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Deaconess was founded in 1892 by a group of Protestant ministers and laymen in a small house on 604 Mary street, Evansville, Indiana, as a 19-bed hospital. [2] In 1897 the house was moved to back of the lot and a new building was constructed on the corner and opened in 1899.
Deaconess Hospital was the name of several hospitals in St. Louis, Missouri. The Deaconess tradition began in 19th-century Europe when Theodor Fliedner of Kaiserswerth, Germany, established the first Deaconess Home and Hospital in 1836. The word deaconess means “one who is devoted to service”, being the feminine gender of the word deacon. [1]
Deaconess Hospital may refer to one of the following: Arizona Deaconess Hospital, Phoenix, Arizona; Deaconess Hospital, South Side, Edinburgh;
MultiCare Deaconess Hospital—more commonly known as Deaconess Hospital and formerly known as Deaconess Medical Center—is a 388-bed [2] non-profit general medical and surgical hospital in the northwest United States, located in Spokane, Washington. [3]
Triad Health Systems bought the hospital in 2005, after which it was sold to Tennessee based Community Health Systems in 2007. [4] After the purchase by Community Health Systems, the hospital was known as AllianceHealth Deaconess from 2007-2018. [5] [6]
In January 2014, Jordan Hospital joined the Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center family of hospitals and became Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital-Plymouth. It was founded in 1899 when a group of leading citizens from Plymouth saw a need to build a hospital to serve residents and pursued the idea of "a hospital on the hill".
Deaconess Midtown Hospital is a hospital in Evansville, Indiana. It is part of the Deaconess Health System. The hospital has 249 private one person rooms for inpatients. Admittedly it can serve 58 people at a time in its outpatient services. [1] It was known as Deaconess Hospital until August 2017, when it assumed its current name. Before it ...
Central Indiana Hospital for the Insane, c. 1903. Central State Hospital (1848–1994) [a] Deaconess Hospital and Clinic (1895 [20] –1935) [b] Eleanor Hospital (1895–1909) [22] Lincoln Hospital (1909–1915) [23] Marion County Healthcare Center (1832–1996) [c] Norways Sanatorium (1898–1957) [26] Robert W. Long Hospital (1914–1970) [27]