Three Pierce Arrow and one GMC ambulances at Minneapolis General Hospital; drivers pictured left to right are Louis Parsons, Nick Polucci, and Ray Maisonneuve.
Betty A. Schomer and May Smith are shown baking pies in the pastry shop in the main hospital kitchens of the Minneapolis General Hospital's service building.
Staff shown in the outpatient clinical records department on the first floor of the Minneapolis General Hospital; outpatients had separate record numbers from admitted patients.
This is a collection of social service reports for the Concordia Society, a benevolent women's society organized October 17, 1901, at the Swedish Hospital of Minneapolis. The Concordia Society was primarily dedicated to providing free beds and other services to persons in need of medical care. The Swedish Hospital was run by and for Swedish immigrants.
Patients are shown being examined at the Minneapolis General Hospital's outpatient dentistry clinic. Staff pictured are Dr. A.E. Wessling, Dr. J.L. Staples, Dr. Theo Martin, and Dr. Irving L. Wigren.
Exterior view of a nurses' dormitory at The Swedish Hospital School of Nursing in downtown Minneapolis. All nursing students were required to live in the dorm and adhere to a strict code of conduct. Notice the cobblestone street in front of the dormitory.
This coal furnace at The Swedish Hospital in Minneapolis featured two Detroit multiple retort underfeed stokers with two 300 horsepower boilers manufactured by Brothers Weatherbee.
Hand ironers are shown in the Minneapolis General Hospital's laundry building. Shown left to right are Bertha D. Byrnes, Lucille M. Lillie, Christine Olson, and Lillian Gravett. Uniform ironing for hospital staff continued until the 1960s.
A registered nurse at St. Barnabas Hospital in Minneapolis is pictured working in the hospital laboratory. The nurse's diploma is proudly displayed on the wall above the light fixture.