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John Marshall High School (Richmond, Virginia)

High schools in Richmond, VirginiaPublic high schools in Virginia
John Marshall High School (Richmond, Virginia), 2024
John Marshall High School (Richmond, Virginia), 2024

John Marshall High School, known colloquially as Jayem, is a secondary public school located in Richmond, Virginia, part of the Richmond Public Schools, serving grades 9–12.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article John Marshall High School (Richmond, Virginia) (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

John Marshall High School (Richmond, Virginia)
Maggie Walker Avenue, Richmond Ginter Park

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N 37.594211111111 ° E -77.4464 °
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John Marshall High School

Maggie Walker Avenue
23222 Richmond, Ginter Park
Virginia, United States
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John Marshall High School (Richmond, Virginia), 2024
John Marshall High School (Richmond, Virginia), 2024
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Nearby Places

Pine Camp Tuberculosis Hospital
Pine Camp Tuberculosis Hospital

Pine Camp Hospital originally opened as Pine Camp Home for Consumptives, on 28 Nov 1910. It operated as a tuberculosis hospital from 1910 to 1957. The complex is located on Old Brook Road, near Ginter Park in Richmond, Virginia. Over time the original structures were replaced with a two-story Central Building (1932) and a one-story, Bungalow-style Administration Building (1932). Both buildings are constructed of structural tile covered with plaster. Also on the property is a contributing one-story, stuccoed masonry laundry and garage building (1922). After 1957 the property was converted for use as a recreation center.The site was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2003."Pine Camp Open. New Tuberculosis Home Begins With Eight Patients. Pine Camp Home for Consumptives, on the Brook Road, about a mile beyond Ginter Park, was opened yesterday morning with eight inmates in attendance. Dr. Giles B. Cook, chief physician, and Miss Florence Black, the nurse in charge were there to take charge of the new arrivals, who were immediately made comfortable. There are many other applications for admission into the camp, but until certain details are worked out only who came in yesterday will be taken care of. The Lean-to as the building is called, is designed to accommodate twenty persons and it is expected to be full in a few weeks. Besides taking advance cases of tuberculosis, the camp is designed also to prevent the spread of the disease. Although an effort will be made to cure cases in the early stages, advanced patients also will be taken in.” The Times Dispatch (Richmond, Virginia) 29 Nov 1910, Tuesday Page 9.