Showing 25260 results

Archival description
Text
Print preview View:

25260 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

Letter to Cushing. Harvey

Letter to Cushing. Harvey from A.R. Neligan, Tehran, Persia. Neligan regrets that he did not keep any of the letters he received from Osler. He explains that plans to repair the Tomb of Avicenna at Hamadan were spoiled by the war, but he is currently raising money to renew the project.

Neligan, A. R. (Anthony Richard), 1879-

Letter to Harvey Cushing, November 4, 1921

Letter to Harvey Cushing from Anna L. von du Osten, Secretary to Simon Flexner. The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, New York, New York, USA. On Flexner's request, von du Osten sends a reprint of Dr. M.C. Hall's "Two new genera of nematodes," which contains references to the organisms named after Osler. [See CUS417/73.1]

von du Osten, Anna L.

Letter to Harvey Cushing, July 22, 1921

Letter to Harvey Cushing from Minis Hays, American Philosophical Society, 104 South 5th Street, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Hays does not believe that Osler attended the International Congress of Medicine at Philadelphia in 1876. He suggests that Cushing consult the original registration manuscript kept in the Library of the College of Physicians in Philadelphia.

Hays, Minis

Letter to Samuel McClintock Hamill, November 2, 1921

Letter to Samuel McClintock Hamill from William T. Sharpless, West Chester, Pennsylvania, USA. Sharpless writes of his memories of Osler at Blockley Hospital. He first saw Osler when he delivered the introductory lecture to the freshman class of the Medical School of the University of Pennsylvania. Sharpless was a medical intern at Blockley, but Dr. Caspar W. Sharpless was Osler's immediate assistant. He comments on Osler's abilities as a lecturer, his influence in the wards, his sense of humour, his great consideration for patients and students, and his habit of turning his own mistakes into teaching tools.

Sharpless, William T.

Letter to Harvey Cushing

Letter to Harvey Cushing from Ernest A. Baker, School of Librarianship, University of London, London, England. Baker never knew of Osler's scheme for a "College of the Book." Osler was a great friend of John MacAlister, who took an active part in the foundation of the School of Librarianship, and it is very possible that the two men had often talked over the matter. Includes manuscript notes.

Baker, Ernest A. (Ernest Albert), 1869-1941

Annual Report and Transaction No. 21 of the Women's Canadian Historical Society of Toronto

Pamphlet: "Annual Report and Transaction No. 21 of the Women's Canadian Historical Society of Toronto." Hon. Mr. Justice [Featherston] Osler's name appears among the list of honorary members of the Society. Includes article by Mrs. W.T. Hallam entitled "Notes on the Life of Canon Featherstone Lake Osler, and his wife, Ellen Free Pickton," p. 26.

Notes written by Osler

Notes written by Osler, forwarded by Grace Revere Osler to Cushing. Includes detailed notes on Osler's scheme for a "College of the Book."

Results 1681 to 1690 of 25260