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The former Good Samaritan Baptist Church in South Richmond, Virginia. South Richmond is an area within the city of Richmond in the U.S. state of Virginia . It is on the south side of the James River , across from Richmond's downtown.
WellSpan Health is an American integrated health system located in South-Central Pennsylvania and parts of northern Maryland.Headquartered in York, Pennsylvania and employing about 20,000 people, WellSpan Health operates eight hospitals (including a surgical hospital and a behavioral health hospital): WellSpan York Hospital, WellSpan Gettysburg Hospital, WellSpan Ephrata Community Hospital ...
The system includes Good Samaritan Regional Medical Center in Suffern, New York, Bon Secours Community Hospital in Port Jervis, New York, and St. Anthony Community Hospital in Warwick, New York. On May 20, 2015, Westchester Medical Center in Valhalla, New York, announced that it would become the majority corporate member of BSCHS. [1]
Samaritan Ministries International says it has 900 members in New Mexico and 270,000 nationwide who share approximately $30 million per month to cover one another's medical costs. ...
The society continued to grow throughout the Great Depression, nearing the end of the 1930s with facilities in ten states and 27 different locations.Because of financial difficulties and a rift in philosophy within the society, the board of directors voted to split the society into two separate organizations: The Evangelical Lutheran Good Samaritan Society and Lutheran Hospitals and Homes ...
Police said a 50-year-old Blue Spings man was the “Good Samaritan” killed while trying to help others involved in a crash on Interstate 70 in Independence this week.
Thomas Fortune Ryan (October 17, 1851 – November 23, 1928) was an American tobacco, insurance and transportation magnate. Although he lived in New York City for much of his adult career, Ryan was perhaps the greatest benefactor of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Richmond in the decades before the Great Depression.
The House of the Good Samaritan (sometimes called the Boston Good Samaritan Hospital) [1] was a charitable, Boston hospital founded by Anne Smith Robbins in 1860. It accepted its first patients in 1861 and was established to care for destitute, chronically ill women and children.