This collection consists of 724 photographs, drawings, diagrams, posters, newspaper clippings, and sheet music, and other ephemera related to the 21st General Hospital. The photographs primarily depict staff and patients of the 21st General Hospital from when it was stationed overseas 1942-1945, as well as views of hospital buildings and grounds. Drawings and diagrams include plans for wiring and plumbing, architectural and ground plans, and some schematic drawings of hospital equipment. Other ephemera in the collection include hand-drawn posters advertising Officers' Club dances, newspaper clippings from the St. Louis Post-Dispatch Pictures Section depicting operations at General Hospital 21, and cartoon watercolors depicting soldiers and Red Cross workers.
This collection consists of 15 photographs from the Washington University School of Medicine Department of Otolaryngology. The photographs are primarily group shots of staff and post-graduate students from the mid-20th century. Also included in this collection are photographs of Evarts A. Graham and Robert A. Moore that have inscriptions to Theodore E. Walsh, who was the head of the Otolaryngology Department from 1940 until his retirement in 1966.
This collection consists of 1,134 photographs depicting scenes from the Washington University School of Medicine Program in Physical Therapy. Subjects include portraits of students, candid scenes from conferences, physical therapists and students working with patients, scenes from Commencement ceremonies, and scenes from department parties and other events. Some of the photographs, VC339-i3391066 to VC339-i3391153, are digital files only and are stored on the Archives and Rare Books RIS server.
Program in Physical Therapy, Washington University School of Medicine
This collection consists of 8 photographs related to the depolyment of the 21st General Hospital to North Africa. The photographs depict scenes from a Meschoui (roasted sheep) Feast, including a tasting and judging of the meschoui by French Captain Louis Brajon, General Arthur R. Wilson, and Colonel Lee D. Cady. For other photographs related to General Hospital 21, please see VC013 General Hospital 21 Photographs and Drawings.
This collection consists of 137 photographs and drawings documenting the years Benjamin H. Charles spent serving as a major for the 21st General Hospital during World War II. The collection includes photographs of Charles, fellow hospital staff and other military personnel, and German prisoners of war (POWs) at various locations in France, Germany, Italy, Morocco, and Algeria. The collection also includes watercolors depicting Charles and various scenes from Bou Hanifia, Algeria by German POW Walter Köhnlein, as well as several promissory notes and a Taittinger champagne label.
This collection consists of 30 photographs depicting scenes from 12th Field Hospital, Camp Bowie, Texas, and 2 photographs of George J.L. Wulff in England and German during World War II.
This collection consists of 21 photographs and certificates from Richard W. Yore. The photographs are portraits of Evarts A. Graham, Eugene Bricker, and Carl Lischer.
This collection consists of ninety-five 35mm slides, including some duplicated or variant images, produced from archival and private sources for a show honoring the Class of 1944, 1993-94. Many of the images are duplicates of those found in other visual collections.
This collection consists of 12 print reproductions of paintings in a portfolio depicting army medicine during World War II. The 12 prints are part of "a series of more than two hundred and fifty pictures by distinguished American artists commissioned by Abbott Laboratories, North Chicago, Illinois, for presentation to the United States Army as a contribution to the war effort."
This collection consists of 9 international flags, 1 wooden sign, and 16 photographs collected by Robert W. Kelley during his World War II service with the 21st General Hospital.
This colleciton consists of 232 rolls of 35 mm. The film contains portraits of medical class members, including Clinical Clerkship Program students, taken from 1946 to 1984.
This collection includes 260 negatives and film transparencies representing photographic reproductions created by the Department of Medical Illustration, 1947-1981. Negatives are not identified with negative numbers. The negatives are primarily for Christmas Cards, but several other subjects are also represented.
Department of Medical Illustration, Washington University School of Medicine
This collection consists of 31 photographs depicting scenes from the professional career of Helen B. Burch. The photographs primarily depict Burch and colleagues conducting research in the Philippines and Guatemala.
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 6 photographs related to the Washington University School of Medicine Department of Surgery. Depicted subjects include a studio portrait of Walter Ballinger, a banquet honoring Evarts A. Graham, a group portrait of Department of Surgery, an unidentified outdoor ceremony, and an informal portrait of Graham with Eugene Bricker and Charles Eckert.
This collection consists of 22 digital surrogates of photographs, negatives, and an oil portrait depicting Rita Levi-Montalcini and her laboratory. The physical objects in this collection are held in the Washington University Archive.
This collection consists of photographs, charts, and drawings mounted on 241 sheets of paper. The images depicit various scenes from Washington University School of Dentistry that were originally bound together in a booklet or binder. The collection of images were likely meant as an exhibit illustrating the importance of the School of Dentistry and to advocate for more funding and for rennovations to the school building.
This collection consists of 9 photographs taken by the pharmaceutical manufacturerers E.R. Squibb and Sons (now Bristol-Meyers Squibb) during the production of a television program at Washington University School of Medicine.