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Windsor: Windsor: 35 (25 acute, 10 inpatient rehab) Operated out of the Thomas Emerson-Edwin Stoughton House in the Windsor Village Historical District from its founding in 1933 until 1972 when the current building was built. 1938: White River Junction VA Medical Center: White River Junction: Windsor: 74 [2] 1949: Grace Cottage Hospital ...
Priory Lane, Dunfermline Bowling Club Pavilion, Including Boundary Wall 56°04′06″N 3°27′35″W / 56.068327°N 3.459811°W / 56.068327; -3.459811 ( Priory Lane, Dunfermline Bowling Club Pavilion, Including Boundary
Location of Windsor County in Vermont. The National Register of Historic Places is a United States federal official list of places and sites considered worthy of preservation. In Windsor County, Vermont, there are 134 properties and districts listed on the National Register, including 4 National Historic Landmarks.
Windsor village began development at the end of the 18th century and achieved importance in Vermont history as the location of the framing of the constitution of Vermont. It is known as the birthplace of Vermont, where the state constitution was signed, and acted as the first capital until 1805 when Montpelier became the official state capital.
The surname derives from the lands of Primrose in the parish of Dunfermline, Fife. [2] The farmstead stood at the junction of Grange Road and Primrose Lane in what is now a housing estate in the town of Rosyth. The name itself may come from the Pictish words *pren, "tree", and *ros, "moor", or the first element may be *prim, "first". [3]
In 2012, the medical center's nearly 7,150 employees included 500 University of Vermont Medical Group physicians (jointly employed by the medical center and the UVM College of Medicine), more than 1750 registered nurses, 160 non-physician practice nurses and physician assistants, and approximately 300 residents (physicians in specialty training).
Windsor House: 54 Main Street: Greek Revival: 1836: A separate NRHP listing 70: Thomas Emerson-Edwin Stoughton House (Old Windsor Hospital) 48 Main Street: Federal: 1836: Served as Windsor's hospital from 1933 until the opening of the Mt. Ascutney Hospital and Health Center in 1972. [6] [7] 71: Baptist Church: Main Street: Pseudo Gothic Revival ...
Central Vermont Medical Center (CVMC) is the primary health care provider located in Berlin, Vermont providing care for the people of the central portion of Vermont. The medical staff numbers 121 physicians including nine community-based medical group practices. CVMC provide 24-hour emergency care, with 122 inpatient beds.