Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
St. John's Episcopal Hospital South Shore [2] [3] [4] opened as St. Joseph's Hospital [5] [6] on June 25, 1905, [7] became the South Shore Division of Long Island Jewish Hospital in January 1973, and was renamed St. John's Episcopal Hospital South Shore on July 1, 1976.
St. John's Episcopal Hospital South Shore, 327 Beach 19th Street, Far Rockaway, Queens. Opened as St. Joseph's Hospital on June 25, 1905, became the South Shore Division of Long Island Jewish Hospital in January 1973, renamed St. John's Episcopal Hospital South Shore on July 1, 1976. [28] [29] [30]
St. John's Episcopal Hospital, Brooklyn, New York; St John's Queens (Elmhurst, Queens, NY), New York City. Closed in 2009 This page was last edited on 2 ...
St. John's Episcopal Hospital was founded in 1871 as a sectarian hospital. It was later known as St. John's Hospital of Brooklyn , [ 1 ] 1545 Atlantic Avenue, in the Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood of Central Brooklyn , and became a major teaching affiliate of the State University of New York Downstate Medical School.
Renamed Community Hospital of Brooklyn in the early 1960s, renamed New York Community Hospital when it was acquired by New York-Presbyterian Hospital in 1997. Maternity Hospital of Brownsville and East New York, 1395 Eastern Parkway. Later Brooklyn Hebrew Maternity Hospital [96] and then Brooklyn Women's Hospital (1930-1960s).
St. Catherine of Siena Medical Center is a 296-bed, [1] [2] not-for-profit hospital located on Long Island in Smithtown, New York. The hospital opened in 1962 as St. John's Smithtown Hospital and its name was changed to its present in 1999.
In the 1930s, the hospital's president, Joseph Baker, was also the chair of the nearby Long Island College Hospital. In December 1948, Dr. Rudolph Nissen, a hospital surgeon, famous for developing a widely used operation to prevent esophageal reflux, performed an exploratory laparotomy on Albert Einstein at the hospital. [7]
The Long Island Motor Parkway was a limited-access toll road, with access at a small number of toll booths, joined to local roads by short connector roads. Traffic could turn left between the parkway and connectors, crossing oncoming traffic, so it was not a controlled-access highway (or "freeway" as later defined by the federal government's ...