{"id":8,"featured":0,"modified":"2026-03-04 21:31:57","latitude":41.5026958796999991818665876053273677825927734375,"longitude":-81.62142276759999504065490327775478363037109375,"title":"Cleveland Clinic","subtitle":null,"fullsize":"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/fullsize/lg_clinic-art-deco-1920_54abe48524.jpg","address":"9500 Euclid Ave, Cleveland, OH ","zoom":15,"creator":["CSU Center for Public History and Digital Humanities"],"description":"Four Cleveland physicians <a href=\"https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/603\">founded</a> the Cleveland Clinic Foundation in February 1921, creating an institution dedicated not only to medical care, but also to research, innovation, and physician education. Three of the four founders had served together in a U.S. Army medical unit in France during World War I. The <a href=\"https://clevelandhistorical.org/items/show/573\">Cleveland Clinic X-ray fire</a> of 1929 – a basement fire caused by combustible nitrocellulose film that left 123 dead – was a tragedy that temporarily set back the hospital's progress. After World War II, however, the Cleveland Clinic rose to become one of the nation's leading medical centers.<br /><br />During the 1940s and 1950s, Clinic researchers pioneered dialysis and kidney treatment and were the first to identify carpal tunnel syndrome and isolate the neurotransmitter serotonin. The Cleveland Clinic also emerged as a national leader in cardiac procedures. Clinic physicians performed the first coronary angiography in 1958 and continued to make significant advances in heart surgery techniques in the proceeding decades. The Clinic's main campus, located along Euclid Avenue in Cleveland's Fairfax neighborhood, has undergone tremendous growth since the 1970s. As adjacent land has been purchased and numerous new facilities constructed in a process of expansion, it is no great surprise that the Cleveland Clinic has become one of the city's largest private employers.","sponsor":null,"accessinfo":"","lede":null,"website":"<a href=\"https://my.clevelandclinic.org\">my.clevelandclinic.org</a>","related_resources":["\"<a href=\"https://case.edu/ech/articles/c/cleveland-clinic-foundation\">Cleveland Clinic Foundation.</a>\" <em>Encyclopedia of Cleveland History.</em>"],"factoids":[],"files":{"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/fullsize/lg_clinic-art-deco-1920_54abe48524.jpg":{"id":47,"mime-type":"image/jpeg","title":"Clinic Building, ca. 1920s","description":"One of the original Cleveland Clinic buildings near Euclid Avenue and East 93rd Street is shown here during the 1920s. During expansion in the 1940s, 7 floors were added to this building, which still stands today.  | Cleveland Clinic Foundation","thumbnail":"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/square_thumbnails/lg_clinic-art-deco-1920_54abe48524.jpg"},"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/fullsize/lg_clinic-original-site-building-1887_14f5072485.jpg":{"id":48,"mime-type":"image/jpeg","title":"Original Clinic Site, 1887","description":"The site of the first Cleveland Clinic building at Euclid Avenue and East 93rd Street - not erected until 1921 - is shown here in 1887.  | Cleveland Clinic Foundation","thumbnail":"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/square_thumbnails/lg_clinic-original-site-building-1887_14f5072485.jpg"},"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/fullsize/lg_clinic-campus-between-euclud-carnegie-residential-areas_7cece3d116.jpg":{"id":49,"mime-type":"image/jpeg","title":"Aerial View, ca. 1940s","description":"An aerial view of Cleveland Clinic campus between Euclid and Carnegie Avenues, ca. 1940s.  As the campus began  expanding in the 1970s, many of the buildings seen in this picture, including many homes, were demolished. Today, the Cleveland Clinic campus dominates the landscape of the Fairfax neighborhood. | Cleveland Clinic Foundation","thumbnail":"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/square_thumbnails/lg_clinic-campus-between-euclud-carnegie-residential-areas_7cece3d116.jpg"},"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/fullsize/lg_clinic-dralice-green-isolates-seraonin_3b5dd64c66.jpg":{"id":50,"mime-type":"image/jpeg","title":"Dr. Alice Green","description":"Dr. Green was among the researchers who first isolated Serotonin at the Cleveland Clinic in 1948. | Cleveland Clinic Foundation","thumbnail":"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/square_thumbnails/lg_clinic-dralice-green-isolates-seraonin_3b5dd64c66.jpg"},"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/fullsize/lg_clinic-atrium-1921_1c16a46092.jpg":{"id":51,"mime-type":"image/jpeg","title":"Cleveland Clinic Atrium, 1921","description":"Cleveland Clinic Foundation","thumbnail":"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/square_thumbnails/lg_clinic-atrium-1921_1c16a46092.jpg"},"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/fullsize/lg_clinic-fire-headline-1929_80260b2cb5.jpg":{"id":52,"mime-type":"image/jpeg","title":"&quot;94 Dead In Blast&quot;","description":"Cleveland News Headline, May 15th, 1929.  The &quot;Cleveland Clinic Disaster,&quot; as it came to be known,  ultimately resulted in the death of 123 people.  The fire is believed to have started when combustible x-ray film was ignited by the heat from an unguarded 100 watt light bulb.  This unfortunate event led to the development of national fire safety and labeling regulations. | Cleveland Clinic Foundation","thumbnail":"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/square_thumbnails/lg_clinic-fire-headline-1929_80260b2cb5.jpg"},"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/fullsize/lg_clinic-crile-25000-goider-surgery_1e0cf35f78.jpg":{"id":53,"mime-type":"image/jpeg","title":"25,000th Goiter Surgery","description":"Dr. George W. Crile and his team perform the 25,000th Goiter surgery at the Cleveland Clinic.  Goiter surgeries were a major source of revenue for the Clinic during its early history.  | Cleveland Clinic Foundation","thumbnail":"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/square_thumbnails/lg_clinic-crile-25000-goider-surgery_1e0cf35f78.jpg"},"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/fullsize/lg_clinic-rooftop-facingeast-1940s_2b45982d06.jpg":{"id":54,"mime-type":"image/jpeg","title":"Clinic Rooftop, 1940s","description":"Cleveland Clinic Rooftop Facing East, ca. 1940s. At this time, the sunny rooftop at the Clinic was often used to treat returning veterans who had been injured during World War II. | Cleveland Clinic Foundation","thumbnail":"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/square_thumbnails/lg_clinic-rooftop-facingeast-1940s_2b45982d06.jpg"},"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/original/cleveland-clinic-cutting-atrium-of-original-bldg_mixdown_eca3377b88.mp3":{"id":55,"mime-type":"audio/mpeg","title":"The Original Clinic Building","description":"Architect Malcolm Cutting discusses the beauty of the atrium at the old Cleveland Clinic  | Cleveland Regional Oral History Collection"},"https://clevelandhistorical.org/files/original/cleveland-clinic-van-petten-drury-mansion-aka-foundation-house_mixdown_a36b221dcc.mp3":{"id":56,"mime-type":"audio/mpeg","title":"The Drury Mansion","description":"Architect Richard Van Petten reflects on the history of the Cleveland Clinic&#039;s Foundation House | <span>Cleveland Regional Oral History Collection<br /></span>"}}}