Physicians
Found in 20 Collections and/or Records:
Medical Society of the District of Columbia Records
Society and Executive Board meeting minutes, committee records, subject files, correspondence, mailings, event fliers, publications, newsletters, financial ledgers, legal briefs, and published legal proceedings document the formal operations of the Medical Society of the District of Columbia. The Medical Society of the District of Columbia (MSDC) is a professional advocacy organization for physicians practicing in and around the District of Columbia.
Sir William Osler Press Clippings
Clippings relate chiefly to his "fixed period" address at Johns Hopkins in 1905, and his death in 1919.
Solomon Robert Kagan Papers
Correspondence, biographical data, and draft. Letters refer chiefly to literature by Kagan, published or in process of publication.
Surgeon-General's Office biographical sketches of U.S. naval medical officers
Sketches requested of U.S. naval medical officers by the Surgeon General of the Army in 1933.
The Versatile Dr. Thornton
Consists of an unpublished manuscript describing the life of William Thornton, physician, painter, inventor, and architect. Thornton was architect of the Capitol until 1802.
Theodore Wiprud Papers
Correspondence, personal diaries, and recollections of director of Medical Society of District of Columbia, 1938-1963.
Thomas B. Marquis Papers
Dr. Marquis practiced medicine in Montana, was with the U. S. Medical Corps during World War I, and became government physician on the Tongue River-Cheyenne Indian reservation. Because of his interest in Indian subjects he eventually gave up his medical practice and devoted full time to gathering historical data and writing.
Thomas Lawson: in summary / C. G. Toepper
Typescript biographical sketch of Thomas Lawson, Surgeon General of the United States Army.
Unpublished autobiography and materials of Louis Tuft
UNPROCESSED COLLECTION. Pertains to the history of the Allergy Round Table.