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Renown Regional Medical Center

1876 establishments in NevadaBuildings and structures in Reno, NevadaHospital buildings completed in 1876Hospitals established in 1876Pages containing links to subscription-only content
Teaching hospitals in NevadaTrauma centers
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Renown Regional Medical Center (formerly Washoe Medical Center) is part of Renown Health (formerly Washoe Health System), a non-profit hospital in Reno, Nevada. It is Renown Health's flagship hospital and the region's only level II trauma center. Renown Regional facilitates the area's only dedicated children's hospital, Renown Children's Hospital. The hospital was founded in 1876.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Renown Regional Medical Center (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Renown Regional Medical Center
Mill Street, Reno

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

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N 39.52542 ° E -119.79574 °
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Renown Regional Medical Center

Mill Street 1155
89502 Reno
Nevada, United States
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Phone number
Renown Health

call+17759824100

Website
renown.org

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Reno-Sparks Indian Colony
Reno-Sparks Indian Colony

The Reno-Sparks Indian Colony in Nevada was established in the early 1900s by members of related tribes who lived near Reno for work; they became a federally recognized tribe in 1934 after forming a government under the Indian Reorganization Act. With its base in Reno, Nevada, the RSIC consists of 1,134 members from three Great Basin tribes: the Paiute, the Shoshone and the Washoe. The reservation lands have been limited, consisting of the original 28-acre Colony located in central-west Reno (39°41′31″N 119°44′44″W) and another 1,920 acres put into trust for the tribe in 1984 in Hungry Valley, which is 19 miles north of the Colony and west of Spanish Springs, Nevada, in Eagle Canyon.In November 2016, the Barack Obama administration announced transfer of 13,400 acres of former Bureau of Land Management (BLM) land to the Reno-Sparks Indian Colony. This was achieved under the Nevada Native Nations Lands Act. It authorized the transfer of more than 71,000 acres of BLM and U.S. Forest Service lands into trust status for six Nevada tribes. This will provide the tribes with more sustainable bases for their peoples, as well as enlist other parties with an interest in conservation of animals and resources. The RSIC uses both traditional teachings and practices as well as contemporary business methods and governmental practices. The tribe employs more than 300 people, with around half of those being tribal members.