Showing 619 results

Archival description
Osler, William, Sir, 1849-1919
Print preview View:

484 results with digital objects Show results with digital objects

Letter to William Osler, December 27, 1913

Letter to William Osler from Charles Francis Adams, Washington, D.C., USA. Thanks him for his "first-class send-off" which appeared in the New York Nation of the 27th of November. Details on his negotiation with the JHH for some lectures. Glad Osler accompanied his presentation of the speech in the original Latin with a translation. Mentions his lapsus in his Oxford lectures, on p.154. Details about it. He never received his degree. Asks him to inform the proper authorities that he did not received it. Mentions his difficulty in accustoming himself to Washington. Will give some suggestions to Hadley of Yale who will be his successor in the American lectureship. Civilities.

Adams, Charles Francis, 1835-1915

Letter to William Osler, May 10, 1904

Letter to William Osler from Pierre Marie, 209, Boulevard St. Germain, Paris, France. Copy of CUS417/100.76. Civilities. Marie extends his sympathy for the damage caused by the recent fire in Baltimore. He reports that he saw Osler's medallion at the Salon in Paris.

Marie, Pierre

Letter to William Osler, August 12, 1904

Letter to William Osler from James Ritchie, 28, Beaumont Street, Oxford, Oxfordshire, England. Ritchie is delighted that Osler has accepted the Regius Professorship of Medicine at Oxford. He explains that he only allowed his own name to be mentioned for the position during the period when some of the Oxford men wanted to merge the Regius Professorship with the chair of Pathology, which Ritchie currently holds. Ritchie was not eager to hold the Regius Professorship and, therefore, was not disappointed when Osler was named in his place.

Ritchie, James

Letter to William Osler, November 15, 1910

Letter to William Osler from Arthur Keith, Royal College of Surgeons of England, Lincoln's Inn Fields, London, England. Requests his help. He is puzzling over the relationship of the "Evelyn" to the "Harvey" Anatomical Plates. Would like to know precise details. Civilities.

Keith, Arthur, Sir, 1866-1955

Letter to William Osler, June 23, 1908

Letter to William Osler from John Stewart Milne. News on the progression of his work on the future "Surgical Instrument in Greek and Roman Times". Details on the dissection of a macaque. Mentions a case of a little girl who inhaled a glass eye of a doll.

Milne, John Stewart

Letter, March 17, 1904

Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Arrangements for the meeting of the Tuberculosis Committee and Professor Maragliano's lecture in Philadelphia. Flick agrees with Osler that Maragliano's work is questionable. He does not agree, however, that the Committee should attach itself to Daniel Lewis's Congress on Tuberculosis. Still, Flick has invited Lewis to Philadelphia to hear what he has to say about his work with Tuberculosis.

Flick, Lawrence F. (Lawrence Francis), 1856-1938

Letter to William Osler, June 18, 1908

Letter to William Osler from G.A. Gibson, 3, Drumsheugh Gardens, Edinburgh, Lothian, Scotland. Details on the Rectorial Contest. He has friends in the Royal Society who will help him. He will put himself in communication with the two political organizations to find out where they stand. He would like to get Osler nominated jointly by Conservatives and Liberals, to have absolute unanimity.

Gibson, G.A.

Letter to William Osler

Letter to William Osler from Evelyn Heaton Smith, Fairholme, Beaumont Road, Windsor, England. "Notes from books." Smith responds to Osler's inquiry into the Wren drawings. Letter found in "Micrographia, " by R. Hooke.

Smith, Evelyn Heaton

Letter to William Osler, June 16, 1908

Letter to William Osler from A. Forbes Sieveking, 12, Seymour Street, Portman Square, W., England. Thanks him for his help at the University Press where he has made application in regard to "Evelyn Naude". Comments on the Keats monograph that he sent him. Enjoyed his Dover paper and the Discovery of Robinson Crusoe. Henley and Stephenson ought to have made a play of him rather than "Deacon Brodie". He is in Paris, en route for Baden-Baden to the Sanatorium Frey-Deugler. Will go to the Mazarine Library and to the Estampes for his Naude 's work. Civilities.

Sieveking, A. Forbes

Results 51 to 60 of 619