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Our Locations

Are you looking for care for yourself or a loved one?

If so, please call 800.653.4490 and press option 2. A member of our care team will be happy to assist you in finding a location near you. If you are a physician seeking referral assistance, please call 888.449.4121.

Honored and privileged to serve more than 60 Ohio counties.

Ohio's Hospice at United Church Homes

Serving: Stark and Washington Counties

Administrative Office

Chapel Hill
12200 Strausser St. NW
Canal Fulton, OH 44614
Phone: 330.264.4899

Administrative Office

200 Timberline Dr. #1212
Marietta, OH 45750
Phone: 740.629.9990

Ohio's Hospice | Cincinnati

Administrative Office

11013 Montgomery Rd.
Cincinnati, OH 45249
1.800.653.4490

Ohio's Hospice | Dayton

Serving: Logan, Champaign, Clark, Preble, Montgomery, Greene, Butler, Warren and Hamilton Counties

Inpatient Care Center

324 Wilmington Ave.
Dayton, OH 45420
Phone: 937.256.4490
1.800.653.4490

Administrative Office

7575 Paragon Rd.
Dayton, OH 45459
Phone: 937.256.4490
1.800.653.4490

Ohio's Hospice | Franklin/Middletown

Serving: Butler and Warren Counties

Inpatient Care Center

5940 Long Meadow Dr.
Franklin, OH 45005
Phone: 513.422.0300

Ohio's Hospice | Marysville

Serving: Union and Madison Counties

Administrative Office

779 London Ave.
Marysville, OH 43040
Phone: 937.644.1928

Ohio's Hospice | Middleburg Heights

Administrative Office

18051 Jefferson Park Rd.
Middleburg Heights, OH 44130
1.833.444.4177

Ohio's Hospice | Mt. Gilead

Serving: Morrow County

Administrative Office

228 South St.
Mt. Gilead, OH 43338
Phone: 419.946.9822

Ohio's Hospice | Newark

Serving: Crawford, Marion, Morrow, Knox, Coshocton, Delaware, Licking, Muskingum, Franklin, Fairfield, Perry and Hocking Counties

Administrative Office

2269 Cherry Valley Rd.
Newark, OH 43055
Phone: 740.788.1400

Inpatient Care Center at Licking Memorial Hospital

1320 West Main St.
Newark, OH 43055
Phone: 740.344.0379

Ohio's Hospice | Columbus

Ohio's Hospice at
The Ohio State University
Wexner Medical Center

410 W 10th Ave - 7th Floor
Columbus, OH 43210
Phone: 614.685.0001

Ohio's Hospice | New Philadelphia

Serving: Tuscarawas, Stark, Carroll, Columbiana, Coshocton, Holmes Counties

Inpatient Care Center

716 Commercial Ave. SW
New Philadelphia, OH 44663
Phone: 330.343.7605

Ohio's Hospice | Springfield

Serving: Clark, Champaign and Logan Counties

Administrative Office

1830 N. Limestone St.
Springfield, OH 45503
Phone: 937.390.9665

Ohio's Hospice | Troy

Serving: Allen, Auglaize, Darke, Mercer, Miami, Shelby, and Van Wert Counties

Inpatient Care Center

3230 N. Co. Rd. 25A
Troy, OH 45373
Phone: 937.335.5191

Ohio's Hospice | Washington Court House

Serving: Fayette, Clinton, Pickaway, Ross, Highland, Pike, Clermont, Brown and Adams Counties

Administrative Office

222 N. Oakland Ave.
Washington Court House, OH 43160
Phone: 740.335.0149

Ohio's Hospice | Wilmington

Serving: Clinton County

Administrative Office

1669 Rombach Ave.
Wilmington, OH 45177
Phone: 937.382.5400
Fax: 937.383.3898

Ohio's Hospice | Wooster

Serving: Cuyahoga, Lake, Geauga, Lorain, Medina, Summit, Richland, Ashland, Wayne, Stark, Holmes and Tuscarawas Counties

Inpatient Care Center

1900 Akron Rd.
Wooster, OH 44691
Phone: 330.264.4899

A Navy WAVE Remembers

Thelma Shellhouse, a timeless beauty full of poise and strength, served for two years as one of this country’s WWII Navy WAVES (Women Accepted for Volunteer Emergency Service). Now, 67 years later at the age of 93, Thelma remembers the details of those trying times of risk and uncertainty in our country’s history, as if it were        yesterday.   “I wanted to enlist immediately, but my mother was a widow and I didn’t want to leave her,” Thelma recalls. “After she died following a complicated surgery, I decided that there was nothing keeping me here anymore, so I just went.”

After enlisting at age 24, Thelma began working in the Brooklyn Navy Yard. “I worked at Pier 42 on the Hudson.  Mine was a very dangerous assignment. After having been blown up overseas, ships would come back into the yard full of holes. Once repaired, it was my job to go onboard the ship and give the commanding officer the orders to sail back out into the  Atlantic.  Enemy submarines would often come very close to our shores, spying. So when I went out on these errands to the ships, they would always transport me in different vehicles, so that the enemy could not detect who I was or what I was doing.    Everything I did had to be very secretive.“

During this time, when our country was still very racially segregated, Thelma remembers a young African-American man in her outfit who was a wonderful friend to her. “Neighborhoods around the Brooklyn Navy Yard were terribly dangerous. Since we both lived there, he would come every morning and escort me to work.  I remember one day an officer (who’d seen us walking together) pulled me aside and reprimanded me for ‘fraternizing’ with him. I said, ‘It’s dark when we come to work; I am afraid to walk alone. We are both enlisted and that is not fraternizing.’ The officer simply looked at me and said, ‘It better not happen again!’ So from then on, to keep us out of trouble, he would walk six feet in front or behind me to still ensure that I was safe.”

After the War, Thelma returned to her native Ohio and worked in a factory, where she met her husband. They raised two children, and had four grandchildren.  Now a widow, and the only surviving member of her group of Navy friends, Thelma recently finished writing her memoirs. “I like to think of myself as still very independent. I am so thankful that I am able to take care of myself and retain all of my memories.”

Thelma was recently honored with an American Pride Veteran Care pinning by Hospice of Dayton.  She is one of many comrades in arms to be recognized for their military service through the program designed to support veterans with services tailored to their needs and honoring their sacrifices for their county.

Author Profile

Craig Schrolucke
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