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Protestant Deaconess Home Hospital at 604 Mary St., commonly called Deaconess. In 1893, the home of Major Byron Parsons, a Civil War veteran, at Mary and Iowa was converted into the first 19-bed hospital. In 1897 this was moved to the back of the lot and a new building was built. A three-story brick hospital was completed in 1899 and was celebrated as one of the most impressive Deaconess institutions in the country. The new Protestant Deaconess Hospital had beds for more than 60 patients. It boasted three operating rooms with hot and cold sterilized water and good lighting, so that operations could be performed with the same degree of safety day or night. (https://www.deaconess.com/About-Us/Our-History) Additions and changes occurred over the years, to the point that by 1948 every part of the original structure was subsumed and what is seen here was no longer visible or identifiable. In the early 1970s nearly all the original building was demolished to make room for a new facility, now covering some 20 city blocks.