Papers, [ca. 1919]-1971.

ArchivalResource

Papers, [ca. 1919]-1971.

This collection contains correspondence, notebooks, lab notes, articles, reprints, and photographs. Opie spent most of his career at the Rockefeller Institute where he did much of his research on the study of influenza, tuberculosis, blood diseases, poliomyelitis, and viruses. There are many lab notes for this period. His work at Washington University, St. Louis, is documented, as are his efforts to alleviate turberculosis in Jamaica, among Philadelphia schoolchildren, and in New York City. His interest in China can be seen in the material on the American Bureau for Medical Aid to China, the United China Relief, and Chinese medicine in general.

ca. 16,000 items (37 linear ft.)

Related Entities

There are 33 Entities related to this resource.

Robinson, George Canby, 1878-1960

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George Canby Robinson (b. 1878) received his A. B. (1899) and M.D. (1903) from Johns Hopkins University and did post-graduate work at Munich (1908-9), From 1903-1912, he held positions at Cornell, Pennsylvania Hospital and Presbyterian Hospital in Philadelphia, and the Rockefeller Institute. In 1913, he joined the faculty and administration of Washington University School of Medicine, serving as: associate professor of internal medicine (1913-1920), and acting dean (1917-1918) and dean (1919-192...

Sawyer, Wilbur A. (Wilbur Augustus), 1879-1951

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Flexner, Simon, 1863-1946

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Washburn, Benjamin Earle, 1885-1979

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Bessey, Otto A.

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Ferrell, John A. (John Atkinson), 1880-1965

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Howard, Hector Holdbrook, 1873-1960.

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Rockefeller Institute.

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Rockefeller Foundation. International Health Division

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Kohlberg, Alfred, 1887-1960

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American businessman; national chairman, American Jewish League Against Communism; chairman, American China Policy Association; member of the board, Institute of Pacific Relations. From the description of Alfred Kohlberg papers, 1927-1967. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 122561238 Biographical Note 1887 Born, San Francisco, California ...

Stevens, Helen K.

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Barker, Lewellys F. (Lewellys Franklin), 1867-1943

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Rufus Ivory Cole served as the the director and physician-in-charge (1909-1937) of the Hospital of the Rockefeller Institute for Medical Research, the first hospital in the United States devoted primarily to the investigation of disease. Cole's medical research centered on problems relating to immunity to diseases of the respiratory system, particularly pneumonia From the guide to the Rufus Ivory Cole papers, ca. 1900-1966, 1900-1966, (American Philosophical Society) ...

Flahiff, Edward.

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Menkin, Valy, 1901-

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Isaacs, Joyce

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United Chinal Relief (U.S.)

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Aronson, Joseph D.

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Warren, Andrew J.

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Ekhart, Walter.

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Aub, Joseph Charles, 1890-1873.

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Bachman, George W. (George William), 1890-

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Opie, Eugene L. (Eugene Lindsay), 1873-1971

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Eugene Lindsay Opie was a pathologist. From the description of Papers, [ca. 1919]-1971. (American Philosophical Society Library). WorldCat record id: 122616067 The pathologist Eugene Lindsay Opie specialized in the pathologic physiology of viral and bacterial diseases, including tuberculosis, influenza, and poliomyelitis. His career can conveniently be divided into roughly ten year increments. From 1894-1904 he was a graduate student and faculty member at Johns ...

Brinton, Ward, 1873-1935

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Cohn, Alfred E. (Alfred Einstein), 1879-1957

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Henry Phipps Institute

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Russell, Frederick F. (Frederick Fuller), 1870-1960

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University of Pennsylvania.

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In 1919 Edward Bushnell was appointed publicity agent for the University of Pennsylvania. His appointment began a long and expanding effort at public relations at the University. In 1954 the Department of Public Relations expanded its work to include two new units, Motion Picture Services and the Office of Radio and Television. These two offices operated until 1975 when they were phased out of a stream-lined department. From the description of University Film Collection, 1915-1989. (...

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American Bureau for Medical Aid to China

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