See History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673].
Quebbeman, Frances E. Medicine in territorial Arizona. Phoenix : Arizona Historical Foundation, 1966, page 336.
McClintock, James H. Arizona, Prehistoric, Aboriginal, Pioneer, Modern; the Nation's Youngest Commonwealth within a Land of Ancient Culture. Chicago: The S.J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1916 (aka Arizona, the Youngest State), volume 3 (Biographical), page 219: Dr. Robert Wallace Craig of Phoenix was born in Danville Illinois, October 30, 1871, a son of Robert G. and Harriett (Wallace) Craig, the former a farmer who devoted his attention to general agricultural pursuits in the middle west. Dr. Craig was accorded the educational advantages offered by the public schools and supplemented his work in the grades by a high school course in Wichita Kansas and by study in the University of Kansas. He read medicine and pursued a course in the Rush Medical College from which he was graduated in 1895 and spent two years as intern in the Cook County Hospital in Chicago. He afterward practiced in that city for two year and in 1898 arrived in Phoenix where he has since remained. In 1905 he married Mrs. Maud Ward, of Victoria B.C.
Sloan, Richard E. History of Arizona. Phoenix, Record Pub. Co., 1930, volume 3 (Arizona biography), pages 53-54.
ROBERT W. CRAIG. CLIMATOGRAPHY OF ARIZONA, WITH ESPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE CLIMATIC TREATMENT OF PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS. J Am Med Assoc, Jan 1902; XXXVIII: 229 - 233.
R. W. CRAIG. OPEN-AIR TREATMENT OF TUBERCULOSIS: TENT LIFE IN ARIZONA. J Am Med Assoc, Oct 1902; XXXIX: 840 - 842.
Prescott Evening Courier, July 11, 1933 obituary, pages 1, 5: "Dr. R. W. Craig Called to Rest" Source: http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=897&dat=19330711&id=7VEwAAAAIBAJ&s...
J Am Med Assoc, Sep 1933; 101: 870: Robert Wallace Craig, Phoenix, Ariz. ; Rush Medical College, Chicago, 1895 ; aged 61 : died, July 10, of erysipelas and acute nephritis.
J Am Med Assoc, Nov 1933; 101: 1487: Arizona. A hospital for be tuberculous patients will constructed with $150,000 bequeathed to the Sisters of Mercy of Arizona, Phoenix, in the will of Dr. Robert W. Craig.
Quebbeman, Frances E. Medicine in territorial Arizona. Phoenix : Arizona Historical Foundation, 1966, page 336.
McClintock, James H. Arizona, Prehistoric, Aboriginal, Pioneer, Modern; the Nation's Youngest Commonwealth within a Land of Ancient Culture. Chicago: The S.J. Clarke Pub. Co., 1916 (aka Arizona, the Youngest State), volume 3 (Biographical), page 219: Dr. Robert Wallace Craig of Phoenix was born in Danville Illinois, October 30, 1871, a son of Robert G. and Harriett (Wallace) Craig, the former a farmer who devoted his attention to general agricultural pursuits in the middle west. Dr. Craig was accorded the educational advantages offered by the public schools and supplemented his work in the grades by a high school course in Wichita Kansas and by study in the University of Kansas. He read medicine and pursued a course in the Rush Medical College from which he was graduated in 1895 and spent two years as intern in the Cook County Hospital in Chicago. He afterward practiced in that city for two year and in 1898 arrived in Phoenix where he has since remained. In 1905 he married Mrs. Maud Ward, of Victoria B.C.
Sloan, Richard E. History of Arizona. Phoenix, Record Pub. Co., 1930, volume 3 (Arizona biography), pages 53-54.
ROBERT W. CRAIG. CLIMATOGRAPHY OF ARIZONA, WITH ESPECIAL REFERENCE TO THE CLIMATIC TREATMENT OF PULMONARY TUBERCULOSIS. J Am Med Assoc, Jan 1902; XXXVIII: 229 - 233.
R. W. CRAIG. OPEN-AIR TREATMENT OF TUBERCULOSIS: TENT LIFE IN ARIZONA. J Am Med Assoc, Oct 1902; XXXIX: 840 - 842.
Prescott Evening Courier, July 11, 1933 obituary, pages 1, 5: "Dr. R. W. Craig Called to Rest" Source: http://news.google.com/newspapers?nid=897&dat=19330711&id=7VEwAAAAIBAJ&s...
J Am Med Assoc, Sep 1933; 101: 870: Robert Wallace Craig, Phoenix, Ariz. ; Rush Medical College, Chicago, 1895 ; aged 61 : died, July 10, of erysipelas and acute nephritis.
J Am Med Assoc, Nov 1933; 101: 1487: Arizona. A hospital for be tuberculous patients will constructed with $150,000 bequeathed to the Sisters of Mercy of Arizona, Phoenix, in the will of Dr. Robert W. Craig.
Master pnID
AMH-PN0755
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AHSL-DP
History of Arizona medicine; collections of Orville Harry Brown, M.D. [AHSL Special Collections WZ 70 AA7 H673]
volume 1, page(s) 448-451; volume 10, page(s) 450
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Tip Top
Phoenix