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Primary Resources from the Medical Historical Library on Women and African Americans. Toby Anita Appel John R. Bumstead Librarian for Medical History. Medical Historical Library. Books by Women Doctors, Nurses, and Midwives — Midwifery book by Justine Siegemund, 1723.
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Primary Resources from the Medical Historical Library on Women and African Americans Toby Anita Appel John R. Bumstead Librarian for Medical History
Books by Women Doctors, Nurses, and Midwives — Midwifery book by Justine Siegemund, 1723
Florence Nightingale, 1820-1910 Louise Boursier, ca. 1563-1636 Portrait Engravings – on our Digital Library
Ethel Dunham, MD, Pediatrics Dorothy Horstmann, MD, Epidemiology Photograph Collection
Yale School of Medicine Photos – Students in1895 including two African Americans
Yale Medical Theses, 1842-1900 Thesis of C. v.R. Creed, first African American medical graduate, 1857
Medical Books related to Women, Mostly Written by Male Physicians • Diseases of Women • Nervous Disorders – Neurasthenia and Hysteria • Midwifery and Obstetrics • Gynecology & Gynecological Surgery • Pediatrics & Child Study
Medical Texts for Practitioners – Spencer Wells, Diseases of the Ovaries, London: 1865
Medical Journals, 17th century to 1920
Nursing School Catalogs Medical School Catalogs
Pamphlet Collections Hospital Reports
American Society for the Control of Cancer Pamphlets for women – 1920s
Clements C. Fry Collection of Prints and Drawings Isaac Cruikshank, “A Man-Midwife,” 1793
Clements C. Fry Collection of Prints and Drawings “Morphinomanie,” by Eugène Grasset, 1897
Clements C. Fry Collection of Prints & Drawings Ivo Saliger, Der Röntgenologe, 1921
Posters on Public Health Part of a set published in Taiwan, 1950s
Manuscript Collections – Herbert Thoms Collection: Scrapbook on natural childbirth and rooming in