UNC Health Blue Ridge

Hospital in North Carolina, United States
35°43′36″N 81°39′16″W / 35.726647°N 81.6545336°W / 35.726647; -81.6545336OrganizationTypeCommunityNetworkUNC HealthServicesBeds305Helipad92NCHistoryFormer name(s)Grace Hospital; Carolinas HealthCare System Blue RidgeOpenedAugust 1, 1906LinksListsHospitals in North Carolina

UNC Health Blue Ridge[1] is a not-for-profit hospital located in Morganton, North Carolina, United States, and serving Burke County, North Carolina. The hospital anchors UNC Health Blue Ridge system of healthcare providers that includes other facilities such as Valdese, Grace Ridge Retirement Community, Phifer Wellness Center and other physician practices.

History

Grace Hospital began as a mission of the Episcopal Church. In 1901, Walter Hughson and his wife, Mary Herbert Hughson, moved to Morganton where Hughson served as rector of Grace Episcopal Church. The church hired Maria Purdon Allen from Philadelphia in 1903 as visiting nurse to the missions. After Allen wrote an article in a national church publication, “The Spirit of the Missions,” about the need for a hospital in the area which she believed could be built for $3,000, friends and strangers began sending money for the project. Mrs. George Zabriskie Gray of New York sent $3,000 in memory of her daughter Grace then another $2,000 of which $1,000 was designated to build a ward for African-Americans. Hughson took charge of the project, and the first Grace Hospital was built on King Street in Morganton across from the Episcopal rectory. The hospital opened on Aug. 1, 1906, with two white wards, one male and one female, with four beds each and a crib and an annex for black patients with two wards of four beds each. The hospital had an operating room and a dispensary. Mrs. Hughson became the first superintendent of the hospital and devoted considerable time and energy to improving the institution's finances and facilities.[2]

Kathy C. Bailey is the president and chief executive officer of UNC Health Blue Ridge.[3]

References

  1. ^ "Carolinas HealthCare System Blue Ridge Unveils New Name". The News Herald. 2014-05-05. Retrieved 2016-05-11.
  2. ^ "Blue Ridge HealthCare Foundation - History of Our Leaders". www.brhcfoundation.org.
  3. ^ "Bailey Selected to Lead Blue Ridge HealthCare". Hickory Daily Record. 2013-01-17. Retrieved 2016-05-11.
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UNC Health Care
  • UNC Medical Center (Hillsborough campus; N.C. Memorial Hospital, N.C. Children’s Hospital, N.C. Neurosciences Hospital, N.C. Women’s Hospital)
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  • UNC Health Blue Ridge (Morganton campus; Valdese campus)
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