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The National Personnel Records Center(s) (NPRC) is an agency of the National Archives and Records Administration, created in 1966. It is part of the United States National Archives federal records center system and is divided into two large Federal Records Centers located in St. Louis, Missouri, and Valmeyer, Illinois.
The National Personnel Records Center fire was a catastrophic fire at the records building in St. Louis that burned for more than four days in July 1973 and ultimately destroyed 16 to 18 million Official Military Personnel Files (OMPF). [12]
Kindred Hospital - St. Louis - St. Louis; Mercy Hospital St. Louis - Creve Coeur, Missouri; Mercy Hospital South - Unincorporated South St. Louis County, Missouri (Tesson Ferry Township) Mercy Rehabilitation Hospital - Chesterfield, Missouri; Metropolitan Saint Louis Psychiatric Center - St. Louis; Missouri Baptist Medical Center - Town and ...
Missouri Baptist Medical Center is a 489-bed hospital located at Interstate-270 and Highway 40/I-64 in West St. Louis County. Missouri Baptist Medical Center was founded in 1886 and joined BJC HealthCare in 1994.
Saint Joseph Hospital West - Lake St. Louis; St. Joseph Medical Center - Kansas City; St. Louis Behavioral Medicine Institute - St. Louis; St. Louis Children's Hospital - St. Louis; Saint Louis University Health Science Center - St. Louis; Saint Louis University Hospital - St. Louis; St. Louis VA Medical Center - St. Louis; Saint Luke's East ...
The National Personnel Records Center fire of 1973, [1] also known as the 1973 National Archives fire, was a fire that occurred at the Military Personnel Records Center (MPRC) in the St. Louis suburb of Overland, Missouri, from July 12–16, 1973. The fire destroyed some 16 million to 18 million official U.S. military personnel records.
John J. Cochran Veterans Hospital is a 355-bed hospital located in St. Louis, Missouri. [1] It is one of two divisions of the VA St. Louis Health Care System (VASTLHCS), a healthcare provider under the United States Department of Veterans Affairs (VA). [2] The other division is St. Louis VA Medical Center-Jefferson Barracks. [3]
The hospital was built by the city of St. Louis primarily as a quarantine facility for patients with a variety of easily transmissible diseases, including smallpox, yellow fever, and tuberculosis. There is a cemetery located on the grounds of this closed hospital, the building founded in 1875 with its last major renovation in 1949 and was ...