Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Bayview Asylum. Founded in 1773, the Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center, is one of the oldest, continuous health care institutions on the East Coast. [3] From its inception as the "Baltimore County and Town Almshouse," for the impoverished, It was initially located half a mile west of the city, however, gradual expansion of the city caused a number of relocations.
Providence Sacred Heart Medical Center: Spokane, Washington: 1857 Lenox Hill Hospital: New York City, New York 1857 St. Mary's Medical Center San Francisco, California St. Mary's Medical Center (SMMC) is the oldest continuously operating hospital and the first Catholic hospital in San Francisco. St.
The site was originally home to the Washington Lawrence mansion in the late 1800s until 1948 when it was sold to Dr. Richard Sheppard. It served as an osteopathic medical center from 1948 until it closed its doors on March 1, 1981. [2] It was added to the National Register of Historic Places on August 27, 1974. The former Washington Lawrence ...
Liberty Medical Center; Lutheran Hospital; Memorial of Cumberland; Pine Bluff State Hospital; Rosewood Center; Sacred Heart; University of Maryland Shore Medical Center at Dorchester [6] University Specialty Hospital; Walter P Carter Center; Washington County Hospital; Women's Hospital
The wider Johns Hopkins Medicine system includes several other regional medical centers, including Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center on Eastern Avenue in East Baltimore, Howard County General Hospital near Ellicott City, Suburban Hospital in Bethesda, Sibley Memorial Hospital in Washington, D.C., and Johns Hopkins All Children's Hospital in ...
Excluded from this new, active treatment program at the all-white Springfield Hospital Center were the African-American Crownsville TB patients. On October 29, 1915, two hundred Baltimore City patients were transferred from Bayview Medical Center (now Johns Hopkins Bayview Medical Center).
He was member of the board of trustees of the McDonough Educational Fund and Institute (for the modern McDonough School) from 1867 to 1871, serving as president in 1871, and member and president of the board for Bay View Asylum (later renamed Baltimore City Hospitals, then Francis Scott Key Medical Center, and today as Johns Hopkins Bayview ...
Bayview Asylum [1] "Johns Hopkins plans $469 million expansion and modernization of its Bayview Medical Center" [2] Pictures of Bayview Hospital and Asylum [3] "Hopkins unveils Key Pavilion, renames eastern site Bayview" [4] The History of the Bayview Medical Center [5] Clinical Excellence at the Bayview Medical Center [6] Adding citations