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Wyckoff Heights Medical Center is a 350-bed [1] teaching hospital located in the Wyckoff Heights section of Bushwick, Brooklyn in New York City.The hospital is an academic affiliate of the NewYork-Presbyterian's Weill Cornell Medical College of Cornell University, the New York Medical College and New York Institute of Technology College of Osteopathic Medicine.
Wyckoff Heights was urbanized starting in the late 19th century, and took its name from the Wyckoff family, who owned the land. The area was home first to many German immigrants, later followed by Italian and more recently Latino and Eastern-European residents. Wyckoff Heights is located largely within ZIP Codes 11237 and 11385.
Wyckoff Heights Medical Center, 374 Stockholm Street, Brooklyn. Founded as German Hospital in 1889, dedicated at St. Nicholas Avenue and Stanhope Street on May 21, 1899, and opened later that year. Renamed Wyckoff Heights Hospital because of anti-German sentiment after World War 1, then renamed Wyckoff Heights Medical Center.
Amy O'Sullivan is an Emergency Room nurse at Wyckoff Heights Medical Center in Brooklyn who appeared on the cover of Time (magazine) in 2020 for the 100 most influential people issue. [1] She treated the hospital’s first COVID-19 patient. [2] Mattel created a Barbie doll [3] in her likeness. [1]
Jackson Heights Hospital was a "private, nonprofit hospital" that was operated by MediSys Health Network, [3] functioning as a subsidiary of Wyckoff Heights Medical Center, in the neighborhood of Bushwick, Brooklyn. [2] A Junior High School, I.S. 230, was built on the hospital's site two years after the hospital closed and was torn down.
Hospital in New York, United States New York Community Hospital New York Community Hospital (2017) Geography Location Brooklyn, New York, United States History Former name(s) Madison Park Hospital Opened 1929 Closed 1997 (merged) Links Website www.nych.com Lists Hospitals in New York State Other links List of hospitals in Brooklyn New York Community Hospital is a hospital in Brooklyn, NY that ...
The Myrtle–Wyckoff Avenues station (announced on New Technology Trains as the Myrtle Avenue–Wyckoff Avenue station) is a New York City Subway station complex formed by the intersecting stations of the BMT Canarsie Line and the BMT Myrtle Avenue Line, served by the L and M trains at all times.
At the Brooklyn Navy Yard, a young Naval Surgeon named E. R. Squibb seeks assignment to the Naval Hospital where he perfects manufacture of an anesthetic known as "ether". Construction starts on the South Bushwick Reformed Presbyterian Dutch Church, (a.k.a. the "White Church"), later placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.