Mentioned in the 2/13/1945 Minutes of the Pima County Medical Society, 1904-1954.
J Am Med Assoc, Nov 1946; 132: 532: Leroy Upson Gardner, Saranac Lake, N. Y. ; Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, 1914; born in New Britain, Conn., Dec. 9, 1888 ; following a period of graduate study at the Boston City Hospital and the Harvard -Medical School, Boston, joined the faculty at Harvard as an instructor in pathology, serving in 1916-1917; returned to Yale as assistant professor of pathology, 1917-1918; an Associate Fellow of the American Medical Association, in which he had been a charter member of the Council on Industrial Health ; fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science ; member of the American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists and the American Society for Experimental Pathology ; member of the board of directors of the National Tuberculosis Association ; member of the corresponding committee on silicosis, International Labor Office, in 1930 ; a first lieutenant in the medical corps of the U. S. Army in 1917; trustee, village of Saranac Lake, 1932-1933, member of the water board, 1929-1930 and member of the village planning commission ; for many years visiting lecturer in medicine at the University of Rochester School of Medicine ; consultant pathologist at the U. S. Veterans Bureau from 1926 to 1932; formerly pathologist and for many years director of the Trudeau Foundation; since 1927 director of the Saranac Laboratory for the Study of Tuberculosis ; trustee, Trudeau Sanatorium; in 1935 was awarded the Trudeau Medal of the National Tuberculosis Association for his work on the pathology of tuberculosis, notably that dealing with the relation between tuberculosis and silicosis ; in 1940, at the annual meeting of the American Association of Industrial Physicians and Surgeons, was presented with the annual William S. Knudsen award for outstanding achievement in industrial medicine because of advances in the knowledge of silicosis resulting from research directed by him ; in 1940 delivered the seventh annual John W. Bell lecture ; co-author of "Tuberculosis—Bacteriology, Pathology and Laboratory Diagnosis" with S. A. Petroff, 1927 ; received the honorary degree of master of science from Yale in 1940 ; died October 24, aged 57.
J Am Med Assoc, Nov 1946; 132: 532: Leroy Upson Gardner, Saranac Lake, N. Y. ; Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, 1914; born in New Britain, Conn., Dec. 9, 1888 ; following a period of graduate study at the Boston City Hospital and the Harvard -Medical School, Boston, joined the faculty at Harvard as an instructor in pathology, serving in 1916-1917; returned to Yale as assistant professor of pathology, 1917-1918; an Associate Fellow of the American Medical Association, in which he had been a charter member of the Council on Industrial Health ; fellow of the American Association for the Advancement of Science ; member of the American Association of Pathologists and Bacteriologists and the American Society for Experimental Pathology ; member of the board of directors of the National Tuberculosis Association ; member of the corresponding committee on silicosis, International Labor Office, in 1930 ; a first lieutenant in the medical corps of the U. S. Army in 1917; trustee, village of Saranac Lake, 1932-1933, member of the water board, 1929-1930 and member of the village planning commission ; for many years visiting lecturer in medicine at the University of Rochester School of Medicine ; consultant pathologist at the U. S. Veterans Bureau from 1926 to 1932; formerly pathologist and for many years director of the Trudeau Foundation; since 1927 director of the Saranac Laboratory for the Study of Tuberculosis ; trustee, Trudeau Sanatorium; in 1935 was awarded the Trudeau Medal of the National Tuberculosis Association for his work on the pathology of tuberculosis, notably that dealing with the relation between tuberculosis and silicosis ; in 1940, at the annual meeting of the American Association of Industrial Physicians and Surgeons, was presented with the annual William S. Knudsen award for outstanding achievement in industrial medicine because of advances in the knowledge of silicosis resulting from research directed by him ; in 1940 delivered the seventh annual John W. Bell lecture ; co-author of "Tuberculosis—Bacteriology, Pathology and Laboratory Diagnosis" with S. A. Petroff, 1927 ; received the honorary degree of master of science from Yale in 1940 ; died October 24, aged 57.
Master pnID
AMH-PN1248
Src2 PCMSMin
PCMS-Min
PCMS pnID
pn0336
Residence(s)
Saranac Lake NY