Skip to main content

Medicine, Military

 Subject
Subject Source: Fast

Found in 24 Collections and/or Records:

James A. Baker collection

 Collection
Identifier: 2005-005
Abstract

The James A. Baker collection is primarily concerned with the military records of James Adolph Baker, M.D. They were created and collected by Dr. Baker and donated to the University by his grand-daughter Sarah Munro.

Dates: 1938-1966

Henry D. Barker papers

 Collection
Identifier: 2012-009
Abstract

The papers of Henry D. Barker, M.D. (1916-96) provide a variety of materials which emphasize two diiferent facets of his career. A vast array of technical data is available concerning his wartime service in the Army Medical Corps in Panama. The papers relating his postwar career are primarily concerned with his paricipation in the group Physicians for Social Responsibility.



Dates: 1916-1996

George E. Chamberlain papers

 Collection — Box SC01
Identifier: 1998-004
Abstract

George Chamberlain graduated University of Oregon (1936) and University of Oregon Medical School (1938) and became an otolaryngologist. The collection consists of a paper on diagnosis and treatment of Otosclerosis, including pictures of instruments used in the operation and negatives of the operation itself.

Dates: circa 1942

Don Devlin collection on the 46th General Hospital

 Collection
Identifier: 1998-005
Abstract

The collection consists of of stenographic records of lectures given by the officers of the 46th General Hospital at Fort Riley Kansas in fall 1942. Also present are newspaper articles with group pictures and names of staff, and photographic negatives of group pictures of staff collected by Don Devlin, who served as stenographer for the University of Oregon Medical School, 46th General Hospital.

Dates: 1942-1943

Eleanor Donaldson papers

 Collection
Identifier: 2008-020
Abstract

The Eleanor Donaldson papers span the years 1909 to 1954 and contain an assortment of materials kept by or about Eleanor, primarily during her time serving in the Nurse Corps of Base Hospital 46 in Bazoilles-sur-Meuse, France during World War I. Materials include photographs, posters, correspondence, publications, obituaries, artifacts, and other documents.

Dates: 1909-1954

Frewing 46th General Hospital image collection

 Collection
Identifier: 2016-009
Abstract Dr. H. Leslie Frewing served as a surgeon with the 46th General Hospital during World War II. After the war ended, Frewing settled with his family in Vancouver, Washington, and became one of the four founders of The Vancouver Clinic before continuing medical work abroad. The Frewing 46th General Hospital image collection consists of photographs depicting the people and scenery of the Army hospital on bases in Kansas and France in the 1940s. This collection offers a glimpse into the lives of...
Dates: 1940s

Herbert Merton and Jeanne Todd Greene papers

 Collection
Identifier: 2006-005
Abstract

The collection consists of materials that pertain to the life and work of Herbert Merton Greene, M.D., and his wife, Jeanne Todd Greene, centering around Greene’s work as a civilian and military physician as well as membership in the Freemasonry and the Anglo-Saxon Christian Association. As well, materials surrounding Jeanne Todd Greene's education, work, and life as a nurse both before and during World War I are included.

Dates: 1849-2003

Paul Gottlieb Hafner papers

 Collection
Identifier: 2015-005
Abstract

1

Dates: 1934-1996; Majority of material found within 1934-1944

Ruby Hills, Kathryn Hilterbrant, and Edith Richards papers

 Collection
Identifier: 1998-007
Abstract

These papers document the history of the 46th General Base Hospital during World War II. Composed of the materials from three nurses active in the Base Hospital, the collection contains manuscripts, newspaper clippings, photographs, and photocopies of letters, lists, and other materials with the bulk being photocopies.

Dates: 1942-1992; Majority of material found within 1942-1945

Esther Pohl Lovejoy papers

 Collection
Identifier: 2001-011
Abstract Esther Clayson Pohl Lovejoy (1869-1967) was the second woman to graduate from the University of Oregon Medical School in 1894, served as Portland’s City Health Officer and with the Red Cross during World War I, led the American Women’s Hospital Service, and helped found and served as the first president of the Medical Women’s International Association. She was also a prolific writer. This collections documents Dr. Lovejoy’s prominent role in advancing the work of women in medicine, as well...
Dates: 1870-1995; Majority of material found within 1907-1967