Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This low-resolution photograph originates from the Oregon Historical County Records Guide, a collection of over 4000 photos from the state of Oregon. License to reuse. The 72 dpi JPEG images displayed in the Oregon Historical County Records Guide may be used free of charge without permission provided that the photo credit "Gary Halvorson ...
Plans for the new $4.7 million facility were approved by the Oregon Health Commission in December 1975. [7] [8] In December 1977, the new hospital opened, replacing both the original Columbia Hospital and the former St. Mary's Hospital building. [9] The old building at 16th and Franklin was turned into a nursing home [10] and still stands today.
The camp was initially established as Camp Clatsop in 1927 as a summer training area for the Oregon National Guard. In 1959, it was renamed Camp Rilea, after Major general Thomas E. Rilea, the Adjutant General of Oregon. [4] In 1940, the camp was federalized for World War II. It was returned to the state in 1947. [4]
In 2020, during the COVID-19 pandemic, Jojo offered free meals to children, restaurant workers, [9] [10] and hospital workers. [11] In April, when Jojo reopened after a temporary closure, the business offered free sandwiches to all who asked. [12] In 2021, Hintze confirmed plans to open a sibling brick and mortar restaurant in the Pearl District.
Original St. Vincent Hospital building in Portland, c. 1910. Dedicated on July 19, 1875, St. Vincent Hospital was the state's first permanent hospital, [5] founded in the Northwest district of Portland, Oregon, by the Sisters of Providence, a Roman Catholic sisterhood from Montreal, Quebec, Canada. [4]
The hospital opened in 1926 on Portland's Marquam Hill. [2] Doernbecher Children's Hospital developed the nation's first academic children's eye clinic in 1949 and Oregon's first neonatal intensive care center in 1968. In 1998, Doernbecher built a new state-of-the-art medical complex to replace the original hospital. [3]
The hospital is located in Springfield, in the U.S. state of Oregon. Established in 2008, it is the only remaining Sacred Heart facility in the Eugene -Springfield area owned by PeaceHealth . The RiverBend facility is home to a 24-hour Level II trauma center including full medical/surgical care.
The only nursing school outside of Portland, Oregon was started in 1942 by the hospital to meet wartime needs. In 1965, the three-year diploma program had 150 students. In 1965, the three-year diploma program had 150 students.