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    9 matches on "Hospital buildings"
    Springfield City Hospital
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    Springfield City Hospital  Save
    Description: The photograph shows the entire Springfield City Hospital. The building is done in the Art Deco style. The back of the photo reads, "City Hospital, at East High St. and Burnett Road, is a modernly-equipped hospital, of Modern Classic design, built in 1932, at an approximate cost of two million dollars, in buildings and complete equipment". The Sprinfield City Hospital or Mercy Hospital was located at the intersection of East High Street and South Burdett Road. The site is now the home of the Springfield Regional Medical Center. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B13F05_028_001
    Subjects: Hospital Architecture--Ohio--Pictorial works.; Hospital buildings; Hospitals--History--Ohio
    Places: Springfield (Ohio); Clark County (Ohio)
     
    Nurses Home at the Springfield City Hospital
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    Nurses Home at the Springfield City Hospital  Save
    Description: The back of the photograph reads: "Clark Co. Sp[r]ingfield, O., April 28, 1937. NURSES' HOME, adjacent on the south to the City Hospital, at High St. and Burnett Road, is Modern Institutional Classic in its plan of architecture, built on lines of marked simplicity, and thoroughly modern in all its appointments and equipment, [sic] completed in 1932." The Springfield City Hospital or Mercy Hospital was located at the intersection of East High Street and South Burnett Road. The site is now the home of the Springfield Regional Medical Center. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B13F05_045_001
    Subjects: Hospital Architecture--Ohio--Pictorial works.; Hospital buildings; Hospitals--History--Ohio; Chimneys
    Places: Springfield (Ohio); Clark County (Ohio)
     
    United States Industrial Reformatory hospital photograph
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    United States Industrial Reformatory hospital photograph  Save
    Description: The United States Industrial Reformatory in Chillicothe, Ohio opened to inmates in January, 1926 after being authorized in 1923. Until 1929 when Congress approved $3,000,000 in funding for permanent buildings, inmates were housed in the repurposed buildings of Camp Sherman, a World War I military training camp. The Camp Sherman quarters included the brick superintendent’s house and a wooden chapel, as well as temporary buildings made up of six dormitories, dining room, kitchen, and auditorium. Prisoner activities consisted of four hours of school daily, viewing movies three times a week, and access to a library and 50 bed hospital. Construction of the new reformatory facilities began in 1928 and was completed in 1936. The new reformatory facilities were to include a receiving building, one inside cell house, two outside cell houses and eight dormitories, as well as a hospital building, mess hall, warehouse, six shops, and a school building and auditorium. In the mid-1930’s a foundry and brick plant opened at the reformatory as part of the Federal Prison Industries (FPI). Items manufactured at the reformatory were sold to the Federal Government. The reformatory is now known as the Chillicothe Correctional Institution. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B02F11_012_1
    Subjects: Chillicothe (Ross County, Ohio)--History; Chillicothe Correctional Institution (Chillicothe, Ohio); Reformatories--Ohio; Hospital buildings; Ohio--History--Pictorial works; Federal Writers' Project
    Places: Chillicothe (Ohio); Ross County (Ohio)
     
    United States Industrial Reformatory hospital interior photograph
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    United States Industrial Reformatory hospital interior photograph  Save
    Description: The United States Industrial Reformatory in Chillicothe, Ohio opened to inmates in January, 1926 after being authorized in 1923. Until 1929 when Congress approved $3,000,000 in funding for permanent buildings, inmates were housed in the repurposed buildings of Camp Sherman, a World War I military training camp. The Camp Sherman quarters included the brick superintendent’s house and a wooden chapel, as well as temporary buildings made up of six dormitories, dining room, kitchen, and auditorium. Prisoner activities consisted of four hours of school daily, viewing movies three times a week, and access to a library and 50 bed hospital. Construction of the new reformatory facilities began in 1928 and was completed in 1936. The new reformatory facilities were to include a receiving building, one inside cell house, two outside cell houses and eight dormitories, as well as a hospital building, mess hall, warehouse, six shops, and a school building and auditorium. In the mid-1930’s a foundry and brick plant opened at the reformatory as part of the Federal Prison Industries (FPI). Items manufactured at the reformatory were sold to the Federal Government. The reformatory is now known as the Chillicothe Correctional Institution. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B02F11_015_1
    Subjects: Chillicothe (Ross County, Ohio)--History; Chillicothe Correctional Institution (Chillicothe, Ohio); Reformatories--Ohio; Hospital buildings; Ohio--History--Pictorial works; Federal Writers' Project
    Places: Chillicothe (Ohio); Ross County (Ohio)
     
    Cincinnati Children's Hospital photograph
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    Cincinnati Children's Hospital photograph  Save
    Description: Reverse reads: "Entrance to the Childrens Hospital, Eland Ave., City." Entrance to 1926 building, located on present site of Children's Hospital, Elland and Bethesda Aves., Cincinnati. In Cincinnati, the area between Martin Luther King Drive East and Erkenbrecher Avenue between Burnett Avenue and Eden Ave has had hospitals since the late 1800’s, and is sometimes called Pill Hill by the locals. Many of the original buildings have been torn down to make way for newer, more modern facilities. The area between Goodman Street and Elland Avenue was the General (City) Hospital and was constructed between 1909 and 1915 and had 25 buildings on 65 acres of land. It was built to replace the overcrowded Commercial Hospital that was downtown. University Hospital, the teaching hospital of the University of Cincinnati now occupies this land. Children Hospital was, and still is located from Elland Drive to Erkenbrecher Avenue, but has since been renamed to the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. The hospital was founded in 1883 and was called The Hospital of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and once was located at Eleanor Place and Mason Street, the present site of the Christ Church Hospital. A five story building, built in 1928 on the corner of Elland Avenue and Bethesda Avenue (now called Albert Sabin Way) which was the first built on its’ present site, was demolished in 2003. Inscription reads: "I will bind the broken / I will strengthen the sick" View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B02F14_032_1
    Subjects: Cincinnati (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc.; Hospitals--Ohio--Cincinnati; Cincinnati. Children's Hospital
    Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
     
    Children Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio
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    Children Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio  Save
    Description: In Cincinnati, the area between Martin Luther King Drive East and Erkenbrecher Avenue between Burnett Avenue and Eden Ave has had hospitals since the late 1800’s, and is sometimes called Pill Hill by the locals. Many of the original buildings have been torn down to make way for newer, more modern facilities. The area between Goodman Street and Elland Avenue was the General (City) Hospital and was constructed between 1909 and 1915 and had 25 buildings on 65 acres of land. It was built to replace the overcrowded Commercial Hospital that was downtown. University Hospital, the teaching hospital of the University of Cincinnati now occupies this land. Children Hospital was, and still is located from Elland Drive to Erkenbrecher Avenue, but has since been renamed to the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. The hospital was founded in 1883 and was called The Hospital of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and once was located at Eleanor Place and Mason Street, the present site of the Christ Church Hospital. A five story building, built in 1928 on the corner of Elland Avenue and Bethesda Avenue (now called Albert Sabin Way) which was the first built on its’ present site, was demolished in 2003. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B02F14_031_1
    Subjects: Cincinnati (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc.; Hospitals--Ohio--Cincinnati; Cincinnati. Children's Hospital
    Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
     
    Children Hospital from General Hospital
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    Children Hospital from General Hospital  Save
    Description: In Cincinnati, the area between Martin Luther King Drive East and Erkenbrecher Avenue between Burnett Avenue and Eden Ave has had hospitals since the late 1800’s, and is sometimes called Pill Hill by the locals. Many of the original buildings have been torn down to make way for newer, more modern facilities. The area between Goodman Street and Elland Avenue was the General (City) Hospital and was constructed between 1909 and 1915 and had 25 buildings on 65 acres of land. It was built to replace the overcrowded Commercial Hospital that was downtown. University Hospital, the teaching hospital of the University of Cincinnati now occupies this land. Children Hospital was, and still is located from Elland Drive to Erkenbrecher Avenue, but has since been renamed to the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. The hospital was founded in 1883 and was called The Hospital of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and once was located at Eleanor Place and Mason Street, the present site of the Christ Church Hospital. A five story building, built in 1928 on the corner of Elland Avenue and Bethesda Avenue (now called Albert Sabin Way) which was the first built on its’ present site, was demolished in 2003. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B02F14_030_1
    Subjects: Cincinnati (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc.; Hospitals--Ohio--Cincinnati; Cincinnati. Children's Hospital
    Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
     
    Children Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio
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    Children Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio  Save
    Description: Caption reads “Children Hospital near General Hospital, Cincinnati, Ohio” In Cincinnati, the area between Martin Luther King Drive East and Erkenbrecher Avenue between Burnett Avenue and Eden Ave has had hospitals since the late 1800’s, and is sometimes called Pill Hill by the locals. Many of the original buildings have been torn down to make way for newer, more modern facilities. The area between Goodman Street and Elland Avenue was the General (City) Hospital and was constructed between 1909 and 1915 and had 25 buildings on 65 acres of land. It was built to replace the overcrowded Commercial Hospital that was downtown. University Hospital, the teaching hospital of the University of Cincinnati now occupies this land. Children Hospital was, and still is located from Elland Drive to Erkenbrecher Avenue, but has since been renamed to the Cincinnati Children’s Hospital Medical Center. The hospital was founded in 1883 and was called The Hospital of the Protestant Episcopal Church, and once was located at Eleanor Place and Mason Street, the present site of the Christ Church Hospital. A five story building, built in 1928 on the corner of Elland Avenue and Bethesda Avenue (now called Albert Sabin Way) which was the first built on its’ present site, was demolished in 2003. It is unclear which building this photograph shows, but it is not the original building of Children’s Hospital, which is much bigger, with several wings. More information needed as to exactly which building this is. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B02F14_029_1
    Subjects: Cincinnati (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc.; Hospitals--Ohio--Cincinnati; Cincinnati. Children's Hospital
    Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
     
    Good Samaritan Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio
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    Good Samaritan Hospital Cincinnati, Ohio  Save
    Description: Good Samaritan Hospital was started in 1852 by the Sister of Charity for the Saint John's Hospital for Invalids and was located in and old school building at the corner of Broadway Street and Woodward Street. They then moved to a larger building located at 3rd Street and Plum Street and called Saint John's Hospital. In 1866, money was donated for the sisters to buy the old Marine Hospital at Locke Street and Sixth Streets. The building in this photograph (ca. 1935-1943) is of the then newer facility that was completed in 1915 in the Cincinnati area of Clifton. Two wings were added in 1926, which were replaced in 1982. 1927 and 1945 saw additions to the nurses residences, to accommodate the nursing school which became the nursing department for the College of Mount Saint Joseph. View on Ohio Memory.
    Image ID: SA1039AV_B02F14_035_1
    Subjects: Cincinnati (Ohio)--Buildings, structures, etc.; Hospital architecture; Hospitals--Ohio--Cincinnati; Ohio--History--Pictorial works; Federal Writers' Project
    Places: Cincinnati (Ohio); Hamilton County (Ohio)
     
      9 matches on "Hospital buildings"
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