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The original hospital in Dewsbury was known as the Dewsbury Infirmary and it opened in temporary accommodation at Northgate in 1876. [ 1 ] The infirmary moved to a more permanent home on the Halifax Road in 1883: the distinctive new building was designed in the gothic revival style by Kirk & Sons of Dewsbury. [ 1 ]
Salisbury NHS Foundation Trust is an NHS foundation trust based in Salisbury that covers South Wiltshire, North and East Dorset and South West Hampshire. It gained foundation trust status in 2006. Its main site is Salisbury District Hospital , a large general hospital.
Mid Yorkshire Teaching NHS Trust runs Pontefract Hospital, Pinderfields Hospital in Wakefield and Dewsbury and District Hospital and community health services in Wakefield, all in West Yorkshire, England. Pinderfields Hospital in Wakefield is the trust's largest. Pontefract General Infirmary seen in 1969.
Erith and District Hospital; Evelina London Children's Hospital – Lambeth; General Lying-In Hospital; Greenwich District Hospital; Guy's Hospital – Southwark; King's College Hospital – Camberwell; Lambeth Hospital – Stockwell; London Bridge Hospital – London (independent) Maudsley Hospital – Camberwell; Memorial Hospital, Woolwich ...
From 1813 to 1955 it was owned and managed by members of the same family. The Old Manor Hospital closed in 2003 and was replaced by Fountain Way, a smaller, modern, psychiatric hospital on part of the same site. In 2014 the site was acquired by Quantum Group for development as a residential estate and the conversion of the main building to a hotel.
Salisbury District Hospital is a large hospital on Odstock Road, Britford, Wiltshire, England, about 1 + 1 ⁄ 2 miles (2.4 km) south of the centre of the city of Salisbury. It is managed by the Salisbury NHS Foundation Trust .
Victoria Hospital in Swindon was established in 1887, [1] at first with 12 beds, increasing to 22 by 1904; it finally closed in 2007. [2]From 1947 to 1974, NHS services in Wiltshire were managed by the South-West Metropolitan Regional Hospital Board (covering New Sarum, Wilton, and the rural districts of Amesbury, Mere and Tisbury, and Salisbury and Wilton), by the South-Western Board ...
The hospital was later much enlarged, with a wing added on one side in either 1845 [3] or 1847 [4] and the other side in 1869, and further 20th-century extensions. [3] Alfred Buckley was the chairman of the infirmary for 13 years in the late 19th century.