This collection consists of 29 photographs from 1950, primarily taken at the Cancer Research Building cornerstone laying and dedication, and at a Washington University Convocation banquet.
This collection consists of 20 photographs, 2 buttons, and 3 proclamations highlighting the scientific achievements of Carl F. and Gerty T. Cori. The photographs primarily depict the Coris in laboratory settings or receiving honors and awards. The buttons were created to commemorate Gerty T. Cori's life and scientific achievements, and the proclamations are from the City of Glendale, MO; the City of St. Louis, MO; and the State of Missouri marking October 23rd as Gerty and Carl Cori day.
This collection consists of 276 photographs, certificates, medallions, and surgical instruments. Photographs include single and group portraits of Carl F. Cori at various stages of his career, scenes from receptions and events where Cori spoke or received honors, and photographs of Carl and Gerty Cori in their laboratory. The collection includes the 1947 Nobel Prize Medal for Physiology or Medicine awarded to Carl Cori, Nobel Prize certificate (VC143236), and an official reproduction of the Nobel Prize medallion (VC143237).
This collection consists of 79 certificates and artifacts from the career of Carl V. Moore. Certificates include diplomas, awards, and Board certifications. Artifacts are various pieces of medical testing equipment including hemoglobinometers, colorimeters, bacteria counting chambers, and hemocytometers. Also included in the collection is an academic hood worn by Moore.
This collection consists of 8 photographs primarily depicting scenes from the professonal career of Carl V. Moore. Photographs include signed portraits of Leo Loeb and Carl T. and Gerty F. Cori, as well as photographs of Moore receiving an award, at a Medical Alumni Association dinner with colleagues, and at work in the laboratory.
This collection conists of 10 glass lantern slides depicting the floorplans and blueprints for the proposed additions to the second Central Institute for the Deaf building, originally drawn in 1927.
This collection consists of 31 anatomical drawings and sketches of the human body by Charles A. Todd. Specifically, Todd's drawings depict human skulls and facial features from various angles, as well as anatomical sketches of the human body at rest or in motion.
This collection consists of physician's bags and their contents, including bottles and vials of medicines, surgical kits, fleams, and various surgical and obstetric tools.
This collection consists of 22 artifacts pertaining to the matriculation of Charles L. Sherman at Barnes Medical College, 1896-1901. The collection includes a scholarship certificate, lecture schedule pamphlet, course cards and matriculation tickets, and a leather wallet that originally held the academic cards.
This collection includes 77 35mm slides made for a presentation by Christopher Hoolihan on the History of Deaf Education. Accompanying the slides is a typed copy of the lecture, and a photocopy of an article by Hoolihan titled, "Too Little Too Soon: The Literature of Deaf Education in 17th-Century Britain (Part 1)."
This collection consists of 23 advertising pamphlets featuring color illustrations of historical medical facitilities in the United States. The pamphlets were distributed by Ciba Pharmaceutical Products, Inc., of Summit, New Jersey to advertise several drugs created by the company.
This collection consists of 9 35 mm slides depicting members of the Washington University School of Medicine Class of 1934. 7 of the slides are photos from the 1930s, and the other 2 are portraits from the 1980s.
This collection consists of 21 photographs bound in a scrapbook made for Anne Lehmann, who had made a financial donation that went toward the surgical floor of Washington University School of Medicine's Clinical Sciences Research Building. The photographs include scenes from the dedication of the building, interior and exterior views of the building, and close-ups of dedication plaques.
This collection consists of three Kodak slide trays containing 35mm color slides and accompanying narrative cassette tapes. The slide presentations were produced by the Wagner Group, Inc., St. Louis to raise funds for the construction and furnishing of the Clinical Sciences Research Building and feature interviews with Drs. Paul E. Lacy, Julio V. Santiago, and Clarence Weldon. Each of the slide trays includes approximately the same presentation, but with a slightly varied number of slides.