Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The hospital opened in 1953 on North Elm Street as a 310-bed community hospital. Moses Cone Hospital is the central facility of Cone Health, a network of medical care facilities serving Guilford County and surrounding areas. As of 2023, Preston Hammock serves as regional president for the Greensboro market which includes Moses Cone Hospital. [1]
Cone Health is active in primary care, cardiology, neuroscience, oncology, orthopedics, rehabilitation, obstetrics and many other specialties. U.S. News & World Report. [2] listed Cone Health hospitals as a 2022-2023 High Performing Hospital in 17 of 20 common adult procedures and conditions.
The church was dedicated on September 14, 1952 by Cardinal Amleto Giovanni Cicognani, the Apostolic Delegate to the United States. Charles H. Helmsing, Auxiliary Bishop of St. Louis, preached the dedication sermon. The Jubilee Pipe Organ, a 2,226 pipe Kleuker organ, was dedicated on the 25th anniversary of the church, in October 1977.
Roughly bounded by Fisher and Bessemer Aves. and Wharton and Church Sts.; also 507 N. Church St. Greensboro: 507 Church represents a boundary increase of September 12, 1996: 26: Former East White Oak School: Former East White Oak School
First Presbyterian Church was founded in 1824 [1] and was the first chartered Presbyterian church in the city. [2] [3] Four of its 12 original members were slaves.Thirty to 40 slaves were members by the time of the American Civil War, and after being freed, 37 former slaves started Saint James Presbyterian at Friendly Avenue and Church Street.
Other notable buildings include the First Presbyterian Church (1928), Holy Trinity Episcopal Church (1922), Gant-McAlister House (c. 1910–15), and A.J. Schlosser House (c. 1922). [2] [3] It was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992, with a boundary increase in 1996. [1]
Greensboro's neighborhoods have no "official" borders, such that some of the places listed below may overlap geographically, and residents are not always in agreement with where one neighborhood ends and another begins.
In the early 2000s a new church building for St. Mary's was built off of East Lee Street. Both the original church building and new building are used for celebrations of Mass. In 2014, Emmanuel O. Ukattah, a native of Nigeria and naturalized U.S. citizen, became the first Catholic deacon of African descent in the history of St. Mary's.