]]> ]]> ]]> Elizabeth D. Hay papers

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]]> ]]> ]]> View the online catalog record for the Zabdiel Boylston Adams papers.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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Public Services.]]> An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available.

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https://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/med00424/catalog.]]> https://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/med00077/catalog]]> An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available.

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An online guide to the collection is available.

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An online guide to the collection is available.

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An online guide to the collection is available.

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Soon after his appointment as Dean of Harvard Medical School, though before he assumed that office, Robert Higgins Ebert (1914-1996) delivered this address at Vassar, at that time still a women's college. Ebert states, "I believe in education for women, and I believe in equal opportunities for women in the learned professions as well as some which are not so learned. I believe that women can do everything that men can do as well as one or two things which in spite [of] considerable ingenuity men have never quite been able to accomplish."

The associated report on the speech is reproduced from a student newspaper, the Vassar miscellany.

A large collection of Dr. Ebert's professional and personal papers, as well as archival records from his tenure as Dean of the Harvard Medical School, are all preserved in the Countway and available through its Center for the History of Medicine.

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An online guide to the collection is available.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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The Principles and Practice of Medicine]]>
He wanted to specialize in surgery, but after being denied the opportunity by Boston-area hospitals, he turned to research. In 1912, he began working part time as a volunteer assistant in the Department of Pathology at Massachusetts General Hospital, and for three years performed autopsies on all persons suspected of having syphilis. He then worked at the Wassermann Laboratory which was the Massachusetts State Laboratory for communicable diseases at Harvard Medical School. In 1915, the Wassermann Laboratory was transferred from Harvard Medical School to the Massachusetts Department of Public Health, and Hinton was appointed Assistant Director of the Division of Biologic Laboratories and Chief of the Wassermann Laboratory, a position he served for 38 years.

Dr. Hinton began teaching at HMS in 1918 as Instructor in Preventive Medicine and Hygiene, and in 1921, his responsibilities expanded to include Bacteriology and Immunology. He was appointed Instructor in Bacteriology and Immunology in 1946, twenty five years after his first appointment. He was promoted to Clinical Professor in 1949 – the first African-American Professor at Harvard University. He only gained promotion one year before his retirement. ]]>
The finding aid for the Paul Dudley White papers underwent a significant revision in 2020 to bring the archival description into alignment with the Center's new Guidelines for Inclusive and Conscientious Description. This is a copy of the now-deprecated original finding aid which is being maintained for transparency around the descriptive process. The current finding aid can be accessed at: https://id.lib.harvard.edu/ead/med00081/catalog. ]]> ]]> Title from first line.

Within border of type ornaments.

At head of text: Written by James R. Thomas, Company H, First Regt., P.R.V.C. Lost his arm at the Battle of South Mountain, Sept. 14th, 1862.

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here through the Medical Heritage Library]]>
Readers Digest. ]]> Reader's Digest]]> An online guide to the collection is available. Click here.

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Boston medical and surgical journal a few weeks later.]]> Dr. David Humphreys Storer, 1900
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An online guide to the collection is available.

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