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Archival description
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World War I Correspondence
US AA088.S003.SS001.B004.F033 · File · 1919-01 - 1919-12
Part of 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.

World War I Correspondence
US AA088.S003.SS001.B004.F031 · File · 1917-1919 (bulk 1917)
Part of 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 "somewhere in France," but also from Germany and Fort Benjamin, Indiana in the U.S.

Topics include the staffing of Beth Israel, future needs of military patients, the status of the Beth Israel Hospital building (future Dazian Pavilion), and the daily life of those serving. At least one letter makes reference to the Mount Sinai Hospital Unit.

World War I Correspondence
US AA088.S003.SS001.B004.F032 · File · 1918 - 1919-01-11
Part of 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 "somewhere in France," but also from Germany and Fort Benjamin, Indiana in the U.S.

Topics include discussion on daily life for those serving in the war, Russia's role in the war, the status of the new Beth Israel hospital building (future Dazian Pavilion), medical staff shortages at Beth Israel and in the United States, the Influenza Epidemic of 1918, discussions of wartime surgery, discussions of x-ray training for military doctors, the status of various Beth Israel doctors at home and abroad, and global and local politics, particularly related to Congressman Isaac Siegel. Two postcards were also sent from Leo B. Meyer from Chartreuse de Vauclaire, a monastery turned military hospital in France. Letters also make various references to the Mount Sinai Hospital unit.

US AA014 · Collection · 1916-1943

This collection consists of nearly 200 photographs of World War I soldiers, evacuation hospitals, field hospitals and areas of France taken by the U.S. Signal Corps., and maps and documents used by Col. Lyle in the course of his command. (The photographs have been integrated into the Mount Sinai Photograph Collection.)

Lyle, Henry H. M.
US AA088.S003.SS001.B004.F032.I027 · Item · 1918-10-31
Part of 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.

Frank, Louis J.
US AA148.S002.DR001.I001 · Item · 1946
Part of Roosevelt Hospital School of Nursing records

This volume, written by a former director of the school, covers the establishment of the Roosevelt Hospital and the need for the establishment of the School of Nursing. It discusses the admittance requirements, the establishment of its curriculum, and development of the school under four of its first directors and the establishment of its Alumnae Association. It also includes chapters on the nurses serving during World War I and II and includes rosters listing those names, as well as many photographs of the nurses and students during the first fifty years.

Fraser, Evelyn G.
US AA107.INT012 · File · 1985-10-31
Part of Collection of Mount Sinai Hospital-related oral histories

This is a recording of the oral history of Bella Trachtenberg conducted by Albert S. Lyons on October 31st, 1985. Some of the significant topics represented in this oral history include: working as a stenographer; stories from life in France while working in the laboratory at Base Hospital No. 3 AEF during World War I; her experiences with and opinion of the men of the Board of Trustees and Medical Board; recalling controversies and tensions between surgeons, as well as the first and second woman externs, Isabel Beck (finished training in 1924) and Gertrude Felshin (class of 1925), and the first woman intern Rose Speigel; and George Baehr’s work with the Consultation Serivces and early animal kidney transplants, including her own role in Baehr’s kidney transplants as an anesthesiologist.

The recording begins in mid-sentence without context.

Trachtenberg, Bella
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.

Roosevelt Hospital (New York, N.Y.)
US AA166.B004.F009 · File · 1942-5/1944
Part of Office of the Director of The Mount Sinai Hospital, Joseph Turner, MD records

Memos and correspondence with Lt. Col. Herman Lande of the Third General Hospital. Correspondence documents the activities of the Third General Hospital in training at Camp Rucker in Alabama, and in North Africa and France, as well as efforts to send supplies to the Third General Hospital, and a visit to Camp Rucker by Dr. Turner and President of the Board of Trustees Waldemar Kops. Includes materials related to the 1942 Presentation of Colors to the Third General Hospital, a list of Mount Sinai Hospital Medical Personnel associated with the Third General Hospital, and a newsletter from the Medical Department of the Third General Hospital.