Hospital by a group that included John Jacob Astor III and his wife Charlotte. [5] The hospital appointed as an attending surgeon William B. Coley, who pioneered an early form of immunotherapy to eradicate tumors. [6]