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Morehead Township, Guilford County, North Carolina

North Carolina stubsTownships in North CarolinaUse mdy dates from July 2023
Map of Guilford County North Carolina With Municipal and Township Labels
Map of Guilford County North Carolina With Municipal and Township Labels

Morehead Township is a rural, non-functioning county subdivision established in 1868 in Guilford County, North Carolina, United States.. The population at the 2010 census was 195,218.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Morehead Township, Guilford County, North Carolina (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Morehead Township, Guilford County, North Carolina
Scott Avenue, Greensboro

Geographical coordinates (GPS) Address Nearby Places
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Wikipedia: Morehead Township, Guilford County, North CarolinaContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 36.069444444444 ° E -79.830555555556 °
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Address

Scott Avenue 502
27403 Greensboro
North Carolina, United States
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Map of Guilford County North Carolina With Municipal and Township Labels
Map of Guilford County North Carolina With Municipal and Township Labels
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Nearby Places

Wesley Long Hospital

Wesley Long Hospital is a 175-bed acute-care facility located in Greensboro, North Carolina. The hospital was founded in 1917 by John Wesley Long, MD, a nationally known physician and surgeon, as a small 20-bed clinic. Today, Wesley Long is a 175-bed modern medical center and home to the Cone Health Cancer Center at Wesley Long. Wesley Long Hospital is a facility of Cone Health, a network of hospitals and physicians serving Guilford County, North Carolina and surrounding areas. On February 24, 1972, Wesley Long's board of trustees approved a 120-bed addition and other improvements to what was then a 225-bed hospital.On April 27, 1981, hospital administrator James Phelps was charged with accepting over half a million dollars in kickbacks during the late 1970s. Phelps, replaced by Ralph Holshouser Jr., pleaded guilty and served five years. The hospital did well for a while until changes in Medicare reimbursement. Wesley Long never recovered from the combination of the scandal and new Medicare rules, with a little over half its beds occupied by 1986. Moses Cone Memorial Hospital went through significant growth, while Wesley Long administrators avoided making many of the advances necessary to attract more patients. Dennis Barry led the hospital through changes that made it more competitive. But by 1996, with just over a third of its beds occupied, Wesley Long needed to either specialize or merge in order to continue doing well. The decision was made to merge with Cone.