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Esther M. Albrecht Turner Collection

  • PC178
  • Collection

This small collection includes documents related to Esther M. Turner's time as a nursing student at Washington University School of Nursing and her career as a registered nurse. Items of note include Turner's nursing caps and cape, and various documents regarding the Washington University School of Nursing class of 1953.

Turner, Esther M. Albrecht

Rutherford B. H. Gradwohl Papers

  • PC030
  • Collection
  • Circa 1900-1959

This small collection includes reprints, newspaper clippings, lantern slides of microscopic specimens, hemacytometer slides, and a commodore's cap reportedly saved from Dr. Gradwohl's office.

Gradwohl, Rutherford B. H.

Mary Bartlett Bunge Papers

  • FC193
  • Collection
  • 1955-2013

This collection contains records relating to Bunge’s work as a neuroscientist. Records include electron microscopy prints and 35mm negatives; research data and notes; laboratory notebooks and electron microscopy logbook; manuscript drafts, related correspondence, and figures prepared for publication and presentation; correspondence; and Bunge’s Master’s thesis and doctoral dissertation.

Bunge, Mary Bartlett

Clark Tibbits Oral History

  • OH060
  • Collection

Interviewed by Margaret Cowdry Haun in 1984. Both recording and transcript are missing.

Nathan Shock Oral History

  • OH059
  • Collection

Interviewed by Margaret Cowdry Haun in 1984. Both recording and transcript are missing.

21st General Hospital Collection

  • RG004
  • Collection
  • 1942-1945

The 21st General Hospital Records is a collection of manuscripts and war memorabilia brought together and preserved by veterans of a military unit. Several of the series were generated as official records of the 21st General Hospital when it was stationed overseas, 1942-1945. But also included are many files and writings compiled or composed by the principal donor, Lee D. Cady, M.D. as late as 1975. The collection is designated a record group because it documents the history of an organization, rather than the career of any particular individual and because this organization at its inception was sponsored by Washington University School of Medicine.

The record group, as processed and described in this inventory by the Archives staff, is comprised of seventeen series. The series include narrative histories and reports, unit newspapers, records of the unit before activation, training materials, transit orders and rosters, files pertaining to each of the overseas duty stations, personnel files, general subject files, maps and plans, and select publications concerning the war and locales where the unit served.

21st General Hospital

John C. Herweg Oral History (OH079)

  • OH079
  • Collection
  • March 2005

The interviewer asked John Herweg to discuss his experiences at St. Louis Children's Hospital during the Alexis Hartmann era, 1936-early 1960s. As a medical student at Washington University in 1942-1945. He mentions his first wife, Janet Scovill, who had finished her pediatric residency at Children's before him. Janet died in 1958. He also speaks of his present wife Dottie Glahn, who was head nurse of the infant ward at St. Louis Children's Hospital from 1947-1959. The interviewer asked him his recollections of Mrs. Langenberg, Gracie Jones and other women on women on the Board of Children's hospital. He also briefly discussed interactions with Estelle Claiborne, the hospital administrator. He recalls that World War II's major effect on St. Louis Children's Hospital was reduction of the number of house officers. The residents who were in charge of the hospital during the nighttime hours were consequently overworked. Concerning the Butler Ward, the segregated ward for African-Americans, he admits the house officers might have integrated Children's Hospital earlier. He thought integration came about when Dave Golden called up Hartmann later and said he wanted to put an African American patient on a ward by treatment needed rather than in the Butler ward. Hartmann agreed and Herwig thought that was the beginning of integration of St. Louis Children's Hospital.

Herweg, John C.

S. Joseph Magidson Oral History

  • OH001
  • Collection
  • 9/25/1969

The interview concerns Magidson's experiences in the First World War with Base Hospital 21, United States Army, sponsored by the Washington University School of Medicine and Barnes Hospital. Magidson begins by reading a general history of the formation and service of this hospital unit. The interview continues with Magidson viewing and describing his Base Hospital 21 photo scrapbook with the interviewer. The audio quality of the interview is inconsistent. Approximately 18 minutes into the interview (and continuing for 8 1/2 minutes) the volume becomes very low. Interviewed by Walter W. Walker on September 25, 1969. OH001. Approximate Length 39 minutes.

Magidson, S. Joseph

Katherine Bain Papers

  • PC164
  • Collection
  • 1892-2000, undated

This collection contains the professional and personal papers of Katherine Bain, MD. The records of Dr. Bain’s professional career focus primarily on her work for the Children’s Bureau in the United States Department of Health, Education, and Welfare and on her work for UNICEF. The records of Dr. Bain’s personal life are equally robust and are reflective of her long life and close relationships with friends and family members.

Records of her professional activities include correspondence, reprints of publications, oral histories, and photographs. Of note are two oral histories focused on Dr. Bain’s career and the history of the Children’s Bureau that were conducted in the 1990s (see Series 4). Also noteworthy are photographs and 35mm slides which capture different periods of Dr. Bain’s career, especially her work with UNICEF (see Series 6). Dr. Bain’s curriculum vitae, lists of her publications, and other biographical materials are included in Series 1.

Records of Dr. Bain’s personal life include correspondence, oral histories, and photographs. Of particular note is an issue of a family newsletter, “The Bain Banner,” published on the occasion of Dr. Bain’s 100th birthday (see Series 1). It contains biographical stories about Dr. Bain and recollections from friends and family. Also of note is an interview with Dr. Bain and her sister, Maria Bain White, conducted by a family member in the 1990s (see Series 4). The photographs and 35mm slides depict the long span of Dr. Bain’s life and include photographs of Dr. Bain as a young child, many of her beloved pet dogs, and her close friend and housemate Christine Glass (see Series 5).

Records of Dr. Bain’s long friendship with Christine Glass are sprinkled throughout the collection. In addition to the photographs and 35mm slides in Series 5, the collection includes correspondence from Ms. Glass (see Series 1), and a photograph of Dr. Bain and Ms. Glass in Italy (see Series 6).

Bain, Katherine

Jerome R. Cox, Jr., A. Maynard Engebretson, V. W. "Bill" Gerth, and Bruce J. Walz Oral History

  • OH128
  • Collection
  • August 21, 2008

Group interview recorded August 21, 2008 commenting on two films: “SPEAR – PC Radiation Treatment Planning (external beams and implants)" dated March 6, 1967, and “This is the P.C.” Biomedical Computer Laboratory, dated May 17, 1971. Commentary and video were synchronized and recorded to a DVD and deposited in RG035 Accession 2010-019.

Cox, Jerome R., Jr.

Jerome R. Cox, Jr. Papers

  • FC157
  • Collection

In his 2006 oral history, Cox comments on influential colleagues such as Harold Edgerton, Leo Beranek, Hallowell Davis, Michel Ter-Pogossian, Charles Molnar, Wesley A. Clark. He discusses his early work at CID, establishment and work of the Biomedical Computer Laboratory (BCL) and Computer Research Laboratory (CRL) at Washington University, and developments in biomedical computing, PET scanning, and computer technology applications.

Cox, Jerome R., Jr.

Jerome R. Cox, Jr. Oral History

  • OH080
  • Collection
  • 6/7/2006

Cox comments on influential colleagues such as Harold Edgerton, Leo Beranek, Hallowell Davis, Michel Ter-Pogossian, Charles Molnar, Wesley A. Clark. He discusses his early work at CID, establishment and work of the Biomedical Computer Laboratory (BCL) and Computer Research Laboratory (CRL) at Washington University, and developments in biomedical computing, PET scanning, and computer technology applications.Interviewed by Simon Igielnik on June 7, 2006. OH080. Approximate Length by 167 minutes.

Cox, Jerome R., Jr.

Saint Louis Medical Society Scrapbooks and Vertical File Collection

  • PC046
  • Collection
  • 1915-1939

This collection includes 7 scrapbooks:
--Scrapbook 1, 1915-1917
--Scrapbook 2, 1918-1925
--Scrapbook 3, 1926-1930
--Scrapbook 4, 1934
--Scrapbook 5, 1935
--Scrapbook 6, 1936
--Scrapbook 7, 1939

See also Index to Vertical File of Saint Louis Metropolitan Medical Society (IG004).

St. Louis Metropolitan Medical Society

Diplomas and Certificates

  • VC814
  • Collection

Diplomas and certificates from local, national and international medical schools, universities and colleges.

Washington University School of Medicine Library Construction Snapshots

  • VC334
  • Collection
  • 1987-1988

This collection consists of 405 color snapshots documenting the construction progress of Washington University School of Medicine Library, now named the Bernard Becker Medical Library, between 1987 and 1988.

Washington University School of Medicine Library

Surgical Illustration Department Negatives

  • VC253
  • Collection

18 Kodak boxes, 4 wood negative cases, 3 legal clamshell document cases of 35mm negatives and two ring binders with handwritten chronological list of negatives.

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