Manuscript note on verso indicates that this is a photograph of 52 Queen Street where chloroform was discovered and where Simpson lived until his death.
Thayer standing, with his hand on the shoulder of a man in a bed, and a clipboard attached to the headboard of the bed. On verso "Dr. William S. Thayer 'Sadie' 1906 Prof. of Medicine."
Portrait of Emil Adolf von Behring. Photographed by Meisenbach Riffarth & Co., Berlin. Facsimile signature.
Publisher: Berlin: Verlag von August Hirschwald.
Physick sitting at a desk, resting his left arm on the desk and holding a folded piece of paper in his right hand. Painted by Henry Inman, engraved by R. W. Dodson. Painted for the Medical class of the University of Pennsylvania. Facsimile signature.
Portrait of Berzelius sitting with his arm resting on a table, wearing a jacket with medallions on it. Text in English. Drawn by O. J. Soedermark, engraved by C. W. Sharpe.
Panel for the Florence Nightingale Memorial, Liverpool. Miss Nightingale is standing over two men and holding her lamp while she pours from a pitcher she is carrying into their bowl. The sculpture is by Charles J. Allen. From the collection of Howard...
Stecher sitting at his desk, holding a pen, with a blank notepad and an open journal in front of him. Photographed by Rebman Photo Service, Inc. Manuscript note on verso: "Trent lecturer 1963."
Portrait of Dr. Howard Kelly seated in his library and holding an open book in his lap. This photograph was included at the beginning of his Florence Nightingale Collection.
Portrait of H. D. Rolleston. Facsimile signature. Photographed by Jhos. Zall. The number "12474" is shown in the bottom right hand corner of the sheet.
Publisher: Berlin-Charlottenburg: Adolf Eckstein's Verlag.
Portrait of D. Francisco Vallesholding a book open with his left hand, and gesturing at it with his right hand. Text in Spanish. Drawn by J. Maea, engraved by M. Alegre, "Concluida pr. D. M. Sr. Carmona."
Portrait of Claude Bernard. Bernard studied many different aspects of medicine, and emphasized the interrelatedness of life functions and the importance of the body's preservation of internal stability.
Twenty-one 16th century Italian Majolic apothecary jars from the Duke-Semans Fine Arts Foundation on exhibit in the Duke University Medical Center Library in February/March 1991. Slide 5.