Abstract
Grant L. Rasmussen was a neuroanatomist with the NIH's NINDB from 1954-1970. Among his most memorable contributions is his discovery and description of a nerve tract, called Rasmussen's Bundle, which is responsible for changing the sensitivity of the inner ear.
Dates
- Creation: 1933-1985 (bulk 1944-1978)
Extent
6.75 Linear Feet (6 boxes)
Creator
- Rasmussen, Grant Lister, 1904- (Person)
Physical Location
Materials stored onsite. History of Medicine Division. National Library of Medicine
Language of Materials
Collection materials primarily in English
Restrictions
Collection is not restricted. Contact the Reference Staff for information regarding access.
Copyright and Re-use Information
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Privacy Information
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Biographical Note
Grant L. Rasmussen was born on July 22, 1904 in Cleveland, Utah. His academic path to becoming Chief, Section of functional Neuroanatomy, Laboratory of Neuroanatomical Sciences, in the division of the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness of the National Institutes of Health (NINBD), began with a strong interest in research and anatomy as a premedical student. Rasmussen was a premedical student at the University of Utah, graduating in 1928 with a major in Zoology. His keen aptitude for research led him to a teaching fellowship at the University of Minnesota Medical School in the Department of Anatomy, where he improved his research skills under Andrew T. Rasmussen (no relation) in the field of neuroanatomy. It was here that Rasmussen developed his long term interest in studying the auditory system and its pathways.
He completed his masters and doctoral work at the University of Minnesota, concluded with his dissertation entitled "The Origin, Course, and Destination of the Olivary Peduncle and the Fiber Projection of the Superior Olivary Complex." After leaving the University of Minnesota, he accepted the position as Instructor at the Medical College at the State of South Carolina and later held the positions of Associate Professor (1936-1940) and Assistant Professor (1940). In 1943, Rasmussen accepted a position at the University of Buffalo in the Department of Anatomy, and in 1954 he began his career with NINBD/NIH.
Among his most memorable contributions is his discovery and description of a nerve tract, called Rasmussen's Bundle, which is responsible for changing the sensitivity of the inner ear. In 1965, three NIH scientists received European awards for their scientific achievements. Rasmussen was awarded the Docteur Honoris Causa degree by the Universite Libre de Bruxelles (Belgium) for his research achievements on the auditory system. This distinguished award was followed with another, the Beltone Institute Award in 1976 for scientific progress in understanding the central aspects of auditory centrifugal control. He retired from the National Institutes of Health in 1970.
Dr. Rasmussen was a member of The American Association of Anatomists and a founding member of the Cajal Club, created by anatomists with an interest in neuroanatomy and named after Don Santiago Cajal.
Collection Summary
Correspondence, lab notes, photographs, articles, and reprints document the active research career of Grant L. Rasmussen, an anatomist who spent the majority of his career at NIH. The bulk of the collection consists of correspondence between Rasmussen and his many professional colleagues during his tenure at NIH.
The correspondence in Series 2 is divided into early letters during his student and teaching careers at the University of Utah, University of Minnesota, Medical College of the State of South Carolina and the University of Buffalo between the years 1943-1954. Series 3 contains letters created after 1954 when Rasmussen came on staff with the National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness (NINBD/NIH). There is also a file on his travel to Belgium, where he carried out laboratory work with a colleague in Belgium. His foreign correspondence is also here and gives written record of dialogue on research, conferences, and other matters.
Series 4: Research Notebooks and Papers documents his bench research on the auditory system. Rasmussen and his colleagues were especially interested in aural pathways, his experimental subjects being primarily cats. The research notes and photographs in this section are very technical and specific to these experiments. Series 5 contains photographs and slides from these experiments used in publications. The notebooks themselves are undated, but his bench career spanned the 1940s-1960s.
Finally, Series 5 contains journal articles written by Andrew T. Rasmussen, who was a colleague and mentor of Rasmussen.
Abstract
Grant L. Rasmussen was a neuroanatomist with the NIH's NINDB from 1954-1970. Among his most memorable contributions is his discovery and description of a nerve tract, called Rasmussen's Bundle, which is responsible for changing the sensitivity of the inner ear.
Physical Location
Materials stored onsite. History of Medicine Division. National Library of Medicine
Provenance
Gift of Mrs. Grant Rasmussen, Nov. 1990. Acc. #653.
General
- Processed by
- Z. Netosh Jones
- Processing Completed
- Feb. 2004
- Encoded by
- John P. Rees
Creator
- Rasmussen, Grant Lister, 1904- (Person)
Subject
- Rasmussen, Grant Lister, 1904- (Person)
- Rasmussen, Andrew Theodore, 1883- (Person)
- National Institute of Neurological Diseases and Blindness (U.S.) (Organization)
- University of Buffalo (Organization)
- Title
- Finding Aid to the Grant L. Rasmussen Papers, 1933-1985 (bulk 1944-1978)
- Status
- Unverified Partial Draft
- Author
- Z. Netosh Jones
- Date
- March 2004
- Language of description
- English
- Script of description
- Latn
- Language of description note
- Finding aid is written in English
- Edition statement
- 1.0
Revision Statements
- July 2004: PUBLIC "-//National Library of Medicine::History of Medicine Division//TEXT (US::DNLM::MS C 541::Grant L. Rasmussen Papers)//EN" "rasmussen541" converted from EAD 1.0 to 2002 by v1to02.xsl (sy2003-10-15).
Collecting Area Details
Part of the Archives and Modern Manuscripts Collections Collecting Area
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Bethesda MD 20894 US
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