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St. John's Presbyterian Church (San Francisco, California)

1866 establishments in CaliforniaChurches completed in 1905Churches in San FranciscoChurches on the National Register of Historic Places in CaliforniaGothic Revival church buildings in California
National Register of Historic Places in San FranciscoPresbyterian churches in CaliforniaRichmond District, San FranciscoSan Francisco Designated LandmarksShingle Style architecture in California
St Johns Presbyterian Church (San Francisco) 2
St Johns Presbyterian Church (San Francisco) 2

Saint John's Presbyterian Church is a historic Presbyterian church at 25 Lake Street and 201 Arguello Boulevard in the Presidio Heights—northern Richmond District of San Francisco, California. It was designed in a Gothic Revival Shingle Style and completed in 1905. The building was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1996.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article St. John's Presbyterian Church (San Francisco, California) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

St. John's Presbyterian Church (San Francisco, California)
Sacramento Street, San Francisco

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 37.786666666667 ° E -122.45861111111 °
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Address

Sacramento Street 3983;3985
94118 San Francisco
California, United States
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St Johns Presbyterian Church (San Francisco) 2
St Johns Presbyterian Church (San Francisco) 2
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Hahnemann Medical College of the Pacific
Hahnemann Medical College of the Pacific

Hahnemann Medical College of the Pacific was an American homeopathic medical school in San Francisco, California. It was established in 1881 as Hahnemann Medical College, with the first graduating class in 1884. During the period of 1888–1902, it was known as Hahnemann Hospital College of San Francisco. Its last name change, 1902–1915, was to Hahnemann Medical College of the Pacific. In 1884, the college was first located at the corner of Stockton Street and Geary Street, but it moved before the end of the year to No. 115 Haight Street. A new four-story building was erected in 1899, costing US$10,000, on a lot of about equal value, situated at the corner of Sacramento and Maple streets. In 1915, the college merged with University of California San Francisco School of Medicine.The standard for graduation was kept at 75% for years, and eventually, the tendency was to be more strict in the requirements for graduation. Higher requirements for admission were also implemented. When the subject of women's admission was broached, a motion was passed that women should be admitted on an equal footing with men to all the privileges of the college. Early in the College's career, co-education was strengthened by the appointment of woman clinical assistants, lecturers and professors.Since the college's foundation in 1881, it was the institution behind the homeopathic branch of medicine in the State of California, graduating 309 men and women. It did so with little support in the way of gifts and endowments as compared to other medical colleges on the Pacific coast. The medical education received there being up-to-date, the State rewarded the college by recognizing its graduates as eligible to become licensed physicians.