- VC164-i164283
- Item
- circa 1950
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Robert S. Dillon is second from the left. Ernest H. Parsons is third from the right. The photograph is mounted on a board.
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Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Robert S. Dillon is second from the left. Ernest H. Parsons is third from the right. The photograph is mounted on a board.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Untitled abstract sculpture by William H.M. Talbot, 1964. Concrete and glass, 64 x 38 x 20 inches with a 3 inch cylindrical metal base mounted on an 84 inch wood plinth. An inscription on the flagstone floor in front of the plinth reads “ IN MEMORY / JOHN CLEVELAND TALBOT / 1891-1962 .” A legend inscribed in stone molding 5 x 111 inches long and set into the brick wall of a staircase adjacent to the sculpture reads: “ CARING IS THE GREAT THING - CARING MATTERS MOST .” John Cleveland Talbot (1891-1962) was the father of the sculptor and an assistant to Washington University Chancellor Arthur Holly Compton in the 1950s. John Talbot was responsible for interesting the Johnson family in contributing toward the construction of the Irene Walter Johnson Institute of Rehabilitation building, which is named for the wife of Oscar Johnson, a president of International Shoe Company. The Talbot family donated the work.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Untitled abstract sculpture by William H.M. Talbot, 1964. Concrete and glass, 64 x 38 x 20 inches with a 3 inch cylindrical metal base mounted on an 84 inch wood plinth. An inscription on the flagstone floor in front of the plinth reads “ IN MEMORY / JOHN CLEVELAND TALBOT / 1891-1962 .” A legend inscribed in stone molding 5 x 111 inches long and set into the brick wall of a staircase adjacent to the sculpture reads: “ CARING IS THE GREAT THING - CARING MATTERS MOST .” John Cleveland Talbot (1891-1962) was the father of the sculptor and an assistant to Washington University Chancellor Arthur Holly Compton in the 1950s. John Talbot was responsible for interesting the Johnson family in contributing toward the construction of the Irene Walter Johnson Institute of Rehabilitation building, which is named for the wife of Oscar Johnson, a president of International Shoe Company. The Talbot family donated the work.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Untitled abstract sculpture by William H.M. Talbot, 1964. Concrete and glass, 64 x 38 x 20 inches with a 3 inch cylindrical metal base mounted on an 84 inch wood plinth. An inscription on the flagstone floor in front of the plinth reads “ IN MEMORY / JOHN CLEVELAND TALBOT / 1891-1962 .” A legend inscribed in stone molding 5 x 111 inches long and set into the brick wall of a staircase adjacent to the sculpture reads: “ CARING IS THE GREAT THING - CARING MATTERS MOST .” John Cleveland Talbot (1891-1962) was the father of the sculptor and an assistant to Washington University Chancellor Arthur Holly Compton in the 1950s. John Talbot was responsible for interesting the Johnson family in contributing toward the construction of the Irene Walter Johnson Institute of Rehabilitation building, which is named for the wife of Oscar Johnson, a president of International Shoe Company. The Talbot family donated the work.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Untitled abstract sculpture by William H.M. Talbot, 1964. Concrete and glass, 64 x 38 x 20 inches with a 3 inch cylindrical metal base mounted on an 84 inch wood plinth. An inscription on the flagstone floor in front of the plinth reads “ IN MEMORY / JOHN CLEVELAND TALBOT / 1891-1962 .” A legend inscribed in stone molding 5 x 111 inches long and set into the brick wall of a staircase adjacent to the sculpture reads: “ CARING IS THE GREAT THING - CARING MATTERS MOST .” John Cleveland Talbot (1891-1962) was the father of the sculptor and an assistant to Washington University Chancellor Arthur Holly Compton in the 1950s. John Talbot was responsible for interesting the Johnson family in contributing toward the construction of the Irene Walter Johnson Institute of Rehabilitation building, which is named for the wife of Oscar Johnson, a president of International Shoe Company. The Talbot family donated the work.
Composite portrait, Washington University School of Nursing class of 1954
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Group portrait of the Washington University School of Medicine Department of Pharmacology.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Group portrait of the Washington University School of Medicine Division of Radiation Oncology.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Group portrait of the Washington University School of Medicine Division of Radiation Oncology.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Composite portrait of the department of anesthesiology residents and fellows, 1986-1987,
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Composite portrait of a third year class, 1957-58, Washington University School of Medicine.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Clinical pathological conference in the Barnes Hospital Ampitheater ("The Pit").
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Drs. John Smith, Ed Massie, and Llwellyn Sale, Jr. are all seated in the front row.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
The photograph is mounted on a board.
"The Physician Grappling with Death," by Ivo Saliger.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
"Arzt und Tod im Kampf um das Madchen," by Ivo Saliger.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
The photograph is mounted on a board.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
The book was originally published in 1893.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
The photograph is mounted on a board. Typed caption beneath the photograph reads: "The technique of examining the lower 12 inches of the bowel will be demonstrated."
Patients in the Eye Clinic, Washington University Medical Center.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
The photograph is mounted on a board.
Residents examining an infant patient during ward rounds, St. Louis Children's Hospital.
Part of Washington University Medical Center Photographs (VC164)
The photograph is mounted on a board.