Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
This page was last edited on 29 December 2024, at 16:15 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Merged with New York Hospital and Lying-In Hospital, moving with the latter into New York Hospital's building on September 1, 1932. [148] Medical Arts Center Hospital, 57 West 57th Street, Manhattan. Now drug rehabilitation. Metropolitan Throat Hospital, opened January 5, 1874 at [155] 17 Stuyvesant Street (Third Avenue).
The Henry J. Carter Specialty Hospital and Nursing Facility is located at the site of the former North General Hospital, which was closed in July 2010. [2] [3] This facility partially offset the closure of the Goldwater Memorial Hospital of the Coler-Goldwater Specialty Hospital and Nursing Facility located on the south side of Roosevelt Island.
Bellevue Hospital (officially NYC Health + Hospitals/Bellevue and formerly known as Bellevue Hospital Center) is a hospital in New York City and the oldest public hospital in the United States. [ 2 ] [ 4 ] One of the largest hospitals in the United States by number of beds, it is located at 462 First Avenue in the Kips Bay neighborhood of ...
Saint Vincent's Catholic Medical Centers (also known as Saint Vincent's or SVCMC) was a healthcare system in New York City, anchored by its flagship hospital, St. Vincent's Hospital Manhattan. St. Vincent's was founded in 1849 and was a major teaching hospital in the Greenwich Village neighborhood of Manhattan , New York City .
The hospital closed in the 1960s and in 1981 became residential rentals under Section 8. The New York City French Hospital was founded in 1880 by doctors Julio J. Henna, Chauveau, Deberceau, Muvial, and Ferrer. Dr. Henna, who was also a member of the medical faculty at Bellevue Hospital, became medical director of the institution. [4]
Mount Sinai Hospital, founded in 1852, is one of the oldest and largest teaching hospitals in the United States. [2] It is located in East Harlem in the New York City borough of Manhattan, on the eastern border of Central Park stretching along Madison and Fifth Avenues, between East 98th Street and East 103rd Street.
Joseph Casavant (French pronunciation: [ʒozɛf kazavɑ̃]; 1807 – 1874) was a French Canadian manufacturer of pipe organs. [ 1 ] Casavant was born 23 January 1807 in Saint-Hyacinthe , Lower Canada to Dominique Casavant and Marie-Desanges Coderre.