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Jean Remington Yawkey (January 24, 1909 – February 26, 1992) was the wife of Tom Yawkey and owner of the Boston Red Sox from 1976 to her death in 1992. Biography [ edit ]
The Longwood Collective, formerly known as MASCO (Medical Area and Scientific Community Organization) [2] [3]), offers shuttle buses for affiliated personnel around the Longwood Medical Area and between Harvard University's main campus in Cambridge and its medical campus in Boston. The medical campus shuttle, known as M2, is free for passengers ...
Boston Children's Hospital: Independent: Boston Suffolk Yes (Pedi Level 1) IV 1869-present Active - Specialty Boston City Hospital: Municipal: Boston Suffolk IV 1864-1996 Succeeded - Merged with Boston University Medical Center Hospital in 1996, forming Boston Medical Center. [25] Boston Dispensary: Independent: Boston Suffolk IV 1796-1930
Thomas Austin Yawkey (born Thomas Yawkey Austin; February 21, 1903 – July 9, 1976) was an American industrialist and Major League Baseball executive. Born in Detroit , Yawkey became president of the Boston Red Sox in 1933 and was the sole owner of the team for 44 seasons until he died of leukemia .
Boston Children's Hospital (formerly known as Children's Hospital Boston until 2013) [1] is the main pediatric training and research hospital of Harvard Medical School, Harvard University. [2] It is a nationally ranked, freestanding acute care children's hospital located at the centre of Harvard Longwood Medical and Academic Area in Boston ...
St. Joseph's Children's Hospital Tampa: Florida 218 3 Studer Family Children's Hospital: Pensacola: Florida 106 3 UF Health Shands Children's Hospital Gainesville: Florida 208 4 8 Wolfson Children's Hospital: Jacksonville: Florida 272 Level I Pediatric 4 3 Children's Healthcare of Atlanta. Egleston Children's Hospital; Hughes Spalding Children ...
Franciscan Children's was founded in 1949 through the collaboration of Archbishop of Boston Richard Cushing and the Franciscan Missionaries of Mary. [3] Funded largely with a $600,000 gift by the Kennedy family, the hospital was originally named the Joseph P. Kennedy, Jr. Memorial Hospital, [2] [5] honoring the late Kennedy who was killed during a 1944 air mission over England during World War ...
The charitable hospital, with only a few beds, opened in 1861 at 4 McLean Street, Boston (not far from Massachusetts General Hospital). [2] Under the leadership of the Boston physician Buckminister Brown (1819–1891), the House of the Good Samaritan opened in 1864 the USA's first orthopedic ward for children.