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1472 Hollis Street 44°38′38″N 63°34′17″W / 44.64389°N 63.57139°W / 44.64389; -63.57139 ( Black-Binney A house reflective of the Palladian -inspired residences common during the late 18th and early 19th centuries in Eastern Canada ; notable residents include John Black , James Boyle Uniacke and Hibbert Binney
1181 Hollis Street Halifax Hotel 15 1930 310-room hotel was last renovated in the 1990s; original structural an example of Streamline Moderne architecture Halifax Station: 1161 Hollis Street Halifax Railway Station 3 1928 Example of Beaux Arts-style 1801 Hollis Street: 1801 Hollis Street Halifax Office Building 22 87 m (285 ft) 1985
St. Mary's Children's Hospital, 29-01 216th Street, Bayside, Queens. Founded in Manhattan in 1870, moved to Queens in 1951. [31] Zucker Hillside Hospital, 75-59 263rd Street, Glen Oaks, Queens. Founded as Hastings Hillside Hospital in Hastings-on Hudson in June 1926. Moved and opened at its current address as Hillside Hospital on October 19, 1941.
The Halifax Club is a private club in Halifax, Nova Scotia that was established in 1862. The club serves as a meeting place for business-minded men and women. It is a place where they can "meet, toast the day's successes, dine or simply relax in a warm atmosphere of history and tradition."
Hollis Johnson's, the cozy, 1950s-style diner in back of the Westwood Drug Store, hosted Jerry West, John Wooden and a collection of UCLA stars.
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Terrace Heights Hospital was a privately owned 166-bed hospital in Hollis, Queens [1] that opened in 1947 and closed in 1984. [ 2 ] The hospital was a "general medical facility"
In 1703 Hollis bought New Hall and the adjoining house which he converted into Hollis Hospital. [3] He was also a benefactor of St. Thomas' Hospital in London and Harvard College in Massachusetts. [2] [4] Hollis had four children, one of whom was Thomas Hollis (1659–1731) who continued his father's support of Harvard.