The Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital | |
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Cone Health | |
Geography | |
Location | Greensboro, North Carolina, United States |
Coordinates | 36°05′32″N 79°47′08″W / 36.09222°N 79.78563°WCoordinates: 36°05′32″N 79°47′08″W / 36.09222°N 79.78563°W |
Organization | |
Care system | Public |
Hospital type | General |
Services | |
Emergency department | Level II |
Beds | 535 Licensed Beds |
History | |
Founded | 1953 |
Links | |
Website | http://www.conehealth.com/moses-cone-hospital/ |
Lists | Hospitals in North Carolina |
Other links | List of hospitals in North Carolina |
The Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital, also known as Moses Cone Hospital, is a 535 bed tertiary care facility located in Greensboro, North Carolina. The hospital opened in 1953 on North Elm Street as a 310 bed community hospital. Moses Cone Hospital is the central facility of Cone Health, a network of medical care facilities serving Guilford County, North Carolina and surrounding areas. As of 2014, its president is Mickey Foster.
Cone has an emergency department recognized as a Level II trauma center, which as of 2005-2007, served approximately 65,000 arrivals per year.
Funding for a hospital began after the 1908 death of Moses H. Cone, a North Carolina magnate who founded the Cone Mills textile company. In 1911, Bertha Cone, the widow of Moses, established a trust fund that would establish a hospital to serve Greensboro and memorialize her late husband. The trust fund stated that "No patient should be refused admittance because of inability to pay.". After Bertha Cone's death in 1947, her inheritance went to the trust fund that would eventually established the hospital. Construction began in 1949 and the facility opened on February 20, 1953.
Cone was a segregated, whites-only hospital until 1963, when the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals, in Simkins v. Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital, held the hospital's acceptance of federal funds prohibited it from discriminating on the basis of race, an opinion influenced Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964.
In the late 1970s, a dispute over payments after the completion of a new wing eventually reached the U.S. Supreme Court. By a 6-3 margin, the justices required the hospital to arbitrate with its contractor. The case, Moses H. Cone Memorial Hospital v. Mercury Constr. Corp., set some precedents in civil procedure, clarifying the circumstances under which a federal court can decline jurisdiction when there is a similar case in state court and when a stay may be appealed as a final judgement.