Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital
http://dbpedia.org/resource/Red_Cross_War_Memorial_Children's_Hospital an entity of type: Thing
Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa was opened in 1956 through public subscription as a memorial to soldiers lost in the Second World War. The suggestion that the memorial take the form of a children's hospital was proposed by Vyvyan U.T. Watson. Mr Watson, a prominent businessman, had lost his first born and only son, Peter Tennant Watson, at about four years old, to an outbreak of diphtheria in Cape Town. Mr Watson was a major force in steering the organization of the building of the hospital. The Peter Pan statue on the hospital grounds, sculpted by Ivan Mitford-Barberton, was donated by Mr Watson and his wife, Gwendolyn. Mr Watson was later President of the South African Red Cross Society. It is one of two dedicated children's public hospitals in sub-S
rdf:langString
rdf:langString
Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital
rdf:langString
Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital
rdf:langString
Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital
xsd:float
-33.95399856567383
xsd:float
18.48800086975098
xsd:integer
16203538
xsd:integer
1084903370
xsd:integer
300
rdf:langString
South Africa
xsd:integer
1956
rdf:langString
Public
rdf:langString
Department of Health
rdf:langString
Shown in Cape Town
rdf:langString
Cape Town
rdf:langString
Western Cape
rdf:langString
Specialist
xsd:string
-33.954 18.488
rdf:langString
Red Cross War Memorial Children's Hospital in Cape Town, South Africa was opened in 1956 through public subscription as a memorial to soldiers lost in the Second World War. The suggestion that the memorial take the form of a children's hospital was proposed by Vyvyan U.T. Watson. Mr Watson, a prominent businessman, had lost his first born and only son, Peter Tennant Watson, at about four years old, to an outbreak of diphtheria in Cape Town. Mr Watson was a major force in steering the organization of the building of the hospital. The Peter Pan statue on the hospital grounds, sculpted by Ivan Mitford-Barberton, was donated by Mr Watson and his wife, Gwendolyn. Mr Watson was later President of the South African Red Cross Society. It is one of two dedicated children's public hospitals in sub-Saharan Africa, and one of only a few dedicated children's hospitals in the Southern hemisphere. The hospital has academic links to the University of Cape Town's School of Child and Adolescent Health, the University of the Western Cape Dental School and the University of Stellenbosch; it is regarded as South Africa's leading centre for post-graduate specialist paediatric medical and surgical training.
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
4481
xsd:nonNegativeInteger
300
xsd:gYear
1956
<Geometry>
POINT(18.488000869751 -33.953998565674)