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Baker Park is named after Dr. Albert Henry Baker (1883–1953), the director of a tuberculosis (TB) sanitorium located on the same site from 1920 to 1979 and demolished in 1989 by Alberta Public Works. [2] The federal government's Soldiers' Civil Re-establishment Department constructed the first buildings in 1918.
OSU writes that the first osteopathic hospital in Tulsa was opened in 1924 at 14th and Peoria Ave. by C. D. Heasley, who named it the Tulsa Clinic Hospital. Three years later, Healey moved the facility to a 25-bed converted apartment building at 1321 South Peoria. The hospital was later sold and renamed Byrne Memorial Hospital. [3]
Cancer Treatment Centers of America – Tulsa; Carl Albert Community Mental Health Center – McAlester Carnegie Tri-County Municipal Hospital – Carnegie, Oklahoma Cedar Ridge Hospital – Oklahoma City
The building, originally named "Athol," was constructed in 1880 as a residence for Charles J. Baker and designed by Baltimore architect T. Buckler Ghequier. [ 1 ] It was purchased in 1900 by Dr Alfred Gundry as a private sanitarium for the "care of nervous disorders of women that required treatment and rest away from home."
Baker Memorial Hospital, affiliated with the Massachusetts General Hospital, was the first "white collar hospital" in Boston, Massachusetts in the United States. [1] It was meant to treat people from the middle class receive hospital care on an inpatient basis at affordable rates.
Briggs Sanitorium is a former sanitorium (also listed as Briggs' Sanitarium) developed in 1896 by Dr. J.R. Briggs, and located at the corner of Jefferson and Tyler streets, in Oak Cliff, Texas. Noted as the first hospital built in Oak Cliff, it included five wings, containing fifty-two rooms. In 1905, its medical director was J. R. Briggs. [1]
Stevens & Wilkinson (Atlanta) and Black, West & Wozencraft (Tulsa) The 110 West 7th Building is a commercial high-rise building in Tulsa, Oklahoma . The building rises 388 feet (118 m), [ 1 ] making it the 7th-tallest building in the city, and the 14th-tallest building in the U.S. state of Oklahoma .
1989 - Tulsa became the Design Center for the Hazardous, Toxic, and Radiological Waste program for the entire five state Southwestern Division. [5] 1995 - Tulsa District, working under the Federal Emergency Management Agency, responds to the bombing attack on the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City. The Corps primary role was public works ...