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This is a list of hospitals in the U.S. state of Vermont, sorted by founding date.[1]
Founded | Hospital | City | County | Beds | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1834 | Brattleboro Retreat | Brattleboro | Windham | ||
1879 | University of Vermont Medical Center | Burlington | Chittenden | 620 | |
1896 | Rutland Regional Medical Center | Rutland City | Rutland | 144 | |
1903 | Gifford Medical Center | Randolph | Orange | 25 | |
1904 | Brattleboro Memorial Hospital | Brattleboro | Windham | 61 | |
1914 | Springfield Hospital | Springfield | Windsor | ||
1918 | Southwestern Vermont Medical Center | Bennington | Bennington | 99 | |
1919 | North Country Hospital | Newport City | Orleans | 25 | |
1925 | Porter Medical Center | Middlebury | Addison | 45 | |
1932 | Copley Hospital | Morrisville | Lamoille | ||
1933 | Mount Ascutney Hospital | Windsor | Windsor | 35 (25 acute, 10 inpatient rehab) | Operated out of the Thomas Emerson-Edwin Stoughton House in the Windsor Village Historical District from its founding in 1933 until 1972 when the current building was built. |
1938 | White River Junction VA Medical Center | White River Junction | Windsor | 74[2] | |
1949 | Grace Cottage Hospital | Townshend | Windham | 19 | |
1968 | Central Vermont Medical Center | Berlin | Washington | 122 | Founded in 1968 following the merger of the Heaton Hospital in Montpelier, the Barre City Hospital in Barre and the Mayo Memorial Hospital in Northfield. |
1972[3] | Northeastern Vermont Regional Hospital | St. Johnsbury | Caledonia | 75 | Opened in 1972 following the merger of St. Johnsbury's two former hospitals, the St. Johnsbury Hospital and the Brightlook Hospital. |
1978 | Northwestern Medical Center | St. Albans City | Franklin | Founded in 1978 following the merger of the old St. Albans Hospital and the Kerbs Memorial Hospital Hospital, though the St. Albans Hospital's services wouldn't be fully consolidated until 1996. Built on the former site of the Kerbs Memorial Hospital. | |
2014 | Vermont Psychiatric Care Hospital | Berlin | Washington | 25 | Built as a replacement for the Vermont State Hospital in Waterbury, which closed in 2011 due to flooding from Tropical Storm Irene. |
Founded | Closed | Hospital | City | County | Beds | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1883 | 1996 | St. Albans Hospital[4] | St. Albans | Franklin | Merged with the Kerbs Memorial Hospital also in St. Albans in 1978 and formed the Northwestern Medical Center. However, the St. Albans Hospital remained open until 1996 when it was completely consolidated with the Northwestern Medical Center and the building was purchased by Bellows Free Academy for one dollar, plus the cost of land. | |
1891 | 2011 | Vermont State Hospital | Waterbury | Washington | 54 | Closed in 2011 due to flooding as a result of Tropical Storm Irene. |
1895 | 1972 | St Johnsbury Hospital | St. Johnsbury | Caledonia | Closed in 1972 after it merged with the Brightlook Hospital to form the Northeastern Vermont Regional Hospital. | |
1896 | 1973 | Proctor Hospital[5] | Proctor | Rutland | First hospital opened in 1896 and was used until 1904. The second hospital building was built in 1904 and was used until it closed in 1973 and was later demolished. | |
1896[6] | 1968 | Heaton Hospital[7] | Montpelier | Washington | Closed in 1968 after it merged with the Barre City Hospital and the Mayo Memorial Hospital to form the Central Vermont Medical Center. Has been used as Heaton Woods Residential Care since 1995. | |
1899 | 1972 | Brightlook Hospital[8] | St. Johnsbury | Caledonia | Closed in 1972 after it merged with the St. Johnsbury Hospital to form the Northeastern Vermont Regional Hospital. | |
1907 | 1968 | Barre City Hospital | Barre | Washington | Closed in 1968 after it merged with the Heaton Hospital and the Mayo Memorial Hospital to form the Central Vermont Medical Center. | |
1907 | 1973 | Holden Memorial Hospital[9] | Hardwick | Caledonia | Also known as the John Holden Hospital, the John Holden Memorial Hospital and simply the Hardwick Hospital. | |
1907 | 1966 | Vermont Sanatorium[10] | Pittsford | Rutland | It was a tuberculosis hospital. It closed in 1966 and the building was repurposed as the Vermont Police Academy in 1971.[11] | |
1912 | 1990[12] | Rockingham Memorial Hospital | Bellows Falls | Windham | The first hospital opened in 1912, had 14 beds and was used until 1915.[13] The second hospital opened in 1915, had 25 beds and was used until 1921. The third hospital opened in 1921 and was used until 1953-54. The fourth hospital was built and opened in 1953-54 and was in use until it closed in October 1990. The first and second buildings are still standing and being used as residential homes. The third hospital building was demolished shortly after the fourth one was built. The fourth hospital building is now being used as a health clinic known as the Rockingham Health Center.[14] | |
1915 | 1993 | Brandon State School | Brandon | Rutland | A psychiatric school and hospital. Historically known as the Brandon Training School and the Vermont State School for Feeble Minded Children. It closed in 1993 and its campus buildings have since been repurposed into apartments and commercial facilities. | |
1919 | 1963 | Washington County Tuberculosis Hospital[15] | Barre | Washington | 40 | Also called the Washington County Sanatorium. It was a tuberculosis hospital. |
1923 | 1973 | Caverly Preventorium[16] | Pittsford | Rutland | It was a tuberculosis hospital for children and was adjacent to the Vermont Sanatorium. It was later renamed the Caverly Child Health Center and served as a pediatric nursing home until it closed in 1973. Since 1980, the building has been used by the Pittsford Fire Department for an annual haunted house for Halloween. | |
1936 | 1968 | Mayo Memorial Hospital[17] | Northfield | Washington | 29 | It was a osteopathic hospital. It closed in 1968 after it merged with the Barre City Hospital and the Heaton Hospital to form the Central Vermont Medical Center. |
1950 | 1978 | Kerbs Memorial Hospital | St. Albans City | Franklin | Closed and demolished in 1978 after it merged with the St. Albans Hospital and formed the Northwestern Medical Center, which sites on the former site of Kerbs Memorial Hospital. |
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