Medical college catalogs, introductory and valedictory addresses, and ephemera, 1820-1920.
Related Entities
There are 135 Entities related to this resource.
University of Wooster. Medical Dept.
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College of Physicians and Surgeons of the City of New York.
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College of Physicians and Surgeons (Baltimore, Md.)
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The College of Physicians and Surgeons in Boston, Mass. was founded in 1880 as a coeducational medical school. Students received practical lectures and laboratory work at the College and completed clinical work at several Boston area hospitals including the North End Dispensary and Hospital, Union General Hospital, Massachusetts General Hospital, Boston City Hospital, and in the homes of poor patients. The College closed in 1948. From the description of Records, 1880-1949. (Harvard U...
University of Nashville. Medical Dept.
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Ohio State University. College of Medicine
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Caducean was a yearbook produced by The Ohio State University College of Medicine. It was produced from 1946-1997. From the guide to the Caducean Photo Collection, 1956-1985, (Medical Heritage Center) ...
Boston University. School of Medicine
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Albany Medical College
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St. Louis College of Physicians and Surgeons.
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Presbyterian Hospital and Woman's Medical College (Cincinnati, Ohio)
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Woman's Medical College of the New York Infirmary.
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Woman's Medical College of Baltimore
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Dayton Medical University.
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University Medical College of Kansas City
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Cooper Medical College
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Castleton Medical College (Castleton, Vt.)
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Jefferson Medical College
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Baltimore College of Dental Surgery
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University of Pittsburgh. School of Medicine
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St. Joseph Medical College.
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University of Tennessee (System). College of Medicine
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Kansas City College of Physicians and Surgeons.
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Willoughby Medical College
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Chartered in 1834 and named after Dr. Westel Willoughby, founder of Fairfield Medical School (Herkimer, N.Y.), whose graduates helped secure the charter. Located in Chagrin, Ohio (renamed Willoughby in 1835), Willoughby University conferred degrees in the arts, sciences, and professions and consisted of male and female colleges, a law dept., and, most notably, the Medical College of Lake Erie. Filling the need for physicians in the pioneer West, the medical college was the first in the Western R...
University of Vermont. College of Medicine
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Western Reserve University. School of Medicine
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New Orleans School of Medicine
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Georgetown University. School of Medicine
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Medical College of Fort Wayne.
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Medical College of Indiana
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Chicago. Woman's Medical College.
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Michigan College of Medicine
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Yale College (1718-1887). Medical Institution
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United States Medical College (N.Y.)
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Maryland Medical College (Baltimore, Md.)
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Medical College of Georgia
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College in Augusta, Ga., formerly Medical Institute of Georgia. From the description of Papers, 1833-1859. (Duke University Library). WorldCat record id: 36492118 Chartered in 1828 as Medical Academy of Georgia, became Medical College of Georgia in 1833; in 1911 became affiliated with the University of Georgia as its Medical Dept.; name changed in 1933 to University of Georgia School of Medicine; became Medical College of Georgia in 1950. The list was compiled by Paul Eaton,...
Eclectic Medical College of Maine.
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Texas Medical College and Hospital.
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Berkshire Medical Institution (Pittsfield, Mass.)
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Lincoln Medical College.
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Denver College of Medicine
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The Denver College of Medicine, Denver, Colo. began as the Medical Department of the University of Denver and Colorado Seminary in 1881. The department was incorporated in 1899 as the Denver College of Medicine. In 1902 the College merged with the Gross Medical College and was named Denver and Gross College of Medicine. Its facilities were located in the Haish Building, located at 14th St. and Arapahoe St. in Denver. The Flexner report, a reorganization of medical education issued by Abraham Fle...
New York Ophthalmic Hospital. College
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Minnesota Hospital College
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New York Polyclinic.
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Kentucky School of Medicine
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The Kentucky School of Medicine was established in Louisville in 1850. From the description of Broadside, ca. 1850. (Filson Historical Society, The). WorldCat record id: 49342457 ...
George Washington University. School of Medicine
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Medical College of Virginia
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San Francisco. College of Physicians and Surgeons.
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State University of New York at Buffalo. School of Medicine
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Northwestern Ohio Medical College.
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Pulte Medical College.
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Eclectic Medical College of the City of New York
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Boston Dental College.
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Pennsylvania Medical College.
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Chicago Physio-Medical College
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Homeopathic Medical College of Missouri
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Medical College of Ohio (Cincinnati, Ohio)
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New York Orthopaedic Dispensary and Hospital
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University of Virginia. School of Medicine
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Arkansas. University. School of Medicine.
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Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.). Women's Medical School.
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Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital of Philadelphia
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Eleanor Elkins Rice was a Philadelphia community activist. From the description of Honorary diploma, 1935. (Temple University Libraries). WorldCat record id: 145566848 ...
Central College of Physicians and Surgeons (Indianapolis, Ind.).
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Eclectic Medical College
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Drake University. College of Medicine.
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Harvard Medical School.
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University College of Medicine (Richmond, Va.)
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Memphis Medical College (Memphis, Tenn.)
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American School of Osteopathy (Kirksville, Mo.)
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Columbia University. College of Physicians and Surgeons
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American Health University (Chicago, Ill.)
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Geneva Medical College
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Philadelphia College of Medicine and Surgery.
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University of Michigan. Medical School
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See the historical sketch in the finding aid for the Medical School (University of Michigan) Records. From the guide to the Medical School (University of Michigan) publications, 1849-1999, (Bentley Historical Library University of Michigan) While the University of Michigan's charters of 1817 and 1837 both called for the inclusion of medical education within the curriculum, no action was taken to carry out this mandate until 1848. On January 19 of that year the r...
Cleveland University of Medicine and Surgery
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Barnes Medical College.
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Bellevue Hospital Medical College
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Established in 1861, merged with University Medical College to form University and Bellevue Hospital Medical College, 1898. From the description of Records, 1861-1898. (Unknown). WorldCat record id: 155527268 ...
New York Medical College (1850)
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Northwestern University (Evanston, Ill.). Medical School
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The Northwestern University Medical School began as the medical department of Lind University (later Lake Forest University) in 1859, located at Randolph and Market Streets in Chicago. In 1864, the medical department became an independent school, the Chicago Medical College, housed in a building at 22nd and State Streets. The founder of the College, Nathan Smith Davis, was an innovator in medical education who wanted to establish a three-year program that went beyond the traditional...
University of California School of Medicine, San Francisco
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Oakland College of Medicine and Surgery.
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Gross Medical College (Denver, Colo.)
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Savannah Medical College
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The Savannah Medical College was the second such college organized in Georgia. The cornerstone for its building was laid in January 1853, and the college opened for its first session in November of that year. The building was on the northwest corner of Taylor and Habersham Streets. The Savannah Poor House and Marine Hospital served for demonstrations in clinical medicine. The college was closed during the Civil War. It re-opened in 1866 and continued operating in its building until it was sold i...
University of Illinois at Chicago. College of Medicine.
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Southwestern Homeopathic Medical College and Hospital (Louisville, Ky.)
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American Medical Missionary College.
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Chicago Homoeopathic Medical College
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Medical College of the State of South Carolina
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University of Chicago. School of Medicine
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Williamette University. Medical Dept.
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Creighton University. School of Medicine
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University of Iowa. College of Medicine
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Downstate Medical Center (N.Y.)
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In colonial New York, only a small number of almshouse infirmaries existed to care for the sick, while the mentally ill were usually imprisoned or placed in poorhouses. It was not until the early to mid-19th century, when the New York City area's dependent and poor population increased dramatically, that hospitals and other health services organizations, such as homeopaths and maternity wards, readily began to emerge. In Brooklyn specifically, the earliest hospitals included the Kin...
University of Cincinnati. College of Medicine
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California Eclectic Medical College
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Tulane University. School of Medicine
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Stanford University. School of Medicine
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Cooper Medical College founded in San Francisco, Calif. by Levi Cooper Lane (1882). He named school for uncle, Elias Samuel Cooper, who had founded first medical school in California, University of the Pacific School of Medicine (1858). University operated medical school until 1865 when competition from Dr. Toland's medical school forced closure of University of Pacific Medical School. Levi Cooper Lane revived school (1870) but Methodist Church, who operated university, severed connection with i...
University of Pennsylvania. School of Medicine
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Many students of the Class of 1943 of the School of Medicine participated in the war efforts, either serving in the Navy on the hospital ship or at Hospital Base 20, both operated by the University. From the description of Class of 1943 papers, 1943-1972. (University of Pennsylvania). WorldCat record id: 122528514 ...
Beaumont Hospital Medical College (St. Louis, Mo.)
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Miami Medical College of Cincinnati
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American Eclectic Medical College.
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Bowdoin College. Medical School
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Vermont Medical College (Woodstock, Vt.)
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Yale university. School of medicine
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James D. Kenney was attending physician, Yale New Haven Hospital, 1968-2007; president, medical staff, 1976-1977; attending physician, Hospital of St. Raphael, New Haven; associate dean for postgraduate and continuing medical education, Yale University School of Medicine, 1978-2001; clinical professor of medicine; and editor of The Medical Letter. From the description of School of Medicine, Yale University, records of James D. Kenney as associate dean for postgraduate and continuing ...
Rush Medical College
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Rush Medical College was one of the first medical schools founded west of Ohio. It was named by its founder, Dr. Daniel Brainard, in honor of Benjamin Rush, M.D., the physician-statesman who was a signer of the Declaration of Independence. During the nineteenth century, Rush grew quickly, paralleling Chicago's rapid growth as a major urban center. In the manner of most medical schools in the 1800's, Rush was a proprietary institution owned and operated by a group of phys...
National University. Medical Dept.
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Baylor University. College of Medicine.
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University of Iowa. College of Homeopathic Medicine.
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Philadelphia School of Anatomy
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Boylston Medical School (Boston, Mass.)
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Starling Medical College
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Portland School for Medical Instruction.
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Baltimore Medical College
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University of Maryland (1812-1920). School of Medicine
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Dartmouth Medical School
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Harvey Medical College
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Cincinnati College of Medicine and Surgery
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Medical school; of Cincinnati, Ohio. From the description of [Diploma] : Cincinnati, Ohio, to Gerard Q. Berryman, June 19, 1865. (Kansas State Historical Society). WorldCat record id: 51205177 ...
New England Female Medical College
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Emory University. School of Medicine
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Detroit Medical College
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Medico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia
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New York University. College of Medicine
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Missouri Medical College
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The first medical school west of the Mississippi River, the Medical Department of Kemper College, was founded in St. Louis in 1840 by Joseph Nash McDowell and John S. Moore. The connection with Kemper College, an Episcopal academy located outside of town, was a formality only. After this first parent institution went out of existence in 1846, McDowell and his colleagues affiliated themselves with the University of Missouri. That connection lasted until 1857, when the school was chartered indepen...
Ohio Medical University (Columbus, Ohio)
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Medical College of Evansville
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Howard University. School of Medicine
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Washington University (Saint Louis, Mo.). Medical School
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Medical College of Alabama
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Keokuk Medical College.
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University of Louisville. School of Medicine
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Hahnemann Medical College and Hospital (Chicago, Ill.)
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Johns Hopkins University. School of Medicine.
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Woman's Medical College of Pennsylvania
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University of Oregon. Medical School
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George Earle Chamberlain (b.1913), grandson and namesake of the former governor and senator of Oregon, son of otolaryngologist Dr. Charles Thomson Chamberlain. He received a BA from the University of Oregon in 1936, and an MD from the University of Oregon Medical School in 1938. Chamberlain served as captain and resident physician in the U.S. Army Medical Corps during WWII. He began serving in 1941, when he was stationed in New York, N. Y.,at the New York Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat Infirmary. He ...
Southern Medical College
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St. Louis Hygienic College of Physicians and Surgeons.
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Louisville Medical College
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