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  1. History. The distinctive large white-tiled structure occupies a prominent position on Headington Hill, on the outskirts of Oxford. [1] JR1: This was the initial hospital building, opened in 1972. It houses women's services and neonatology. The second building, JR2, opened in 1979 and is much larger.

  2. Oxford University Hospitals: John Radcliffe Hospital history from the purchase of the Manor House estate in 1919 to present day.

  3. History. The initial proposals to build a hospital in Oxford were put forward at a meeting of the Radcliffe Trustees, who were administering John Radcliffe's estate valued at £4,000, in 1758. The facility was constructed on land given by Thomas Rowney, one of the two members of parliament for Oxford.

  4. The Radcliffe Infirmary became an independent NHS Trust in 1993 and part of the Oxford Radcliffe Hospitals NHS Trust in 1999. The hospital closed in 2006 and the site is now being developed by the University of Oxford.

  5. 18 de ene. de 2007 · The Radcliffe Infirmary, Oxford’s first hospital opened in 1770. It had 277 beds and provided specialist healthcare services across the Thames Valley and beyond. These include neurosurgery and...

  6. The hospital opened in July 1972. Almost immediately the contract for Phase II was signed, and this acute hospital opened in 1979, with extensions continuing to the present day. The most recent extensions were the West Wing, housing services transferred on the closure of the Radcliffe Infirmary, and the Children’s Hospital, both opened in 2007.

  7. The earliest record of the Radcliffe held in the archives is of a plan of drains and cesspits, dating back to 1761 - some nine years before it opened as an Infirmary. The name perpetuates its founder, Dr John Radcliffe, an Oxford graduate who became an eminent medical figure in the seventeenth century, and physician to Mary II, William III and ...