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  2. St. John's Rehab Hospital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._John's_Rehab_Hospital

    Officially opening in 1937, St. John's Rehab's origins date back to the 1884 founding of the Sisterhood of St. John the Divine, Canada's only indigenous Anglican women's religious order. During the Riel Rebellion in Saskatchewan in 1885, the Sisters were called upon to manage a hospital being organized in Moose Jaw to care for those wounded in ...

  3. New York Foundling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/New_York_Foundling

    The Foundling: The Story of the New York Foundling Hospital (2001) Carolee R. Inskeep. The New York Foundling Hospital: An Index to Its Federal, State, and Local Census Records, 1879–1925 (Baltimore, 1995) Sisters of Charity. The New York Foundling Hospital: Its Foundress and Its Place in the Community (1944),

  4. List of hospitals in Toronto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_hospitals_in_Toronto

    Wellesley Hospital (1942–2001); Central Hospital 1957 as a private care centre and later became Sherbourne Health Centre in 2003. [1]The Doctor's Hospital (1953–1997) – merged with Toronto Western Hospital in 1996, merged again with Toronto General Hospital and closed in 1997; site at 340 College Street now home to Kensington Health, a long-term care facility and hospice for seniors. [2]

  5. Sister Mary Irene FitzGibbon - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sister_Mary_Irene_FitzGibbon

    Sister Irene (born Catherine Rosamund Fitzgibbon; May 12, 1823 – August 14, 1896) was an American nun who founded the New York Foundling Hospital in 1869, at a time when abandoned infants were routinely sent to almshouses with the sick and insane.

  6. St. John's Hospital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._John's_Hospital

    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 ...

  7. Brooklyn Jewish Hospital and Medical Center - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Brooklyn_Jewish_Hospital...

    Jewish Hospital was forced into bankruptcy, reorganized, and on December 16, 1982 [10] merged with St. John's, another struggling hospital. [11] The new name was Interfaith Medical Center. [10] Each site, situated "11 blocks apart" [10] from one another, remained open. [11] [12]

  8. St. John's Episcopal Hospital - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._John's_Episcopal_Hospital

    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.

  9. St. John's Episcopal Hospital South Shore - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._John's_Episcopal...

    In 1987 the 300-bed hospital installed a dairy kosher kitchen. [10] Peninsula Hospital, which in 2006 a state agency wanted St. Johns to absorb, [11] closed in 2012. This closing left St. John's, whose emergency room "was last renovated in the 1960s" [12] as the only hospital in Far Rockaway.