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Letter, October 28, 1903

Letter to Mazyck P.(?) Ravenel from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Flick feels that it may be best for all involved to drop the subject of creating a new Congress on Tuberculosis until the old one has disbanded. He will have nothing to do with the old Congress or the men involved with it.

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

Letter, November 4, 1903

Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Arrangements for Osler's upcoming lecture in Philadelphia. Flick writes briefly of his plans to invite the International Congress on Tuberculosis to the U.S.

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

Letter, November 12, 1903

Letter to William Porter from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Flick is not willing to associate himself with the rival Congresses on Tuberculosis spearheaded by Clark Bell and Daniel Lewis. He writes that the Congresses that have been held in the past have been a discredit to the country and to the medical profession. He feels that those that work with Tuberculosis have been largely ignored in this matter. He will wait until the rival factions withdraw before he gets involved in planning a Congress himself.

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

Letter, December 1, 1903

Letter to Clark Bell from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Flick regrets that he cannot permit his name to be used in any way in connection with Bell's Congress on Tuberculosis in St. Louis. He feels that the Congresses on Tuberculosis held in the U.S. in the past have been a discredit to the country and have given the U.S. a bad standing in Europe.

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

Letter, December 10, 1903

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from Sigmund Adolphus Knopf, New York, New York, USA. Knopf asks Flick if he is willing to make his feelings about the Congress on Tuberculosis public. Knopf would like to make the opinions of Flick and others known to the men who will assemble in Baltimore.

Knopf, Sigmund Adolphus

Letter, February 1, 1904

Letter to John George Adami from Henry Barton Jacobs, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. Jacobs reports on the motion made at a recent Conference in Baltimore, presided over by Welch and attended by a number of physicians interested in the study of Tuberculosis, to create a committee to deal with the present Tuberculosis issue in the U.S. The members of the committee are: Osler, Trudeau, T. Smith, Adami, V.Y. Bowditch, Knopf, Ravenel, Klebs, Janeway, Jacobs, Bracken, Flick and Biggs.

Jacobs, Henry Barton, 1858-1939

Notes, 1904

Cushing's handwritten manuscript notes regarding "The Tuberculosis Exposition(?)."

Letter, February 1, 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from Henry Barton Jacobs, 11, Mount Vernon Place, West, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. Jacobs requests a confirmation of Flick's willingness to serve on the Tuberculosis Committee. The first meeting of the Committee will be held in New York on February 27, 1904.

Jacobs, Henry Barton, 1858-1939

Letter, February 19, 1904

Letter to Lawrence F. Flick from William Osler, 1, West Franklin Street, Baltimore, Maryland, USA. Osler invites Flick to join him for dinner while they are both in New York for a meeting of the recently appointed Committee to address the Tuberculosis question.

Osler, William, Sir, 1849-1919

Letter, March 4, 1904

Letter to William Osler from Lawrence F. Flick, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. Flick would like to take advantage of Professor Maragliano's time in the U.S. and plan a Tuberculosis Committee meeting around the date of his lecture in Philadelphia. Flick provides a list of organizations and individuals in Pennsylvania who could be of help in their crusade against Tuberculosis.

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

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