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Having been built in 1903 as St. Joseph's Parochial School, that building was renamed Wheatley-Provident Hospital and repurposed as Kansas City's first hospital for Black people. It was led by Dr. Perry and his wife Fredericka Douglass Sprague Perry, who was the daughter of Rosetta Douglass and granddaughter of Frederick Douglass. [5]
Providence Medical Center – Kansas City; ... Rainbow Mental Health Facility – Kansas City; Topeka State Hospital – Topeka (closed in 1997) References
Providence Hospital may refer to: Providence Hospital (Columbia, South Carolina) USA Health Providence Hospital in Mobile, Alabama; Providence Hospital (Southfield), Michigan; Providence Hospital (Washington, D.C.) in Washington, D.C. Providence Alaska Medical Center in Anchorage, Alaska; Providence Behavioral Health Hospital in Holyoke ...
Providence Health & Services is a not-for-profit Catholic healthcare system headquartered in Renton, Washington.. The health system includes 51 hospitals, more than 800 non-acute facilities, and numerous assisted living facilities in the western half of the United States (Alaska, Washington, Oregon, California, Montana, New Mexico, and Texas).
Saint Luke's Health System is an Episcopal Church non-profit hospital network [1] in the bi-state Kansas City metro area, located in northeast Kansas and northwest Missouri. . With over 12,000 local employees, it is the third largest private employer in the Kansas City met
Saint Luke's Health System - Kansas City; St. Luke's Hospital - Chesterfield; Saint Luke's Hospital - Kansas City; Saint Luke's North Hospital–Barry Road - Kansas City; Saint Luke's North Hospital–Smithville - Smithville; Saint Mary's Health Center - Jefferson City; Saint Mary's Hospital of Blue Springs - Blue Springs
Saint Luke's North Hospital–Barry Road Campus is an 84-bed hospital located at 5830 Northwest Barry Road in Kansas City, Missouri. The hospital first opened in 1989. The hospital first opened in 1989.
The origins of University Health Truman Medical Center began in 1870 with the construction of City Hospital at 22nd Street and McCoy Avenue (now Kenwood Avenue) in Kansas City. [4] Voters approved a bond issue in 1903 to fund the construction of a new larger General Hospital because the 175-bed hospital was deemed insufficient for the growing city.