Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
In 1916, a small medical clinic opened on Broad Street (now known as University Boulevard) to serve Tuscaloosa. The 12-bed Druid City Infirmary was quickly seen to be insufficient to serve the town's medical needs. With land donated by the University of Alabama, a bond issue and public subscriptions were used to fund a new hospital on a nearby ...
City Notes 1 RSA Battle House Tower: 745 (227) 35 2007 Mobile [1] 2 Shipt Tower: 454 (138) 34 1986 Birmingham: 3 Regions-Harbert Plaza: 437 (133) 32 1989 Birmingham 4 RSA–BankTrust Building: 424 (129) 34 1965 Mobile 5 RSA Tower: 397 (121) 22 1996 Montgomery: 6 AT&T City Center: 391 (119) 30 1972 Birmingham 7 Regions Center: 390 (119) 30 1972 ...
Inpatient pediatric psychiatric facility ... Mary Starke Harper Geriatric Psychiatry Center: Tuscaloosa: Tuscaloosa: 126: ... Russell Medical Center: Alexander City ...
The move of the college from Mobile to Tuscaloosa took effect in 1920. [3] In 1936, the University of Alabama Extension Center was opened in Birmingham. [4] In 1943, Governor Chauncey Sparks created the four-year Medical College of Alabama with the passage of the Jones Bill (Alabama Act 89). In 1944, Roy R. Kracke was named dean of the Medical ...
College of Physicians and Surgeons, Medical Department Kansas City University Kansas City: 1894 1895 1905 1905 absorbed by University of Kansas School of Medicine [2] Kansas Kansas City College of Medicine and Surgery Kansas City 1897 1898 1898 1898 moved to Kansas City, Missouri, and became the Medico-Chirurgical College [2] Kansas
Location of Tuscaloosa County in Alabama. This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Tuscaloosa County, Alabama. This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Tuscaloosa County, Alabama, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are ...
The Downtown Tuscaloosa Historic District is a historic district which was first listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1986. [2] The listing included 50 contributing buildings on 27 acres (11 ha), including the historic city hall of Tuscaloosa . [ 1 ]
Partlow Center was the third mental health facility to open in Alabama. The first was Bryce Hospital, initially known as the Alabama Insane Hospital.It was proposed to the state Legislature in 1836 by Dorothea Dix, a pioneering reformer in the treatment of mental illness, and accepted its first patient in 1861. [3]