Letter to William C. Welling, 1917 September 29.

ArchivalResource

Letter to William C. Welling, 1917 September 29.

Hadley replies to a plea to end Dr. Yandell Henderson's medical research using dogs :" ... if a moderate degree of suffering on the part of a few dogs will save thousands of our boys in Europe from a degree of suffering ten times greater in every case, I feel quite sure that you would not make an appeal to have these experiments stopped."

1 item.

Information

SNAC Resource ID: 7634564

University of Virginia. Library

Related Entities

There are 3 Entities related to this resource.

Henderson, Yandell, 1873-1944

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w6b5740z (person)

Henderson was a physiologist at Yale University. Dr. Henderson helped develop some of the poisonous gases used in the First World War, as well as the gas mask worn by U.S. soldiers, and as contrition for his wartime efforts he had become America's most vociferous critic of automakers' efforts to market leaded gasoline. From the description of Yandell Henderson papers on the merit of a resuscitation apparatus, 1911-1944. (National Library of Medicine). WorldCat record id: 14320335 ...

Welling, William C.,

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w68w5jn9 (person)

Hadley, Arthur Twining, 1856-1930

http://n2t.net/ark:/99166/w62j6cfm (person)

President of Yale University. From the description of Letter to William C. Welling, 1917 September 29. (University of Virginia). WorldCat record id: 50997891 James Hadley: philologist; B.A., Yale, 1842; spent two years at the Yale Divinity School, 1844-1845; appointed tutor in Yale College in 1845, promoted to asst. prof. of Greek in 1848, in 1851 succeeded Theodore Dwight Woolsey, holding the chair of Greek until retirement. Arthur Twining Hadley wa...