History, Modern 1601-

Zone des éléments

Référentiel

Code

D049711

Note(s) sur la portée et contenu

  • The period of history from 1601 of the common era to the present.

Note(s) sur la source

  • Medical Subject Headings

Note(s) d'affichage

    Termes hiérarchiques

    History, Modern 1601-

    Terme générique History

    History, Modern 1601-

    Termes équivalents

    History, Modern 1601-

    • Employé pour History, Modern
    • Employé pour Modern History

    Termes associés

    History, Modern 1601-

      49 Description archivistique résultats pour History, Modern 1601-

      World War I Correspondence
      US AA088.S003.SS001.B004.F033 · Dossier · 1919-01 - 1919-12
      Fait partie de Mount Sinai Beth Israel records

      This folder includes the correspondence of Louis J. Frank with Beth Israel Hospital medical staff serving in World War I. Correspondence is mainly sent from France and Germany.

      Topics include discussion on daily life of those serving, travel throughout Europe, practicing medicine during and after battle, and reactions to Armistice.

      One major thread of correspondence includes a request from Dr. Joseph Horowitz, who, stationed in Germany with little to do after the Armistice, asks Louis J. Frank to coordinate with Congressman Isaac Siegel to help him return to work at Beth Israel Hospital.

      US AA039 · Collection · 1937-1979

      This collection consists primarily of correspondence, documents, photographs and memorabilia dating from Esther Winkler Shapiro’s service as a U.S. Army nurse on the Pacific front during the Second World War, with a smaller assortment of material dating from her time as a nursing student at The Mount Sinai Hospital School of Nursing. Memorabilia include a World War II Army Nurse Corps uniform and cap, a Japanese flag, and Mount Sinai Hospital School of Nursing caps. The collection include a shipboard newsletter from the U.S.S. Repose and a hospital newspaper from Thomas M. England General Hospital, locations where Shapiro served.

      Sans titre
      US AA155.INT191 · Dossier · 11/9/2017
      Fait partie de St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center Alumni Association oral history collection

      In part one of a two-part interview, Dr. Braun recounts her childhood in Shanghai, China during the third Japanese invasion, before the World War II. She discusses her family's struggles to escape the war, her father and grandfather's relationship with the U.S.; her grandfather's various diplomatic roles for China and the Kuomintang; her parents' meeting in the US (her mother is from Poland) and their lives after marriage.

      Sans titre
      US AA155.INT212 · Dossier · 2/6/2018
      Fait partie de St. Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center Alumni Association oral history collection

      Dr. Jeanne Baer describes her family’s background in Germany and France in the years leading up to World War II, their life evading German troops in France, and their move to the US in 1948. She discusses her schooling in Pennsylvania, and her acceptance and training experiences in medical school through her residency in medicine. She provides interesting details of training in the 1960s including fellowship training in gastroenterology and finally her appointment to the radiology department at St. Luke’s Hospital and the work she did there. Baer particularly mentions Dr. Virginia Kanick with whom she formed a close friendship and training in the 60s and 70s as a woman in what was a man’s field.

      Sans titre
      Roosevelt Hospital records
      US AA105 · Collection · 1866-2013

      Please review the notes under the individual series below. For additional information on that series, go to https://libguides.mssm.edu/catalog and enter the OCLC # provided to read the catalog record for that series.

      Sans titre
      John H. Garlock, MD papers
      US AA013 · Collection · 1915-1967

      This small collection spans the career of Dr. Garlock: from medical school material, to ambulance duty logs from his internship at New York Hospital, photographs and some case reports on plastic surgery patients, private practice patient records, Operative Clinic presentations he made as Chief of Surgical Service at Mount Sinai, to the book on surgery of the alimentary tract that was published after his death.
      While the range is wide, the records still only provide a surface picture of the man. The detailed notes and sometimes colorful drawings that Dr. Garlock created in medical school speak to his attention to detail. The early volumes are labeled "John Harry Garlock." He also noted a change of address on the notebooks from 346 W. 56th Street to 180 Claremont Avenue. This move happened during his medical school years.
      His surgical acumen and style are brought out in the patient files and transcripts of the surgical clinics. The latter also give a glimpse into early plastic surgery at New York Hospital and The Mount Sinai Hospital. It was Dr. Garlock who helped establish plastic surgery as a surgical specialty here. The clinics were ended in January of 1943 for the duration of the War because there was a problem obtaining a sufficient number of orderlies.
      Also instructive for insights into Dr. Garlock are the correspondence files, one with colleagues (Box 1, f.6) and the other with patients (Box 2, f.6). The ambulance log books in Box 1 show Dr. Garlock's keen eye for his surroundings and provide wonderful details on the people he treated and the treatments of the day.
      Of note, too, is a series of letters Dr. William Hitzig wrote on behalf of Dr. Garlock when the latter was planning a trip to India. Dr. Hitzig had many connections there and wrote letters of introduction for the Garlocks. There is also a series of letters regarding a controversy between Drs. Sigmund Mage and Richard Lewisohn. (Box 1, f.9)
      The patient records found here are only a portion of the files maintained by Dr. Garlock at his office. At his death, the records were divided among Dr. Garlock's junior colleagues. Many of those included here are the records of ileostomy and colostomy patients that were taken by Dr. Albert S. Lyons.
      This collection contains some photographs, many of which are large and mounted. Thirteen posed publicity photos of unknown musicians and dancers were removed and sent to the Lincoln Center Archives for inclusion in their collections.

      Sans titre
      US AA088.S003.SS001.B004.F032.I027 · Pièce · 1918-10-31
      Fait partie de Mount Sinai Beth Israel records

      Topics include status of Beth Israel doctors following the end of World War I, discussion of progress on the new hospital building at Livingston Place (the future Dazian Pavilion), staffing shortages at the hospital, and the ongoing Influenza Epidemic of 1918.

      Sans titre
      US AA088.S003.SS001.B004.F032.I030 · Pièce · 1918-10-23
      Fait partie de Mount Sinai Beth Israel records

      Topics of letter include the status of Beth Israel medical staff members serving in World War I, staff shortages caused by the 1918 Influenza Epidemic, the wartime conscription of women as nurses, and the status of the new hospital building on Livingston Place (future Dazian Pavilion).

      Sans titre