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{{FIformat | {{FIformat | ||
β | |Image= | + | |Image= Wh011.jpg |
β | |Width= | + | |Width= 350px |
β | |Body= [[ | + | |Body= In 1900, [[Waverly Hills Sanitarium|Louisville, Kentucky]] had the highest tuberculosis death rate in the country. This was due to the fact Louisville is such a low valley area and before development, was basically all swampland and perfect breeding ground for the Tuberculosis bacteria. As with many other towns and cities across the country, hospitals were needed to care for the sick. In 1910, a wooden, two-story hospital with 40 beds opened on one of the highest elevated hills in southern Jefferson County to try and contain this ravaging disease. |
}} | }} |