This fonds contains material relating to the students, faculty and administration of the College of Medicine. These records generally contain correspondence, minutes, reports, and memoranda; as well as considerable material relating to national and provincial professional associations, health organizations, and research work.
Head and shoulders image of Dr. Louis W. Christ, Head of General Practice, College of Medicine.
Bio/Historical Note: The Department of Family Medicine came in existence in 1971 under the Deans Dr. John Gutelius (1970-1973) and Dr. Robert Murray (1973-1983). Dr. Louis Christ was the first Head of the Department of Family Medicine from 1971-1977. He later joined the Department of Geriatric Medicine. Dr. Christ died on 9 February 1983 in Saskatoon.
This series contains departmental reports, various committee minutes, grant applications, reports on curriculum, and correspondence. In addition, there is material relating to both the Hall Commission and Medicare.
John Adams (Professor of Pathology), Dr. Caldwell, Dr. Lindsay (Dean of Medicine) and A.M. Blue (Kiwanis Club) standing with group of physicians who are members of the Kiwanis Club. They are inside the Murray Museum of Pathology
Bio/Historical Note: The Museum consisted of reproductions of photographs from Pathology Museum of the University of Toronto.
This fonds contains correspondence, reports, studies, minutes, articles and speeches documenting the interests and career of Dr. Matthews. The bulk of the material deals with health care in general and Medicare in particular.
This fonds contains correspondence, memoranda, and reports relating to the administration and the activities of the department. Included are the publications and presentations of Dr. D.G. McKerracher, Department Head (1954-1970).
This fonds contains correspondence, memoranda, minutes and reports related to the administration and activities of the department. Included are applications to various agencies which provide grants for medical research (1952-1974). These files consist of applications, biographical data, project proposals, correspondence and reports of results.
This fonds contains departmental minutes (1958-1987) and annual reports from 1979-1990 (1981-82 and 1983-84 are missing). Also included are a small number of research and personnel files.
This fonds contains materials relating to Pierson’s research interests, and his collaborative work with graduate students and faculty from medicine, nursing, veterinary medicine, and computational science. Pierson and the reproductive biology research unit made medical history when they were the first to capture natural human ovulation, witnessed with the use of an intra-vaginal probe to produce ultrasound waves. Those original images, on video tape, form part of this fonds; as do other images and data relating to Pierson’s research in reproductive technologies.