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New York (N.Y.) With digital objects
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Colonel House

Correspondence between E.M. House and Mr. Buxton, including several typed copies of House's letters.

Letter to Harvey Cushing

Letter to Harvey Cushing from Nicholas Murray Butler, National Committee of the United States for the Restoration of the University of Louvain, 407 West 117th Street, New York, New York, USA. Butler responds to Cushing's inquiries about the project to rebuild the library at the University of Louvain. Osler's involvement in the project was likely due to early refugees who went to Oxford from Louvain, and who appealed to him for help in the matter. [For more details see CUS417/22.8]

Butler, Nicholas Murray, 1862-1947

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, December 15, 1921

Letter to Harvey Cushing from Simon Flexner, The Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, 66th Street, New York, New York, USA. Flexner has sent along several letters from Osler concerning the period in 1898 when Osler was helping Flexner attain the position of Pathologist at the University of Pennsylvania.

Flexner, Simon, 1863-1946

Letter to Harvey Cushing, March 19, 1921

Letter to Harvey Cushing from E.S. Martin, 178, East 64th Street, New York, New York, USA. Martin sends Cushing a letter he found from Osler to C.F. Martin in his copy of "Science and Immortality." [See CUS417/101.42]

Martin, E.S.

Letter to Harvey Cushing, June 2, 1920

Letter to Harvey Cushing from Scudder J. Woolley, 157, West Seventy Sixth Street, New York, New York, USA. Woolley responds to Cushing's call for letters from Osler to members of the medical profession. He reminisces about his first encounter with Osler. Woolley writes that all who knew Osler loved him and are all anxiously awaiting the completion of Cushing's biography.

Woolley, Scudder J.

Letter to William Osler, (ca July 12, 1919)

Letter to William Osler from Abraham Jacobi, 19 E., 47th Street, New York, USA. Birthday greetings on his seventieth anniversary. States that Osler is eminently the indispensable man in medicine.

Jacobi, A. (Abraham), 1830-1919

Letter, 4 June 1919

Letter from Edward S. Winslow to Lois Harrington Winslow, written from New York on stationery of the Hotel Belmont while en route to England.

Winslow-Spragge, Edward, 1886-1953

Letter to William Osler, October 14, 1918

Letter to William Osler from Leonard L. Mackall, 420, Riverside Drive, New York, USA. Acknowledges his letter of August 6th. Informs him that his cousin Alexander R. Lawton will sail to France with his Regiment and will probably go to England. Hopes that they will have the pleasure to meet each other. Details on the arrangements to make Lawton meet Osler. The new Draft Laws blocked his acceptance by the Red Cross for France at the last moment. He is uncertain of what he should try to do. Civilities.

Mackall, Leonard L. (Leonard Leopold), 1879-1937

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