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Founded in 1937 as North Mississippi Community Hospital. Name changed to North Mississippi Medical Center in 1967. [35] Total bed numbers include North Mississippi Medical Center Women's Hospital. [36] North Mississippi Medical Center-West Point: West Point: Clay: 49: Level IV: No: Previously known as Ivy Memorial Hospital, then Clay County ...
General Hospital No. 1, Limay, Philippines, April 1942 [10] 2nd General Hospital United States, 12 October 1945 [22] Landstuhl, Germany mid-1990s; General Hospital No. 2, Cabcaben, Philippines, April 1942 [10] 3rd General Hospital, Camp Kilmer, New Jersey, 16 September 1945 [23] 4th General Hospital, end of World War II [24] 5th General Hospital
South Central Regional Medical Center was founded in 1952 and is currently a 285-bed, public not-for-profit hospital located in Laurel, Mississippi. The hospital primarily serves a four-county area: Jones County, Jasper County, Wayne County and Smith County. The stated focus of the South Central Regional Medical Center Health System is to ...
Forrest County is a county located in the U.S. state of Mississippi.As of the 2020 census, the population was 78,158. [2] Its county seat and largest city is Hattiesburg. [3] The county was created from Perry County in 1908 and named in honor of Nathan Bedford Forrest, a Confederate general in the American Civil War and the first Grand Wizard of the Ku Klux Klan.
This is intended to be a complete list of the properties and districts on the National Register of Historic Places in Forrest County, Mississippi, United States. Latitude and longitude coordinates are provided for many National Register properties and districts; these locations may be seen together in a map.
The hospital has been certified by The Joint Commission. [3] In 2009, it employed a total of 1,100 people, including 100 doctors, making it Lowndes County 's largest private employer. [ 4 ] Baptist Golden Triangle is also home to one of the best ambulance services in the state of Mississippi which has received several awards including the ...
The Confederate Armory Site, a.k.a. Jones, McElwain and Company Iron Foundry, is a historic site in Holly Springs, Mississippi, US.It contains the scant ruins of the foundry built there in 1859, converted to an armory in 1861 by the Confederate States Army, used as a hospital by the Union Army in November 1862, and razed by the Confederates a month later.
The parcel of land on which UMMC's University Hospital sits was once the site of the Mississippi Insane Asylum, [4] which moved its operations in 1935 to Whitfield, Miss., and became Mississippi State Hospital. [5] The bodies of perhaps seven thousand patients have been found on campus in unmarked graves. [6]