Format • | Manuscript Collection | [X] |
Subject • | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | [X] | • | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(7)
| • | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(5)
| • | Medical care -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(5)
| • | Mount Sinai Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) |
(5)
| • | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Administration. |
(4)
| • | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies and clubs. |
(4)
| • | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(4)
| • | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. |
(4)
| • | Nursing schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(4)
| • | Charitable uses, trusts and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(3)
| • | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(3)
| • | Jewish Women's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) |
(3)
| • | Jewish refugees -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Medical care |
(3)
| • | Young Ladies Hebrew Association for the Care of the Needy Sick (Cleveland, Ohio) |
(3)
| • | Case Western Reserve University. School of Medicine |
(2)
| • | Cleveland General Hospital. |
(2)
| • | Hospitals -- Maternity services -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(2)
| • | MetroHealth Medical Center. |
(2)
| • | MetroHealth Saint Luke's Medical Center. |
(2)
| • | Nurses -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(2)
| • | Philanthropists -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(2)
| • | Saint Luke's Foundation. |
(2)
| • | Saint Luke's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) -- History. |
(2)
| • | Saint Luke's Hospital Association (Cleveland Ohio). |
(2)
| • | Saint Luke's Medical Center. |
(2)
| • | Bars (Drinking establishments) -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Bridges -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Buildings -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Canals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine |
(1)
| • | Case Western Reserve University. School of Medicine. |
(1)
| • | Cemeteries -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Churches -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Commerce. |
(1)
| • | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Genealogy. |
(1)
| • | Cleveland (Ohio). City Infirmary. |
(1)
| • | Cleveland Bar Association. |
(1)
| • | Cleveland City Hospital Society. |
(1)
| • | Cleveland City Hospital. |
(1)
| • | Cleveland Clinic Foundation -- Fire, 1929. |
(1)
| • | Cleveland Clinic Foundation. |
(1)
| • | Cleveland Law Library Association. |
(1)
| • | Clubs -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | College Building and Hospital Association. |
(1)
| • | Crile family. |
(1)
| • | Crile, George Washington, 1864-1943. |
(1)
| • | Crile, Grace. |
(1)
| • | Dwellings -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Elderly poor -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Factories -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Fortification -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Historic sites -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Historical Records Survey (Ohio). |
(1)
| • | Homeless persons -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Hospital benefactors -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Hotels -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Immigrants -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Jewish Community Council (Cleveland, Ohio) |
(1)
| • | Jewish Convalescent Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio). |
(1)
| • | Jewish Women's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio). |
(1)
| • | Jewish lawyers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Kutash, Henry X., 1907-1996. |
(1)
| • | Land titles -- Registration and transfer -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Land titles -- Registration and transfer -- Ohio -- Cuyahoga County. |
(1)
| • | Lawyers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Lodging-houses -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Medical personnel -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. |
(1)
| • | Medicine -- Research -- United States. |
(1)
| • | Mentor Harbor Yachting Club. |
(1)
| • | Methodist Church -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Methodist Episcopal Church -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Military Hospitals -- France. |
(1)
| • | Nurses -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. |
(1)
| • | Orphans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Parks -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Physicians -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. |
(1)
| • | Physicians -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Poor -- Ohio -- Cleveland |
(1)
| • | Prentiss, Elisabeth Severance Allen, 1865-1944. |
(1)
| • | Prentiss, Francis Fleury, 1858-1937. |
(1)
| • | Public health -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Railroads -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Real property -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Real property -- Ohio -- Cuyahoga County. |
(1)
| • | Refugees, Jewish -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Medical care. |
(1)
| • | Registers of births, etc. -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Restaurants -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Roads -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Sailing clubs -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Saint Luke's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) School of Nursing. |
(1)
| • | Saint Luke's Hospital School of Nursing. |
(1)
| • | Schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Scientific expeditions -- Africa. |
(1)
| • | Scientific expeditions -- Central America. |
(1)
| • | Scientific expeditions -- North America. |
(1)
| • | Spanish-American War, 1898 -- Medical care. |
(1)
| • | Street-railroads -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Streets -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Synagogues -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Taverns (Inns) -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Temple-Tifereth Israel (Cleveland, Ohio). |
(1)
| • | Theaters -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | United States. Army. Base Hospital No. 4. |
(1)
| • | United States. Works Progress Administration. |
(1)
| • | Universities and colleges -- Ohio -- Cleveland. |
(1)
| • | Vivisection -- United States. |
(1)
| • | Wilson Street Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) |
(1)
| • | Women in charitable work. |
(1)
| • | World War, 1914-1918 -- Hospitals. |
(1)
| • | World War, 1914-1918 -- Medical care. |
(1)
| • | World War, 1939-1945 -- Medical care. |
(1)
| • | Young Ladies Hebrew Association for the Care of the Needy Sick (Cleveland, Ohio). |
(1)
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| Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 1 | Title: | Cleveland City Hospital Society Records
| | | Creator: | Cleveland City Hospital Society | | | Dates: | 1868-1873 | | | Abstract: | The Cleveland City Hospital Society was established in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1863 by the Ladies' Society of the Old Stone Church, and called the Home for the Friendless. It offered care and assistance to victims of the American Civil War, many of whom were homeless Southern refugees. It was incorporated in 1866 as the Cleveland City Hospital Society, with the aim of founding a hospital. A house on Wilson Street was rented in 1866 and called the Wilson Street Hospital. The Society changed its name to the Wilson Street Hospital Association. Wilson Street Hospital was later renamed Cleveland City Hospital. In 1888 it was renamed Lakeside Hospital. In 1925 Lakeside Hospital joined University Hospitals of Cleveland (now known as University Hospitals Cleveland Medical Center. The collection consists of minutes of the Boards of Trustees of Cleveland City Hospital (1868-1869) and the Wilson Street Hospital Association (1870-1873). Attached to the minute book are several newspaper clippings about the Hospital, ca. 1871. | | | Call #: | MS 3917 | | | Extent: | 0.10 linear feet (1 container) | | | Subjects: | Cleveland City Hospital Society. | Cleveland City Hospital. | Wilson Street Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Women in charitable work.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 2 | Title: | Saint Luke's Hospital Records
| | | Creator: | Saint Luke's Hospital | | | Dates: | 1894-1997 | | | Abstract: | Saint Luke's Hospital began operations as Cleveland General Hospital in 1894 on Woodland Avenue in Cleveland, Ohio. Its facilities were moved to Carnegie Avenue in 1908, and to its present site on Shaker Boulevard in 1927. After a brief merger with MetroHealth Medical Center in the early 1990s, it was sold to Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corporation and its Ohio partner, the Sisters of Charity of Saint Augustine in 1997. The non-profit proceeds of the sale were used to create the Saint Luke's Foundation. The collection consists of agendas, annual reports, articles of incorporation, brochures, budgets, bylaws, calendars, certificates, contracts, correspondence, financial statements, handbooks, indexes, inventories, invitations, ledgers, lists, magazine and newspaper clippings, notes, pamphlets, publications, reports, resolutions, rosters, schedules, scrapbooks, scripts, signage, speech texts, surveys, proceedings, and tax records. | | | Call #: | MS 4875 | | | Extent: | 21.61 linear feet (24 containers and 1 oversize folder) | | | Subjects: | Cleveland General Hospital. | Saint Luke's Hospital Association (Cleveland Ohio). | Saint Luke's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) School of Nursing. | MetroHealth Medical Center. | MetroHealth Saint Luke's Medical Center. | Saint Luke's Medical Center. | Saint Luke's Foundation. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Saint Luke's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) -- History. | Nurses -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Hospitals -- Maternity services -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Philanthropists -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 3 | Title: | City Infirmary, Cleveland, Ohio, Records
| | | Creator: | City Infirmary, Cleveland, Ohio | | | Dates: | 1867-1876 | | | Abstract: | The City Infirmary was established in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1855 to house and assist the poor, aged, mentally ill, and handicapped. The State of Ohio authorized county governments to build and administer poorhouses and infirmaries to provide long-term care for the poor and homeless in 1816. Cuyahoga County was the only county that did not establish a poorhouse, so Cleveland built a combined poorhouse/infirmary in 1827 behind Erie Street Cemetery that accepted referrals from throughout the county. As the population of Cleveland expanded rapidly, its City Council voted in 1849 for a tax levy to pay for a separate workhouse and infirmary. In 1855 the new City Infirmary was built on the site of the current Cleveland Metropolitan General Hospital. A few years later, Cleveland was experiencing the consequences of a national economic panic which included an influx of "inmates" to the City Infirmary that included newborn babies, the elderly, and the infirm. Immediately after the American Civil War, Ohio changed its infirmary law to require the election of infirmary directors and boards, thus injecting politics into the management of the City Infirmary. Cleveland's population doubled between 1860-1870, its economy rapidly industrialized, and its immigrant population increased dramatically. The City Infirmary cared for the poorest, most vulnerable citizens of Cleveland and Cuyahoga County during this era, including destitute individuals and families, the mentally ill, the aged, children too young to be apprenticed, alcoholics, and those suffering from mental and physical disabilities. During the 1870s, Cleveland was again mired in an economic panic that did not begin to ease until 1878. The City Infirmary again experienced a flood of impoverished and ill individuals and families seeking aid. Increasingly, those seeking help at the City Infirmary were recent immigrants to the United States, including Germans, Irish, and Eastern Europeans. At the turn of the century, the City Infirmary was transformed into Cooley Farms which became a national model for service delivery and rehabilitation. The collection consists of one intake ledger. | | | Call #: | MS 5134 | | | Extent: | 0.20 linear feet (1 container) | | | Subjects: | Cleveland (Ohio). City Infirmary. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Public health -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Medical care -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Registers of births, etc. -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Poor -- Ohio -- Cleveland | Elderly poor -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Orphans -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Homeless persons -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Immigrants -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Genealogy.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 4 | Title: | Diana Tittle Mount Sinai Medical Center Research Papers
| | | Creator: | Tittle, Diana | | | Dates: | 1891-2015 | | | Abstract: | Mount Sinai Hospital (1903-2000) had its origins in the Young Ladies Hebrew Association for the Care of the Needy Sick, created in 1892 by nine young women in Cleveland, Ohio. The hospital opened in 1903. In 1996, the nonprofit hospital was sold to a for-profit company, Primary Health Systems (PHS). In March 1999, PHS filed for bankruptcy, and in February 2000, Mount Sinai Hospital closed. The closure of Mount Sinai was a significant development in the history of medicine in the Cleveland area and in the history of the Jewish community. Diana Tittle, author of Welcome to Heights High: The Crippling Politics of Restructuring America's Public Schools and other titles, began research on a book documenting the closure of Mt. Sinai in 2004. Amid concerns that the ongoing consolidation of the health care delivery system and the ongoing national health care debate would overshadow her publication, Tittle reached the decision to pursue an alternative use for her research other than publication. This collection preserves her research in its entirety, including primary source materials she collected and extensive notes from numerous oral history interviews. The collection consists of articles, booklets, brochures, correspondence, drafts, indexes, memoranda, newsletters, newspaper clippings, notes, overviews of specific subjects, reports, a scrapbook, summaries, texts of unpublished material, and other documents related to the donor's work on the history of Mt. Sinai Medical Center. | | | Call #: | MS 5413 | | | Extent: | 8.60 linear feet (10 containers) | | | Subjects: | Case Western Reserve University. School of Medicine | Charitable uses, trusts and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Administration. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish Women's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jewish refugees -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Medical care | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies and clubs. | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Medical care -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Mount Sinai Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Nursing schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Young Ladies Hebrew Association for the Care of the Needy Sick (Cleveland, Ohio)
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 5 | Title: | George Washington Crile Papers
| | | Creator: | Crile, George Washington | | | Dates: | 1888-1946 | | | Abstract: | George Washington Crile (1864-1943) was an internationally-known surgeon and co-founder of the Cleveland Clinic in Cleveland, Ohio. He was also a respected medical scientist whose research and writings included surgical shock, glandular function, blood pressure and transfusion, shell shock, and the effects of wartime surgery. He served in the Army Medical Corps during the Spanish American War. During World War I, he was surgical director at the American Ambulance Hospital in Neuilly, France. In 1917, he organized and trained medical personnel from Lakeside Hospital, Cleveland, Ohio, who then served at United States Army Base Hospital No. 4 in Rouen, France. In 1921, he co-founded the Cleveland Clinic, serving as president (1921-1940) and as a trustee (1921-1936). In 1913, Crile helped found the American College of Surgeons, and was a member and officer not only of that organization, but also of the American Medical Association, American Surgical Association, Royal Academy of Surgeons, and the Royal Academy of Medicine. The collection consists of diaries, correspondence, papers, articles, speeches, notes and memoranda, medical records, account books, invoices and receipts, photographs and postcards, scrapbooks, pamphlets, programs and other memorabilia, passports, blueprints, and newspaper clippings. Includes material on modern medical science, Crile's service during World War I with the United States Army Hospital Base No. 4 (Lakeside Unit) in France, the antivivisection controversy, scientific expeditions to regions of North and Central America and Africa, the founding of the Cleveland Clinic in 1921 and the devastating fire there in 1929, and the genealogy of the Crile family. Also included are notes and other material used in the writing of George Crile: An Autobiography, prepared and edited by Grace Crile and published in 1947. Correspondents include Newton D. Baker, Myron T. Herrick, Charles F. Thwing, Harvey Cushing, Charles Mayo, Lord Berkely Moynihan, Nicholas Senn, and Hans Zinsser. The role that Grace Crile played in her husband's life and work is evident, and her own experiences are documented by her diaries, correspondence, and memoranda. | | | Call #: | MS 2806 | | | Extent: | 28.50 linear feet (73 containers and 1 oversize folder) | | | Subjects: | Crile family. | Crile, George Washington, 1864-1943. | Crile, Grace. | Cleveland Clinic Foundation. | Cleveland Clinic Foundation -- Fire, 1929. | United States. Army. Base Hospital No. 4. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Military Hospitals -- France. | Physicians -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Scientific expeditions -- North America. | Scientific expeditions -- Central America. | Scientific expeditions -- Africa. | Medicine -- Research -- United States. | World War, 1914-1918 -- Medical care. | World War, 1914-1918 -- Hospitals. | World War, 1939-1945 -- Medical care. | Vivisection -- United States. | Spanish-American War, 1898 -- Medical care.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 6 | Title: | Saint Luke's Foundation (Hospital) Records
| | | Creator: | Saint Luke's Hospital | | | Dates: | 1904-1997 | | | Abstract: | Saint Luke's Hospital was founded in Cleveland, Ohio, in 1894 as the Cleveland General Hospital. Its purpose was to provide clinical training for medical students of Wooster University and as a training school for nurses. At the same time, the College Building and Hospital Association was incorporated. The College Building and Hospital Association became the Saint Luke's Hospital Association of the Methodist Episcopal Church in 1904. Medical staff at the hospital affiliated with the medical department of Ohio Wesleyan University. In 1906 Cleveland General Hospital was renamed Saint Luke's Hospital. Cleveland industrialist and philanthropist Francis Fleury Prentiss provided financial support and leadership, serving as president of the association from 1906 until his death in 1937. His wife, Elisabeth Severance Allen Prentiss, succeeded him as president until her death in 1944. The Saint Luke's Hospital School of Nursing closed in 1970. In 1980, the Saint Luke's Hospital Association adopted a long range plan of acquisition and new programs. By 1983, it held leases on five medical buildings and had control over Saint Luke's Hospital, Shaker Medical Center Hospital, and the for-profit Medical Outreach Services, Inc. In 1992, the Saint Luke's system merged with MetroHealth Medical Center, and its name was changed to MetroHealth Saint Luke's Medical Center. The merger dissolved in 1993, but the affiliation continued. In 1993 the name of the hospital changed once more, becoming Saint Luke's Medical Center. In 1997, Saint Luke's Medical Center was sold to Columbia/HCA Healthcare Corporation and its regional partners, the Sisters of Charity of Saint Augustine. The proceeds of this sale and the endowments of the Saint Luke's Hospital Association and Saint Luke's Medical Center were used to create the Saint Luke's Foundation. The collection consists of the institutional records of Saint Luke's Hospital, MetroHealth Saint Luke's Medical Center, Saint Luke's Medical Center, and the Saint Luke's Hospital Association, including historical records, correspondence, contracts and agreements, minutes, financial statements, wills, newspaper clippings, publications, transcripts, reports, and surveys. | | | Call #: | MS 4786 | | | Extent: | 16.41 linear feet (17 containers and 1 oversize container) | | | Subjects: | Prentiss, Francis Fleury, 1858-1937. | Prentiss, Elisabeth Severance Allen, 1865-1944. | Cleveland General Hospital. | Saint Luke's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) -- History. | College Building and Hospital Association. | Saint Luke's Hospital Association (Cleveland Ohio). | Saint Luke's Hospital School of Nursing. | MetroHealth Medical Center. | MetroHealth Saint Luke's Medical Center. | Saint Luke's Medical Center. | Saint Luke's Foundation. | Methodist Episcopal Church -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Methodist Church -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Nurses -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Hospital benefactors -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Hospitals -- Maternity services -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Philanthropists -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 7 | Title: | Henry X. Kutash Papers
| | | Creator: | Henry X. Kutash | | | Dates: | 1923-1987 | | | Abstract: | Henry X. Kutash was an attorney, sportsman, and Jewish community leader in Cleveland, Ohio. After service in the Navy during World War II, he joined the Cleveland law firm of Jones, Day, Cockley & Reavis, where he practiced estate administration, corporate law, and litigation. He was a partner until his retirement in 1973. He was active in the Cleveland Bar Association and the Cleveland Law Library Association. As a sportsman he was an active sailor, participating in races at the Mentor Harbor Yachting Club. He taught sunday school at The Temple-Tifereth Israel and was a volunteer counselor at Camp Wise in the 1930s. He served on the boards of many organizations, including the Jewish Community Federation of Cleveland, the Jewish Convalescent Hospital, Mt. Sinai Hospital, and the Jewish Family Service Association. The collection consists of correspondence, certificates, brochures, financial records, minutes, reports, and notes. | | | Call #: | MS 4799 | | | Extent: | 6.00 linear feet (6 containers) | | | Subjects: | Kutash, Henry X., 1907-1996. | Cleveland Bar Association. | Cleveland Law Library Association. | Jewish Community Council (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jewish Convalescent Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio). | Mentor Harbor Yachting Club. | Mount Sinai Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Temple-Tifereth Israel (Cleveland, Ohio). | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish lawyers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Lawyers -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Sailing clubs -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Synagogues -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 8 | Title: | Mount Sinai Hospital Records
| | | Creator: | Mount Sinai Hospital | | | Dates: | 1903-1996 | | | Abstract: | Mount Sinai Hospital had its origins in the Young Ladies Hebrew Association for the Care of the Needy Sick, created in 1892 by nine young women in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1900, they changed their name to the Jewish Women's Hospital Association. A 29-bed facility, named Mount Sinai Hospital, opened in 1903 at 2373 East 37th Street. In 1916, a new, larger facility was opened at East 105th Street and Ansel Road. Innovations included outpatient clinics for pediatrics and mental hygiene, established in 1915. A nursing school was included. Mount Sinai affiliated with Western Reserve University for the training and education of its nurses in 1930, and its doctors in 1947. Medical research was given a high priority. The Women's and Junior Women's auxiliaries provided important assistance to the medical staff and patients, including a nursery school for children of nurses and volunteers. Mount Sinai served as a major medical resource for Cleveland's east side throughout its history. Expansion included a twelve-story building and a kidney dialysis center (1960), a new laboratory facility (1970), and an outpatient clinic in the Cleveland suburb of Beachwood (1972). A new medical wing was added to the hospital in the 1980s, and in 1993 an integrated medical campus was opened at the Beachwood facility. In 1996, the nonprofit hospital was sold to a for-profit company, Primary Health Systems (PHS). In March 1999, PHS filed for bankruptcy, and in February 2000, Mount Sinai Hospital closed. The collection consists of reports, minutes, histories, newspaper and magazine articles, booklets, financial records, staff publications, bulletins, medical case histories, drawings, and scrapbooks. | | | Call #: | MS 4840 | | | Extent: | 1.60 linear feet (6 containers) | | | Subjects: | Mount Sinai Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jewish Women's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio). | Young Ladies Hebrew Association for the Care of the Needy Sick (Cleveland, Ohio). | Case Western Reserve University. School of Medicine. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charitable uses, trusts, and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Refugees, Jewish -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Medical care. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Administration. | Nursing schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies and clubs. | Medical care -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Nurses -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Physicians -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs. | Medical personnel -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Photographs.
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 9 | Title: | Mount Sinai Hospital Records Series III
| | | Creator: | Mount Sinai Hospital | | | Dates: | 1913-2006 | | | Abstract: | Mount Sinai Hospital (1903-2000) had its origins in the Young Ladies Hebrew Association for the Care of the Needy Sick, created in 1892 by nine young women in Cleveland, Ohio. In 1900, they changed their name to the Jewish Women's Hospital Association. A 29-bed facility, named Mount Sinai Hospital, opened in 1903 at 2373 East 37th Street. In 1916, a new, larger facility was opened at East 105th Street and Ansel Road. Innovations included outpatient clinics for pediatrics and mental hygiene, established in 1915. A nursing school was included. Mount Sinai affiliated with Western Reserve University for the training and education of its nurses in 1930, and its doctors in 1947. Mount Sinai served as a major medical resource for Cleveland's east side throughout its history. A new medical wing was added to the hospital in the 1980s, and in 1993 an integrated medical campus was opened in Beachwood. In 1996, the nonprofit hospital was sold to a for-profit company, Primary Health Systems (PHS). In March 1999, PHS filed for bankruptcy, and in February 2000, Mount Sinai Hospital closed. During the demolition of the Mount Sinai building in 2006, workers uncovered a time capsule that had been placed in the cornerstone of the building during construction in 1915. The time capsule held newspapers, fundraising records, and miscellaneous items related to the construction of the building. Throughout the history of Mount Sinai Hospital, female volunteers provided invaluable assistance to the medical staff and patients. The Women's and Junior Women's Auxiliaries created and staffed a nursery school for the children of nurses and volunteers. They offered classes that trained volunteers to work in outpatient clinics and pediatric wards, and, in addition, organized a gift shop and television rental for patients. In 1997, the auxiliaries were renamed the Mount Sinai Community Partners. The Auxiliaries also published a newsletter, "The Chart," documenting their activities. The collection consists of reports, minutes, booklets, financial records, newspapers, quarterly reports, and a scrapbook. | | | Call #: | MS 5143 | | | Extent: | 2.20 linear feet (3 containers and 1 oversize volume) | | | Subjects: | Case Western Reserve University. School of Medicine | Charitable uses, trusts and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Administration. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish refugees -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Medical care | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies and clubs. | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish Women's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Medical care -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Mount Sinai Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Nursing schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Young Ladies Hebrew Association for the Care of the Needy Sick (Cleveland, Ohio)
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 10 | Title: | Mount Sinai Hospital Records, Series IV
| | | Creator: | Mount Sinai Hospital | | | Dates: | 1905-2000 | | | Abstract: | Mount Sinai Hospital (1903-2000) had its origins in the Young Ladies Hebrew Association for the Care of the Needy Sick, created in 1892 by nine young women in Cleveland, Ohio. A 29-bed facility, named Mount Sinai Hospital, opened in 1903 at 2373 East 37th Street. In 1916, a new, larger facility was opened at East 105th Street and Ansel Road. Mount Sinai affiliated with Western Reserve University for the training and education of its nurses in 1930, and its doctors in 1947. Mount Sinai served as a major medical resource for Cleveland's east side throughout its history. In 1996, the nonprofit hospital was sold to a for-profit company, Primary Health Systems (PHS). In March 1999, PHS filed for bankruptcy, and in February 2000, Mount Sinai Hospital closed. The collection consists of articles, brochures, a bulletin, a certificate, minutes, a press release, a print, a proposal, records of honor, reports, commemorative tiles, a tribute book, a yearbook, as well as several audio and visual materials. | | | Call #: | MS 5430 | | | Extent: | 1.80 linear feet (six containers, including one oversized box and three oversized film reels) | | | Subjects: | Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine | Charitable uses, trusts and foundations -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Charities -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Administration. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jewish Women's Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Jewish refugees -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Medical care | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Societies and clubs. | Jewish women -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland -- Charities. | Jews -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Medical care -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Mount Sinai Hospital (Cleveland, Ohio) | Nursing schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Young Ladies Hebrew Association for the Care of the Needy Sick (Cleveland, Ohio)
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Manuscript Collection | Requires cookie* | 11 | Title: | Historic Sites of Cleveland Records
| | | Creator: | Works Progress Administration | | | Dates: | 1800-1939 | | | Abstract: | The Historic Sites of Cleveland Project was funded through the Works Progress Administration (WPA), which gathered data during the Great Depression (1930s) on historic sites and organizations in and around Cleveland, Ohio. The collection consists of real estate transfer records (1800-1885) for Cleveland and Cuyahoga County, Ohio, and material relating to boardinghouses, bridges, buildings, canals, cemeteries, churches, civic and social institutions, dwellings, educational institutions, hospitals, hotels, military sites, manufacturing and commercial agents, public buildings, railroads, restaurants and saloons, roads, streets, theaters, and halls. | | | Call #: | MS 3675 | | | Extent: | 204.40 linear feet (511 containers) | | | Subjects: | Historical Records Survey (Ohio). | United States. Works Progress Administration. | Factories -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Historic sites -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Land titles -- Registration and transfer -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Land titles -- Registration and transfer -- Ohio -- Cuyahoga County. | Railroads -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Real property -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Real property -- Ohio -- Cuyahoga County. | Roads -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Street-railroads -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Universities and colleges -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Bars (Drinking establishments) -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Bridges -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Buildings -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Canals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cemeteries -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Churches -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Clubs -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Dwellings -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Fortification -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Hospitals -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Taverns (Inns) -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Hotels -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Lodging-houses -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Parks -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Restaurants -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Schools -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Streets -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Theaters -- Ohio -- Cleveland. | Cleveland (Ohio) -- Commerce.
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