Guillaume Baylies, M.D., special adviser and physician to the king of Prussia and member of the Royal Colleges of Medicine of London and Edinburgh. Drawn by H. Schmid, 1779, and engraved by D. Berger, 1783.
Photograph of a staff member coming out of a hyperbaric unit. He is wearing surgical attire and a mask. Another man is standing behind him. Several cans lined with plastic are also shown.
Portrait of Victor Albrecht von Haller sitting by a table, with his right hand resting on a book on the table. Painted by T. R. Studer v. W., engraved by I. I. Haid.
Photograph of Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer, who analyzed the motor functions of the cerebral cortex, the brain stem and the spinal cord of primates with Victor Alexander Haden Horsley.
Portrait of Henri Francois Le Dran, Head Surgeon and the Charity Hospital, member of the Royal Academie of Surgeons and associate to the Royal Society of London. Engraved by Ambroise Tardieu. Based on the painting at the Paris School of Medicine.
Photograph of John George Adami. Photographed by Notman, Montreal. Facsimile signature. The number "14745" is shown in the bottom right hand corner of the sheet.
Publisher: Berlin-Charlottenburg: Adolf Eckstein's Verlag.
Photograph of the Old Pathological Building at Johns Hopkins Hospital. Manuscript note indicates it was replaced in 1922-23 by the new Institute, following partial destruction by fire.
William Osler accompanied by interns, stops en route to the old “post” House to talk with a patient on the grounds of Philadelphia General Hospital (Old Blockley). Portrait by Dean Cornwell is the second in the series “Pioneers of American Medicine.”
Portrait of Rayer standing, facing right, with his left hand in his pant pocket and his right hand tucked into his vest. Photographed by Adam Salomon, Lithographed by Bornemann.
Photograph of an older Florence Nightingale seated in an arm chair. She is holding papers in her hands. From the collection of Howard A. Kelly, M.D., No. 7.
Portrait of Linnaeus, from a copy by Pasch in the possession of R. Brown Esqr. of the original at the Royal Academy of Sciences at Stockholm. Engraved by C. E. Wagstaff.
Portrait of Joannes Valverdus. Portrait is bordered by skeletons on both sides. Small picture insets are shown at the bottom of the plate and angels are shown at the top. Manuscript note indicates N. Blatritet as the engraver.
Picture showing Troy Hospital. This view shows two wings, one of which is partially obscured by trees. A stone wall, several large boulders, and four people are also shown.
Portrait of John Hunter. He is sitting in a chair with a quill pen in his right hand and his left hand on his chin. His left elbow is resting on a table containing several books. Drawn by Sir Joshua Reynolds. From the engraving in the collection...
Photograph of Karl Frederik Wenckebach, who discovered an arrhythmia of the heart known today as the Wenckebach period. "Triangle Volume VI No. 8 July 1964" appears at the head of the sheet.
Oil portrait of Valentine Mott, M.D. who was a pioneer vascular surgeon famous for ligation of great vessels for aneurysm. He was considered the leading American surgeon of the first half of the nineteenth century.
Portrait of Franz Joseph Gall, founder of the doctrine of the physiology of the brain. Painted by Rubidge and engraved by J. Alois. Facsimile signature.
Hand colored diagram of the arterial system in a Persian treatise on anatomy by Mansur ibn Muhammad ibn Ahmad. This is a seventeenth century copy of a late fourteenth century manuscript.
Portrait of Abraham Lincoln, 16th president of the United States from page 17 of an anonymous album. The only non-physician included in this anonymous album.
Part of an album of 23 small formal photographs of physicians.
People standing outside the Boston General Hospital. Drawn by R. Goodacre, engraved and printed by Fenner Sears & Co. Published May 1, 1831 by I. T. Hinton and Simpkin & Marshall.
Sigerist sitting at a desk holding a book. Presentation inscription: "To Henry Schuman with the good wishes March 1943 Dr. Sigerist" By Greystone Studios Inc., New York.
Photograph of Florence Nightingale Memorial in Florence, Italy. The memorial is in the Cloister of Santa Croce. From the collection of Howard A. Kelly, M.D., No. 50.
Photograph of the drawings on the walls of a medical student dorm room. At center is the figure of a woman and various other objects, one of which is entitled “Mole Pheasant.”
Left to right, Arena, Davison, and McGovern standing. Arena and Davison both wearing glasses. Presentation inscription: "To Jay Arena from Dave W. Davison."
Photograph of Florence Nightingale's home in Embley Park, Romsey, Hampshire. Embley Park is noted for its long road and masses of rhododendrons. From the collection of Howard A. Kelly, M.D., No. 29.
Portrait of Johann Christian Reil, who emphasized irritability as a specific property of living material, and advanced the concept of the living force as a chemical factor in function. He founded the first periodical for physiology.
Photograph of St. Thomas Hospital, Lambeth, London erected 1870-1871. The building with the tower is the medical building. A river and several boats are also shown. From the collection of Howard A. Kelly, No. 45.
Publisher: [London] F. F & Co.
Signed photograph of Sir Frederick Grant Banting: "Sincerely F. G. Banting, University of Toronto." Banting was one of the discoverers of insulin and received the Nobel Prize in 1923.
Pare in three-quarter right profile, engraved by W. Holl. From the original picture in "L'Ecole de Medecine" at Paris. Under the superintendence of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge.
Portrait of Charles Horace Mayo, right view. Facsimile signature. The number "13666" is shown in the bottom right hand corner of the sheet.
Publisher: Berlin-Charlottenburg: Adolf Eckstein's Verlag.
Portrait of Adolf Lorenz in full beard and mustache. Facsimile signature. The number "2083" is shown in the right hand corner of the sheet.
Publisher: Berlin-Charlottenburg: Adolf Eckstein's Verlag.