Information: The first column shows data points from Alexander, Leo, 1905- in red. The third column shows data points from Alexander, Leo W in blue. Any data they share in common is displayed as purple boxes in the middle "Shared" column.
1905Born
in Vienna, Austria Hungary1929Received doctorate in medicine
from University of Vienna1932Moved to Peiping, China
to teach psychiatry and neurology at Peiping Union Medical
College1933Emigrated to the United States of
America1934Appointed to positions at Boston City Hospital, Harvard
Medical School and Boston State Hospital.1936Married Phyllis
Harrington19411946Associate Professor Neuropsychiatry at
Duke University1942Appointed Colonel, Medical Corps, US Army, 8th Air Force
Medical Intelligence - active duty19461947Acted as US Medical Consultant to
Secretary of War and US Chief Counsel for War Crimes during te
Nuremberg Doctors' Trial, Nuremberg,
Germany1972Received the Gold Medal Award of the Society of Biological
Psychiatry1985Died
in Weston,
MAFrom the guide to the Papers, 1883-2001, (Harvard Law School Library, Harvard University)
Alexander, Leo, 1905-. Leo Alexander Papers, 1883-2001
Title:
Leo Alexander Papers, 1883-2001
Papers relating to the life of Leo Alexander including documents from his involvement in the Nuremberg Doctors' Trial in Nuremberg, Germany (1946-1947) and his personal and professional life in Vienna, Peiping and Boston (1905-1985.)
Alexander, Leo, 1905-. Leo Alexander Papers, 1883-2001
0
Alexander, Leo, 1905-
creatorOf
Papers, 1883-2001
Papers, 1883-2001
Title:
Papers, 1883-2001
Papers relating to the life of LeoAlexander including documents from his involvement in the NurembergDoctors' Trial in Nuremberg, Germany (1946-1947) and his personal andprofessional life in Vienna, Peiping and Boston(1905-1985.)
Brown, Ivan W. 65th General Hospital collection, 1926-2002.
Title:
65th General Hospital collection, 1926-2002.
Contains personal papers, records, and memorabilia of the United States Army 65th General Hospital, a United States Army Medical Corps unit. Also contains a small amount of material from Base Hospital No. 65, a World War I-era installation of North Carolina physicians. Types of materials include official reports, newsletters, patient records, memorabilia, oral histories, photographs, artifacts, audiovisual materials, investigative notes, and short writings. Major subjects include Duke University Medical Center, United States Army, the 65th General Hospital, Base Hospital No. 65, World War I, World War II, war crimes, neurosurgery. Materials were created by Ivan Brown, Leo Alexander, Norman Ross, and O. Norris Smith.
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